New Releases: August 10, 2011

Someday This Will Be Funny coverWe’ve got such diverse and exciting titles this week that it seems like summer blockbuster season over here, except with good material, fewer special effects, and way less botox. And so, we’re rolling right along with three new releases, including the latest dazzling short fiction collection from Lynne Tillman, the second title in Toby Frost’s Chronicles of Iambard Smith series, and an action-soaked, historical “chick-in-pants” romance.

As always, enter the code “rulebreaker” at checkout for an additional 25% off any title. Here’s what we’ve got lined up for you this week:

The Lady Soldier by Michelle Styles and Kate Allan. Narrated by Emma Newman.  Published in print by Salt Publishing.
“I have a weakness for loving “Chick-in-Pants” stories and Lindsey fed that need wonderfully with her rich descriptions and historical texturing. Her prose is beautiful and the historic research she obviously did proves that she is a writer with potential.” Cybil Solyn, Rakehell

Someday This Will Be Funny by Lynne Tillman. Published in print by Cursor/Red Lemonade. Narrated by Lee Ann Howlett.
Gorgeously at ease and technically virtuosic, the stories are ever on point — on point, that is, if the point of your reading has more to do with psychological nuance and bravura performances of language than with conventional story lines.Forrest Gander, New York Times

God Emperor of Didcot by Toby Frost. Published in print by Myrmidon.  Narrated by Clive Catterall.
The sci-fi world Smith inhabits is very much Blackadder meets Red Dwarf. There is a lot of gentle mockery, both of the British and Johnny Foreigner. Moments of amusement are almost constant, and some parts are quite hilarious. […] The author doesn’t get bogged down with scientific technicalities, and the plot is nice and fast-paced.Thaddeus the Sixth

Audiobook reviewers, book bloggers, and Iambik ambassadors, email Miette for review and advance listening copies of any title.

Roundup: Iambik narrators elsewhere

We know your ears are burning for more listening material, and don’t want you to miss out on some of the other projects, free and commercial alike, by our brilliant narrators.  We’re a busy group.  Look what else we’ve been up to:

The ever-industrious Charles Bice had a poetic July, reading works by Maya Angelou, Lucretia Davidson, Percy Bysshe Shelley and others at his Pause for Poetry poemcast.

Xe Sands, narrator of Step on a Crack by Mary Anderson, has a new commercial release through Tantor audio: Kelly Meding’s Another Kind of Dead.

Cori Samuel, she of Lydia Millet’s Oh Pure and Radiant Heart and Natalie-Jane Revell’s Around the World in Stilettos, recently contributed to Librivox’ Short Poetry Collection 095

Also at Librivox, the delightful Elizabeth Klett, who most recently recorded Anna Quon’s Migration Songs and Mary Anderson’s You Can’t Get There From Here, has just released a solo recording of Edith Wharton’s Madame de Treymes

Linette Geisel (The Journal of Antonio Montoya by Rick Collignon) took part in a dramatic reading of Granny’s Wonderful Chair by Frances Browne, also at Librivox.

Miette (Dustin Long’s Icelander), who hates speaking of herself in the third-person, has a new piece of short fiction at Miette’s Bedtime Story Podcast.

(Narrators: did I miss your recent projects?  Let me know and I’ll include it next time.  Listeners: what else are you listening to? Fill my ears.)

New releases from Iambik, August 3, 2011

The Mitochondrial Curiosities of Marcels 1 to 19 cover
This week we continue to appeal to your tastes where-ever they lie, with a mouthful of a literary title from our friends at Coach House Books, another young adult classic from the incomparable Mary Anderson, and a hardboiled sci-fi title that will steam up your nights.

And it’s still summer, so enter the code “rulebreaker” at checkout for an additional 25% off your purchase.  Summer’s not here for much longer, so download an audiobook and get outside.  Here are this week’s titles:

The Mitochondrial Curiosities of Marcels 1 to 19 by Jocelyn Brown. Narrated by Denice Stradling.  Published in print by Coach House Books.
“Jocelyn Brown’s The Mitochondrial Curiosities of Marcels 1-19 sports a title you’ll not soon forget, and a protagonist who challenges your patience while easily winning your affection …” Coleen Mondor, Bookslut

You Can’t Get There From Here by Mary Anderson.   Narrated by Elizabeth Klett.
The pace of this narrative accelerates with the pace of Reggie’s tailspin as she becomes more immersed in the character Adam has created for her and she begins to have difficulty distinguiishing herself from her alter ego. Reggie’s experience is similar to those caught up in a cult. This will hold and involve readers. – Booklist

Defining Diana by Hayden Trenholm (published in print by Bundoran Press).  Narrated by Art Carlson.
Defining Diana manages to feel true to both its hardboiled and its futuristic roots. The writing presents an interesting mash-up of pulp dialogue and well-researched scientific theory. The novel’s characterizations of the SDU’s troubled and conflicted officers is also top notch. Trenholm’s solid police procedural, set in a cyberpunk Calgary, will appeal to mystery and science fiction fans alike – Chadwick Ginter, McNally Robinson

Audiobook reviewers, book bloggers, and Iambik ambassadors, email Miette for review and advance listening copies of any title.

Speaking up: some listener comments

I was looking at Iambik’s ever-growing catalog the other day, and to my delight, noticed some of the comments our narrators, proof-listeners, and listeners have been adding to some of our titles.  Apparently, I’m easy to please.  If you’re looking for recommendations for Iambik titles, here’s a small sampling of what we’ve had to say so far:

“A funny little story with an interesting look at human nature. I really enjoyed listening to Gordon read this to me.”
Linda Andrus on Andrew Kaufman’s All My Friends are Superheroes (Coach House Books), narrated by Gordon Mackenzie.

“You know how it is when you see a really great movie and all through the day for the next week you suddenly notice there’s a little scene from it playing in your head? Or when a snippet of music surfaces into your awareness from some unconscious dj in your mind? I keep hearing Tadhg’s voice here and there through the day, dished up by my internal mp3 player. Tadhg’s reading for this book is fresh and off-hand, flawed* and absolutely perfect**.”
Anita Roy Dobbs on The Failure by James Greer

“One of Joe Coomer’s best books (so far) … colorful characters living unique, yet realistic, lives. Lee Ann Howlett brings additional depth to the characters through her narration.”
Betsie Bush on Joe Coomer’s One Vacant Chair (Graywolf Press)

“This very enjoyable book reminds me of Gaston Leroux’ mysteries. Once you hear the solution to it, you cannot help but slam your head, thinking: why did I not see that? It is so logical, it is beautiful. All the clues are there, and yet…”
Nadine Eckert-Boulet on The Tattoo Murder Case by Akimitsu Takagi

“Completely loved this book – great style of writing, interesting (zany) characters, good mystery, funny yet thoughful. Fantastic narration, too, and really fitted well with the book.”
Gesine Kernchen on High Season by Jon Loomis, narrated by Charles Bice

“Excellent story; once I started listening, I could not stop until the end. Very compelling story and extremely well read by the narrator.”
Elaine Klett on Death of a Nationalist by Rebecca Pawel, read by Elizabeth Klett

“The text itself swims with demanding plot twists and labyrinthine language games, which can be a joy to read though a challenge over audio, but which Yearsley nicely lays straight. Excellently done.”
Erm, ME, on Peter Yearsley’s narration of Laird Hunt’s The Impossibly (Coffee House Press)

Listened to our titles?  Leave a comment!  I might send you a penny or more for your thoughts.  Maybe.

Mixing it up: our first Classic, Romance, and Young Adult titles are here!

Step on a Crack cover
It’s still summer by my count, which means it’s okay to go out on a schoolnight, skinny dip in a rooftop pool, and otherwise indulge in large-scale rulebreaking.  In that spirit, here are a few special releases, including our first work of Classic Literature, a saucy Romance, and a Young Adult classic.  To celebrate further, enter the code “rulebreaker” at checkout for an additional 25% off your purchase.  Now, go out and put a tassel on your nightcap already, and blame it on me.

The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford. Narrated by Robert Keiper
“The Good Soldier is an odd and maybe even unique book. That it is a masterpiece, almost a perfect novel, comes as a repeated surprise even to readers who have read it before.” — Jane Smiley in The Guardian

Around the World in Stilettos by Natalie-Jane Revell (published in print by HandE Publishers).   Narrated by Cori Samuel.
I read this book in two days – just couldn’t put it down! If you love the shopoholic books, you will love this. Superb book for taking on holiday and reading on the beach. My daughter has borrowed my copy and is loving it too. Thoroughly recommended. I can’t wait for the sequel to come out. – Amazon review

Step on a Crack by Mary Anderson (published in print by Atheneum Books).  Narrated by Xe Sands.
It is without question one of the fastest paced novels dealing with the psychological problems of the young that has been published to date. From the time that Josie fully enters the novel until it’s shrieking climax, one is literally bound with hands clasped to the bindings of the book! – Catholic Library World

Introducing Crime Collection #2

These hot July nights are made for the steamy filth of city sidewalks, shadows lurking in the dark, and bodies dropping under mysterious circumstances.  Of course, it’s better for all of us if the blood, shadows, and soot are relegated to fiction.  And so, we introduce Iambik’s second Crime fiction release, six nail-biting, suspense-heavy, genre-defying works from today’s leading independent U.S. and Canadian crime fiction publishers.  You may need to leave a light on after some of these:

Hard Cold Whisper by Michael Hemmingson. Narrated by Adam Verner (Black Mask)
“[Hemmingson’s writing] is a twisted mix of sin and redemption.”
— American Book Review

Listen to the Dead by Randall Peffer. Narrated by Art Carlson (Tyrus Books)
“Fueled by sex, drugs, long-suppressed memories, and the practice of Santeria, this fast-paced fifth entry in Peffer’s series (after Bangkok Dragons, Cape Cod Tears)is unusual and intriguing”
— Library Journal

Richmond Noir by Various. Narrated by Charles Bice (Akashic Books)
“A lovingly compiled entry in Akashic’s strong regional noir series, this could have appeal beyond the Commonwealth and its capital.”
– Library Journal

The Painted Messiah by Craig Smith.  Narrated by Clive Catterall (Myrmidon)
“I got paper friction burns on my fingers and pressure sores elsewhere because I could barely move until I’d finished it.”
– Paul Doherty, author of the Hugh Corbett mysteries

Thought You Were Dead by Terry Griggs.  Narrated by Gregg Margarite (Biblioasis)
“Griggs’s finest joke lies in her decision to set her novel in the publishing industry, which allows her to riff on tacky book covers and take aim at everyone from aspiring writers to copy editors to a lowly book reviewer who meets an untimely demise.”
— Lee Ferguson, CBC Arts & Entertainment

The Vaults by Toby Ball.  Narrated by Michael Agostini (St. Martin’s Press)
“Astonishingly, Toby Ball is a first-time novelist. The Vaults succeeds on every level, in its language, plotting, and ability to enthrall readers.”
– Mystery Scene Magazine

Complete Crime #2 Collection: All six titles for $29.99!

“Only the blank page has limitless possibilities.” Matt Bell talks to Mark F. Smith

Have you ever known someone who does what you do, but who does so much of it, and does it so well, and with such great perspicacity, that at the very mention of that person’s name, you instinctively snap out of whatever idle time-wasting activity you’re up to, and get busy?   For instance, if the things you do include reading and writing ceaselessly, the thought of Matt Bell probably has you abandoning blog comment wars and Wikipedia surfing sessions and ceiling-staring contests.  This is all probably for the best.  In fact, you probably owe him a great deal of thanks for it.  But hopefully a blog introduction will suffice.  So here’s Matt discussing How They Were Found with audiobook narrator Mark F. Smith and me:

Mark F. Smith: I had an unusual amount of fun narrating How They Were Found. You took me strange places where I got to apply unusual emotion in telling the story. So, which of these captures Matt Bell: are you someone who is haunted by disturbing dreams, or are you someone maliciously hoping to intrude on the dreams of your readers/listeners?

Matt Bell: “Haunted” and “malicious” might be overstating it, but I have always been a person who dreamed vividly and often–and, when I was younger, repeatedly, with the same dreams reappearing over and over. Nowadays, I think that sense you’re picking up comes first out of the process of my stories, in that I often start without knowing where I’m going: I’m beginning with an intriguing image or pleasant sounding sentence, and then just trying to extend or explore that thing, whatever it is that’s set me in motion.

The other reason for that dream-sense might be impossible to prove, but I think it matters: Right around the time I started writing How They Were Found, I switched from writing late at night to writing first thing in the morning. I get out of bed in the morning and walk right into my computer and start working, usually trying to get at least an hour in before I even go make coffee or have breakfast or whatever. That transition from dreaming to writing feels like it diminishes the gap between the two activities, and drags some of the night into the day.

Matt Bell

Author Matt Bell

MFS: When you sit down to write your stories, do you already know where they’re going, or do they write themselves and you find out their ends as you go?

MB: I wouldn’t say they write themselves, but they do help direct me on where to go: Only the blank page has limitless possibilities. If you’re doing things correctly on the page, every sentence you write lowers the number of possible right next sentences, words, actions, and so on. So even though I’m starting with mystery, I’m writing to explore, to discover. The trick, really, is not to overdetermine it, or to explain too much of that mystery away: I always want there to be space remaining for the reader to work with, to insert their own emotions and sensibilities.

MFS: You’ve won prizes with at least of couple of the stories in this book. Which of the thirteen is your personal favorite? Which do you most like to read out loud yourself? Why?

Mark F. Smith

Narrator Mark F. Smith

MB: I think my favorite changes from time to time. “The Collectors” means a lot to me, because it was a big turn in my writing at the time, but “His Last Great Gift” was essential in other ways– both were born out of obsessions with their bits of history, so writing them was a great way to exercise and exorcise those obsessions. But others stick out too: “Wolf Parts” was an enormous challenge to write, and one I greatly enjoyed working on, and “The Receiving Tower” is certainly one that I feel close to, in part because I’d wanted to write a story in that mode for a very long time, and never could.

As for reading aloud: I’ve performed every story in the book at least a time or two, but “An Index of How Our Family Was Killed” was a staple in the early part of my book tour. Later, “The Cartographer’s Girl” became my most common choice, in part because of its length–it’s a good size for most events–but also because it’s one that consistently got a kind response from a wide variety of different audiences: It’s become that unexpected “hit” bands discover on tour, and I’ve really learned to enjoy performing it.

MFS: I once kicked you a question about categorization tags for this book, lamenting that I was having a terrible time trying to put labels on such a disparate collection. I believe your answer was something like, “Tough, huh?” followed by diplomatic silence! Now that the audiobook is “out there” would you like to add to or subtract from any of my tags?

MB: Well, it was less “diplomatic” and more “overwhelmed,” as I let the time slip by a bit on that. But tagging is difficult for any work, and harder for short story collections. I think it’s especially hard for most writers to do that kind of thing for themselves: It feels reductive, and while I realize this kind of thing is necessary for sales purposes, it’s hard to try to reduce my own art to ten words. If it only took ten words to talk about these stories, then that’s all I would have used!

MFS: I remarked as I was narrating How They Were Found that there is almost no dialogue. When someone says something, it is usually reported as having been said, and the words are echoes in the protagonist’s brain. In your upcoming novel, are you going to let people speak?

MB: I’d argue that summarized and indirect dialogue is still dialogue, but I know what you mean: There isn’t a ton of direct dialogue in the book. There’s more in my next book (Cataclysm Baby, a novella-in-shorts, which will also be from Iambik next year), but even there, it’s always filtered through the narrator, since the stories are in the first-person. Really, I don’t find direct dialogue very natural–when you tell me a story that happened to you, I’d imagine that very little of the dialogue you relate is truly direct, or worthy of quotes–and I think it’s generally the weakest part of many books. It also has other costs: unfiltered by the narrator, it can break the flow of the fiction’s syntax and diction, and it also reduces the writer’s ability to control time, as direct dialogue necessarily progresses in real-time: it takes the same time to read it as it does for it to actually happen, and that’s a rare thing in fiction. The only device, I think, that works that way.

MFS: You read a prodigious amount! To what degree does your reading find its way into your writing (or, are all the nightmares your own?)

MB: I’ve taken a lot of writing classes over the years, and had some amazing teachers, writer friends, and editors. But more than anything else, it’s books that taught me how to write, their authors who taught me how to be a writer. I must have read thousands of books before I was able to write one of my own, and–other than my day to day habits of writing–the only thing that’s going to keep accelerating what I’m capable of–and what I know the form is capable of–is to read as much as I can.

Besides, the reason I became a writer was because I loved to read. The two go together, and I don’t expect that to change. If anything, I might someday (somehow?) stop writing. But never reading.

Miette Elm: Mark was right in noting that your reading output is enviable, and you seem to have a better handle on today’s young writers of innovative, genre-defying American fiction. If you could curate a collection of literary fiction for Iambik, who would you be sure to include?

MB: I’d have to think about this a bit harder, but what I’d really love to see is a collection of fiction that seemed meant to be read out loud in the first place: A lot of fiction technically works in audiobook format, but not every writer is as alive to the acoustic possibilities of their prose as perhaps they should be. I think there are some really great fiction writers who just beg to be read out loud on every page, and Iambik would be smart to snatch up their books and match them with narrators who could really make their books sing.

ME: Do you listen to many audiobooks, and if so, what are you up to while doing so?

MB: I used to listen to tons of audiobooks, because I’ve spent a lot of time commuting: I went to both undergrad and grad school an hour away from home, and then my first job after I moved to Ann Arbor was an hour away too. So audiobooks took up a lot of that drive time. I still travel by car quite a bit, often alone on book tour or similar outings, and so try to squeeze in some whenever I’m gone. I’ve also listened to them while working out, while doing website or eBook coding, or anything that doesn’t require my fullest brain, leaving me some attention left. I’ve probably listened to one or two a month every month since 2004 or so.

ME: In addition to writing and reading seemingly ceaselessly, you’re the editor of Dzanc Books and its literary journal The Collagist. Being this exposed to the writing landscape, what stylistic/structural trends have you noticed lately? Are writers adapting the way they create text to work better online, in audio, for e-readers etc? What else is happening?

MB: One of the first things I thought when I listened to the Iambik audiobook of How They Were Found was that maybe I should have reordered it for audio, that maybe it worked differently in that medium. It hadn’t even occurred to me, even though I’d already made slight changes to the text in the first story (which I’d also done in the eBook version)– Now I think those changes are actually better, and if I were to be lucky enough to have the book go into another printing, I might ask to be allowed to change the text there.

I do think things work differently in these different mediums, and the writers who are most aware of this are going to have certain advantages over others, or at least certain opportunities. Sometimes you can tell a writer isn’t thinking about this: We’ll get submissions full of footnotes, for example, which is really a print artifact, and doesn’t work exactly the same way online. I’m also hoping that the expanded margins of the screen will open us up for new structural attempts: I think poetry is dominated by shorter lines in part because, if you want to get published in lit mags, there are line length limits marked off by the printed page. There are ways around this (the hanging indent, etc.), but I’m sure it scares off a lot of would-be long-line poets, by suggesting that the short line is the de facto standard.

ME: Thanks so much for letting us turn How They Were Found into audio. We hope to be able to do it again with the upcoming novel, and with other Dzanc/Keyhole titles.

MB: Thanks to everyone at Iambik for publishing How They Were Found in audio: It’s something I’d always hoped would happen with my work, and I’m so glad Mark did such a fine job narrating it.


How They Were Found

Matt Bell’s How They Were Found, published in print by Keyhole Press, is available from Iambik as an audiobook for only $6.99.  You can also buy it as part of our Complete Literary Fiction Collection 3 of 6 titles for $29.99.

You can also have a listen to Mark F. Smith’s reading of the collection’s first story, “The Cartographer’s Girl,” using the embedded audio player below.

Audio: Miette & J. Robert Lennon. “Inspiration is just the thing that gets you the pile of crap that will eventually be something good if you keep working on it.”

Back in the winter, I trekked up to Ithaca in six feet of snow (give or take), and stopped in to visit author J. Robert Lennon, whose novel Castle was released as part of Iambik’s first Literary Fiction collection. I wanted to know the basic reaction to hearing one’s work interpreted by someone else. We ended up covering the need to respect the process, uncovering and resuscitating one’s lost pile of crap, being reviewed alongside hand creams, and other topics of great literary importance.

The sound quality is that of your average punkrock bootleg, between my dying computer’s background death rattle and the occasional but determined plodding up and down Cornell’s hallways.  Hopefully you’ll get the idea, though, and while I can promise you it’s a fine listen despite these things, I can also promise you won’t have as good of a time as I did.  The guy knows how to yap with a booknerd.  Thanks so very much, John!

These things were also discussed and are here for your link-clicking delight:

Which of our authors would you love to see us chat with?  Email me and let me know.


Castle

J. Robert Lennon’s Castle, published in print by Graywolf Press, is available from Iambik as an audiobook for only $4.99. You can listen to the first chapter directly on our site. It’s also available as part of our Complete Literary Fiction Collection 1 of 11 titles for $49.99.

“People have been very kind to me.” Lee Ann Howlett on conquering Thomas Hardy and The Ginseng O.

At one time, I was planning to run these Five Questions interviews only throughout June, as part of June is Audiobook Month (#jiam2011). But we have too many talented narrators and proof-listeners to pack them all into one month, and today’s featured narrator alone is charming enough to deserve a full month all to herself. Here’s Lee Ann Howlett, narrator most recently of With or Without You (Akashic) by Lauren Sanders.

Miette Elm: First off, what are you up to? What titles have you recently wrapped, what are you in the middle of, and how’s it going?
Lee Ann Howlett:  I finished a collection of short stories called Someday This Will Be Funny by Lynne Tillman for Iambik around the same time that I wrapped a semi-autobiographical book for LibriVox called Three Girls in a Flat by Enid Yandell and two of her friends. (Yandell was a noted American sculptor.) Right now, I’m currently recording a romance for Iambik – Nanny Behaving Badly by Judy Jarvie (Salt Publishing). I believe it’s scheduled to be released as part of Iambik’s first romance collection. I’m also working on a mystery for LibriVox called The Mystery of Mary by Grace Livingston Hill. It’s always nice to have two very different projects going on at the same time.

Lee Ann Howlett

Lee Ann Howlett

ME: Anything stand out as the most notable sentence or paragraph you’ve narrated?
LAH:Well, a recent one was “Have you ever had a ginseng orgasm?” from Joe Coomer’s book One Vacant Chair. My proof-listener, Betsie Bush, and I had a laugh over that one.

ME: Care to share a memorable comment you’ve received about your voice or narration talents?
LAH: People have been very kind to me over the years with LibriVox and, now, Iambik. One that I hold dear was the first comment I ever received for my readings on the LibriVox group project for Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd. The listener told me that he particularly enjoyed my sections and felt I brought genuine emotion to my reading. I’ve also had similar messages from others about the same book. Since I recorded with my American accent, I was very pleased that the fact that I wasn’t English didn’t seem to bother these listeners. I know that it does disturb many listeners when it’s a UK author and that it’s a personal preference. I’m just glad I didn’t ruin it for everyone.

ME: What are the world’s top sounds? What are the worst?
LAH: Top sounds would have to include the cute little sound my dog, Sammy, makes when he yawns, the sounds of my toddler nieces laughing, and anything by The Cure.

Worst sounds are trucks driving by, airplanes overheard, cicadas and crickets doing their thing, and barking dogs (Sammy included) — all while I’m trying to record.

ME: Of any book ever published, what’s your dream title to narrate (even if your voice wouldn’t be a good match)?
LAH:  That’s a tough one but I’m going to go with some non-fiction. Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood and Vincent Bugliosi’s Helter Skelter. I’m a fan of true crime when it’s well-written. Also a biography or memoir by someone that I admire or whose work I enjoy who also has a knack for telling their story well.


Lee Ann Howlett’s audiobooks for Iambik so far include One Vacant Chair by Joe Coomer and With or Without You by Lauren Sanders.  If you’re like me and can’t get enough of her, you’ll sign up for our mailing list and be the first to know when her future titles are released.  And if you’re like me but with a little free time, maybe you’ll start the Lee Ann Howlett fan club.  You should.

“The audiobook becomes a part of your journey.” Clive Catterall on audiobooks in the car

In Where We Listen, Iambik’s community of narrators, proof-listeners, friends, and and fans share memorable audiobook-listening experiences.  Do you have an anecdote to share?  Where do you listen to your audiobooks?  Email Miette and tell us about it.

Here, Iambik narrator Clive Catterall tours New Zealand’s south island to The Light Princess and P.G. Wodehouse:

Like many people, I often listen to audiobooks in my car. But there can be problems. If the book gets too involved either your driving suffers or you miss chunks of the story. When I took a road trip last year I had to stop four or five times after busy road junctions to rewind Ian Richardson’s excellent reading of The Prince by Machiavelli. When it first came out, I bought Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and worked through the cassettes in the car. You have to time your journey just right, though. I arrived at a business meeting on time but had to stay in the car to listen to the end of a chapter. I wasn’t outrageously late…
But the best bit about listening to an audiobook in the car is when the audiobook becomes a part of your journey. I loaded up two mp3 players before our family took a month to tour round the south island of New Zealand. There are big distances between the towns of this achingly beautiful landscape and, even though the views are spectacular, I knew that the long journeys were going to test the patience of our youngest two children. So we listened to stories.

These stories are now part of my memories of that journey. The drive through the Canterbury Plains was made to George MacDonald’s story The Light Princess. We visited Hanmer Springs to the tale of Dr Doolittle. We arrived at Lake Te Anau and The Princess and the Goblin was just finishing. By the time we had circled back up to Nelson we had progressed to Mike by P.G. Wodehouse.

That trip was four years ago. Recently, I listened to the start of The Light Princess for the first time since then. After the first few paragraphs I could remember the smell of the inside of the car: orange peel, sun cream and sea salt.


About Clive Catterall: Clive has always been interested in storytelling, and has recorded audiobooks for LibriVox and Iambik. As well as recording audiobooks , Clive writes and illustrates non-fiction for children.  He has narrated two titles for Iambik to-date: In the Shadow of Swords by Val Gunn (published in print by Errant Press) and Space Captain Smith by Toby Frost (published in print by Myrmidon), in addition to several public domain titles for Librivox including The Light Princess.

Read Clive’s interview with Space Captain Smith author Toby Frost, or learn more about Clive.