Janet Gogerty's Blog: Sandscript - Posts Tagged "audio-arcadia"
Sandscript goes Audio
'Books On Wheels' takes books to the housebound. Library staff choose the books and we, the volunteers from the Royal Voluntary Service, pack boxes full of books into car boots and set off on our rounds. All over the country similar schemes operate. Many of our customers are elderly, no longer driving and even if able to go out for a walk, could not manage to carry home a heavy bag of books or leap onto a bus with them. Others are disabled or have a chronic illness, but every person has a file with their interests and favourite authors to help the librarians make a selection. One lovely gentle lady has over twenty murder mysteries every three weeks; to her amusement, when her daughter took her to see Agatha Christie's 'The Mousetrap' she didn't guess who did it. Other readers enjoy travel books or large colourfully illustrated craft books to give them ideas for hobbies they can do at home.
But it is not just paper books we bring. For the visually impaired or those whose sight is fading, the audio book is available on cassette tapes or CDs. Cassettes can easily be stopped and the place saved, unless the listener falls asleep. Some long novels can have a box of twelve cassettes and if one is missing it is mayhem. Anyone who has ever lost anything at home will know how easy it is for objects to disappear off the face of the earth.
Both tapes and CDs have now been superceded by audio downloads. As with Kindles and e-readers, the computer literate housebound now have the whole world of books at their finger tips. But audio books are also a boon to travellers. The commuter on the bus or train can plug in their earphones and listen to a good novel in peace. No more elbowing the person sitting next to them while reading a newspaper or standing in a crowded tube train hanging on to a pole with one hand and trying to hold open a paperback with the other.
Now I can listen to one of my own short stories. Audio Arcadia are holding monthly competitions for anthologies of short stories. My story, 'The Ambassadors', was one of four winning stories to be professionally recorded for Volume One 'A Good Brandy'.
Visit their website if you would like to download the book, or listen to a preview of the first story.
http://www.audioarcadia.com/product/a...
But it is not just paper books we bring. For the visually impaired or those whose sight is fading, the audio book is available on cassette tapes or CDs. Cassettes can easily be stopped and the place saved, unless the listener falls asleep. Some long novels can have a box of twelve cassettes and if one is missing it is mayhem. Anyone who has ever lost anything at home will know how easy it is for objects to disappear off the face of the earth.
Both tapes and CDs have now been superceded by audio downloads. As with Kindles and e-readers, the computer literate housebound now have the whole world of books at their finger tips. But audio books are also a boon to travellers. The commuter on the bus or train can plug in their earphones and listen to a good novel in peace. No more elbowing the person sitting next to them while reading a newspaper or standing in a crowded tube train hanging on to a pole with one hand and trying to hold open a paperback with the other.
Now I can listen to one of my own short stories. Audio Arcadia are holding monthly competitions for anthologies of short stories. My story, 'The Ambassadors', was one of four winning stories to be professionally recorded for Volume One 'A Good Brandy'.
Visit their website if you would like to download the book, or listen to a preview of the first story.
http://www.audioarcadia.com/product/a...
Published on June 23, 2014 15:22
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Tags:
agatha-christie, audio-arcadia, audio-books, books-on-wheels, library, royal-voluntary-service, rvs, the-mousetrap, volume-one-a-good-brandy
Sandscript
I like to write first drafts with pen and paper; at home, in busy cafes, in the garden, at our beach hut... even sitting in a sea front car park waiting for the rain to stop I get my note book out. We
I like to write first drafts with pen and paper; at home, in busy cafes, in the garden, at our beach hut... even sitting in a sea front car park waiting for the rain to stop I get my note book out. We have a heavy clockwork lap top to take on holidays, so I can continue with the current novel.
I had a dream when I was infant school age, we set off for the seaside, but when we arrived the sea was a mere strip of water in the school playground. Now I actually live near the sea and can walk down the road to check it's really there. To swim in the sea then put the kettle on and write in the beach hut is a writer's dream. ...more
I had a dream when I was infant school age, we set off for the seaside, but when we arrived the sea was a mere strip of water in the school playground. Now I actually live near the sea and can walk down the road to check it's really there. To swim in the sea then put the kettle on and write in the beach hut is a writer's dream. ...more
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