Narrators channel their inner Hammett for short story collection

August 28th, 2013 by Kay Weiss · Author/Narrator News

Hammett - The Hunter and Other Stories NarratorsNarrators Donna Postel, Ray Chase, Stephen Bowlby, and Brian Holsopple channel their inner Dashiell Hammett while recording the short story collection The Hunter and Other Stories (pub date 11/5), which includes never before and rarely published stories. The collection both affirms Hammett’s reputation as an author of hard-boiled fiction and broadens it beyond that to explore failed romance, courage in the face of uncertainty, hypocrisy, and crass opportunism. Greg Lawrence, On Purpose Productions, is producing.

Clockwise from left: Donna Postel, Ray Chase, Stephen Bowlby, Brian Holsopple

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The Esperanza Fire – Haunting yet Triumphant

August 26th, 2013 by Kay Weiss · Uncategorized

It’s interesting sometimes to reflect on how you end up settling on a particular book: The hazy day in Minnesota that the weather people attributed to western wildfires, including a huge one in Yosemite. The recent return of a colleague from a vacation in Montana—and that reminding me of my own visit there, many years ago, and the boat tour on the Missouri River, during which I first heard about the Mann Gulch Fire. That recollection of course reminding me of Norman Maclean’s Young Men and Fire, which was about that forest service disaster.

So, although it took more than a few minutes to realize what lead me to my sudden burning—excuse the very bad pun—desire to listen to Norman’s son John N. Maclean’s new book The Esperanza Fire: Arson, Murder and the Agony of Engine 57 (read by Pete Larkin), in retrospect it seems almost inevitable.

Maclean delivers, much as you would expect a writer dubbed “the Bob Woodward of forest fires”
(National Geographic Adventures) on the research, details, and stats: The 12,000 fires a year in the US attributable to arson. The significance of a sloping hillside. The words any California firefighter dreads: “We’re expecting a Santa Ana Wind.” The meaning of the haunting terms “area ignition” and “engine burn over.” The fact that arsonists are almost always serial arsonists.

But he also delivers on the emotion and backstory: The sense that arsonists are as monstrous as any Son of Sam-style mass murderer; and if the arsonist hasn’t actually killed anyone yet, they are simply an unsuccessful mass murderer. The human shortcomings and mistakes of even the most veteran of firefighters. The family nature of the firefighting community and the impact when not just one or two but several fall, and fall within just a few yards of their fellow firefighters—close by and yet not close enough to save.

Maclean also delivers on a story of true crime. While the outcome of the trial—as of the fire—are a matter of public record, he strings together a narrative that, without sensationalism, captures the investigators’ efforts—part determination, part gut instinct, and part luck—that lead to the eventual identification and prosecution of the arsonist. Finally, he takes you inside the court for the first conviction of an arsonist in a capital murder case.

I always appreciate Pete Larkin’s narrations, and I definitely appreciate what he contributes to The Esperanza Fire. For his work on the Black Mask series, he was exactly the hard heavy you’d expect in a noir story. But for nonfiction, and one with a serious outcome, having an even and controlled narrator is indispensable. This isn’t a story that needs a sensationalist narration to convey its depths, and Larkin never fails to supply emotion where it belongs—and nowhere else. It can’t be easy for a narrator to achieve, however. Larkin must constantly move back and forth between the control of his narrator role and the multitudinous, emotional voices of the firefighters, their family members, and the investigators. He pulls it off smoothly.

The Esperanza Fire is ultimately a story about fighting against odds to do what is right—and how easy it can be to do incredible wrong. Although spoken in another context, a few words spoken by one firefighter form a cautionary warning for every camper, smoker, or garbage burner in California—local or visiting. It’s a warning as well for every would-be arsonist: “You don’t let a fire burn in southern Cal.”

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Latino Americans set for HighBridge release (and PBS Broadcast!) in September 2013

August 21st, 2013 by Frank Randall · Acquisition News

HighBridge is delighted to announce it will be publishing the audio edition of Latino Americans by longtime public media favorite Ray Suarez in September 2013. Not only is the book a landmark history of the Latino role in shaping the Americas – and the US in particular, but it captures the sprawling, emotional, personality-rich tale that will be presented by the accompanying six-hour PBS documentary also set for broadcast in September. Suarez will be featured as a commentator throughout the series, and much to the delight of audiobook fans familiar with his stellar career delivering news and conversation at PBS and NPR, he has made himself available to read the audio version of the book. Latino Americans offers the rare opportunity to hear an award-winning journalist and spoken-word professional make his audiobook narration debut while reading his own work. Listeners are in for a treat.

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Something about Her

August 19th, 2013 by Steve Lehman · Uncategorized

Have you ever had to periodically stop listening to an audiobook because it was so intense you just needed a break? Probably not all that uncommon with good thrillers. But with a memoir? That’s what my wife and I had to do on a recent road trip during which we tuned in to Her by Christa Parravani. Riveting throughout, Parravani’s story of her life as an identical twin before and after her sister Cara’s decline into drug use and untimely death is loaded with incidents that are nothing less than harrowing. Such as the details of Christa’s own descent into addiction and destructive promiscuity following Cara’s death. Such as the moment by moment description of Cara’s savage rape—related unflinchingly by Christa from Cara’s point of view.

Her is read by the author with an even, almost understated intonation. One reviewer was critical of this, claiming the author’s seeming dispassion dulled the emotional impact of the story. I couldn’t disagree more. For me, Parravani’s steady modulations give the reading a powerful emotional authenticity, as if what you’re hearing emanates directly, sentence by sentence, from some deep inner locus where anguish and regret and trauma and love are smoldering in memory. To have read it any other way might have come off as mere performance, turning genuine feeling into simple melodrama. However, by relating this excruciatingly intimate story in her own measured, unwavering voice, a story in which no one is spared, not their distant father and controlling father-surrogates, not their well-meaning but peripatetic mother, not Cara, who suffered so much as she spiraled to her destruction, and especially not herself, Parravani forces upon the listener the uncomfortable sensation of eavesdropping outside a confessional. And that uneasiness is exactly what ratchets up the intensity so much that at times you simply have to hit the pause button while you catch your breath.

Her is lyrically written, gut-wrenchingly honest, profoundly moving, cathartic and redemptive, and, ultimately, hopeful. Or as Booklist’s starred review put it, “raw and unstoppable”—which pretty much nails Parravani’s narration as well.

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Narrator News

August 14th, 2013 by Josh Brown · Author/Narrator News

HighBridge is proud to announce that author Sharon Salzberg is returning to the studio with producer Paul Ruben to record her new book, Real Happiness at Work, available this December. Real Happiness at Work is a follow-up to Salzberg’s previous title, Real Happiness, which she also narrated.
Real Happiness at Work

Real Happiness at Work offers solutions for peace and productivity in the workplace with short, subtle meditations to use pre- or post-meeting, in coping with unreasonable people, in finding meaning in seemingly meaningless tasks, and for dealing with mistakes.

Sharon Salzberg is co-founder of the Insight Meditation Society and is the author of several books. A teacher for more than 30 years, she has been a contributing editor at O, The Oprah Magazine, and has been featured in Time, Real Simple, Good Housekeeping, Self, and many other periodicals.

Simon Prebble
In other HighBridge news, acclaimed narrator Simon Prebble just finished up recording both Scaredy Cat and Sleepyhead, two thrillers by Mark Billingham both available in November. Sleepyhead introduces Detective Investigator Tom Thorne in a gripping new British police procedural series. Simon Prebble is a veteran narrator of nearly 300 titles.

David Drummond
And finally, HighBridge has recently confirmed that David Drummond will be reading The Tell by Matthew Hertenstein. The Tell draws on rigorous research in psychology and brain science to reveal that our intuition is surprisingly good at using small clues to make big predictions, and shows how we can make better decisions by homing in on the right details. David Drummond is a prolific actor and narrator who recently narrated Inside the Box for HighBridge.

Stay tuned to this blog for more narrator updates, as well as other exciting audiobook news from HighBridge!

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What a Trip! Philip Caputo’s The Longest Road

August 12th, 2013 by Gladys · Uncategorized

The Longest RoadI knew Philip Caputo’s The Longest Road: Overland in Search of America, from Key West to the Arctic Ocean (read by Pete Larkin) would be my kind of “listen.” I love to travel and when I’m stuck at home, I love traveling vicariously through others’ stories and photos. And the more adventurous, the better.

Acclaimed journalist and novelist Philip Caputo, his wife Leslie, and their two Irish Setters set off on a definite adventure—an epic road trip that takes them from the southernmost tip of the continental US, Key West—to the northernmost (as navigable by car), Deadhorse, Alaska—all in a 1962 Airstream named Ethel, and all by avoiding the interstate highways. Along the way, they encounter every imaginable kind of American from small towns and the fascinating country in between—places many of us forget even exist.

I was especially captivated by narrator Pete Larkin, who brings the travelogue alive with his nuances in accent and dialect. The regional variety of geography, place and people were highlighted by Larkin’s personable and expressive reading. Larkin must have loved this story, and it shows. I really can’t imagine experiencing this book any other way, given the interviews and conversations generously recounted throughout.

Laugh-out-loud funny at times, touching and heartbreaking at others, I was fascinated as I re-visited places I’ve been, reminded of places I’ve always wanted to visit, and introduced to towns and vast swaths of America I know nothing about.

A theme and recurring question asked to folks Caputo encountered along the way was: given that our country seems more polarized than ever, what holds this vast and diverse country together, if in fact you think anything does? From recent immigrants to those who can trace their heritage in this country back many decades, the responses Caputo receives to this multi-layered question come in many forms and surprising ways—and some admit they have no idea!

The seasoned reporter in Caputo rises to the occasion as he inserts bits and pieces of history and nicely ties them to place. I was especially taken with the journey north of the border as he hits the Alaska Highway to his final destination along the North Slope.

My enthusiasm for undertaking such a trip is tempered by Caputo’s wry recounting of the trials and tribulations of traveling for months in incredibly close quarters through challenging terrain and climate, even with those you love the most in this world! Four months and 17,000 miles: what a trip. Ok, I DO want to get back on the road! And so will you.

“In the end though, the journey had been the destination…” –Philip Caputo, The Longest Road

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Across the Nightingale Floor

August 7th, 2013 by Josh Brown · Uncategorized

It’s like Harry Potter, but with ninjas instead of wizards.

That’s the best and easiest way I can describe Across the Nightingale Floor.

Lian Hearn’s Tales of the Otori trilogy is fantasy with the slightest twinge of history. Set in a fictional feudal Japan, Across the Nightingale Floor takes place immediately after the events of the fictional Battle of Yaegahara, quite obviously based on the real-life Battle of Sekigahara, which took place in Japan in 1600, and was the decisive battle that ultimately led to Tokugawa Ieyasu seizing control of all of Japan, securing the Tokugawa clan as the last shogunate of Japan, ruling for more than 250 years.

Across the Nightingale FloorThe book begins with a young boy named Tomasu, who lives in a remote mountain village. The people of his village are members of the persecuted Hidden (historically, think Christians), and Tomasu returns from the forest one evening to discover his entire village has been slaughtered by the Tohan clan, under the leadership of Iida Sadamu, the most powerful lord of all the clans in all the land. In a panic, Tomasu flees, and is discovered and rescued by Lord Shigeru of the Otori clan. Shigeru vows to adopt and protect Tomasu, and renames him Takeo. Oh, did I mention that there is no love lost between the Otori and Tohan clans? Shigeru blames Iida for the death of his brother, who, coincidentally, looks strikingly similar to Tomasu/Takeo.

Takeo is raised in Lord Shigeru’s home in Hagi. He eventually comes to realize that he has special abilities, most noteworthy his hearing has become highly acute. Takeo begins tutelage under Muto Kenji of the Muto clan, one of the several clans that make up the Tribe, a group/network of highly skilled spies and assassins. Kenji divulges that Takeo’s father was once the greatest assassin of the Tribe. Kenji then begins to train Takeo in the arts of the Tribe.

Takeo soon finds himself struggling with three separate identities: a member of the Hidden, Lord Shigeru’s son and heir to the Otori clan, and an assassin of the Tribe.

Takeo then travels with Lord Shigeru to Tsuwano, where Lord Iida Sadamu has arranged for Shigeru to marry the young and beautiful Shirakawa Kaede, who had been held hostage by the Noguchi clan since she was seven. Shigeru and Kaede’s union is meant to further unite the land under Lord Iida’s control and bring peace among the clans. Shigeru, however, has other plans.

This enveloping story is enhanced by the narration from Kevin Gray and Aiko Nakasone; with Kevin Gray narrating the Takeo scenes, and Aiko Nakasone narrating the Kaede scenes. The voices, accents, and pronunciations are expertly executed, which is especially important with a story in an exotic setting.

While Across the Nightingale Floor is widely considered a fantasy novel, Hearn draws heavily on certain historical events and geographic locations of Japan, and makes great use of samurai imagery. The characters are well-developed, and while the story has plenty of action, there are well-placed romance elements among the characters. I think Across the Nightingale Floor and the subsequent books in the trilogy would make a fantastic movie or mini-series.

Across the Nightingale Floor
Across the Nightingale Floor (Tales of the Otori book one)
by Lian Hearn
Read by Kevin Gray and Aiko Nakasone

Grass for His Pillow
Grass for His Pillow (Tales of the Otori book two)
by Lian Hearn
Read by Kevin Gray and Aiko Nakasone

Brilliance of the Moon
Brilliance of the Moon (Tales of the Otori book three)
by Lian Hearn
Read by Kevin Gray and Aiko Nakasone

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Featured Audio Giveaway – August 2013 – The Chaos Imperative (Brafman, Pollack)

August 6th, 2013 by Kay Weiss · Featured Audio Giveaways

The Chaos Imperative

How Chance and Disruption Increase Innovation, Effectiveness, and Success

by Ori Brafman and Judah Pollack; read by Drew Birdseye

Hear an excerpt

Make chaos work for you, not against you.

Ori Brafman, bestselling co-author of Sway: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior, and leadership guru Judah Pollack give us a real mind-changer as they reveal how organizations can drive growth and profits by giving contained chaos and disruption the space to flourish, generating new ideas that trigger innovation.

We at HighBridge are familiar with Ori Brafman through another of his books, Sway: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior.

But we were also fortunate enough to hear him speak at a publishing industry event—and we were blown away!

He has a fantastic way of weaving together stories and case studies and neuroscience, medieval history, video gaming, and a just a remarkable range of ideas to really shift one’s thinking into a more creative mode.

________________________

How to Win This Audio CD

1. Send an email to newsletter@highbridgeaudio.com
2. Put the words “Chaos” in the subject line.

Entries must be received by no later than 8/23/2013.
See the Program Details for more information.

________________________


Last Giveaway Winner

Congratulations to PATRICIA JOVEN, winner of the last giveaway, The Shanghai Factor. Thanks to all who participated.

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Stamberg and Co. Break Down Barriers – NPR American Chronicles: Women’s Equality

August 5th, 2013 by Frank Randall · Uncategorized

NPR American Chronicles: Women's EqualityAs part of the NPR American Chronicles series, listeners might be fearful of an over-academic treatment of a subject that is very personal to many. Women’s Equality is nothing of the sort. I can’t recommend this audio enough as an example of essential, inspiring, primary audio content presented in an artistic and entertaining manner. Susan Stamberg, a feminist groundbreaker herself, hosts a story in which she plays an integral part, becoming the first female host of a national nightly news program back in 1972. She introduces each of these 28 mini-documentaries culled from the NPR archives with a radiant, knowing glow that a sister, mother, cousin or daughter might exhibit at a long overdue family reunion. You can hear it in her voice: She was there when many of these events took place, and she takes pride in the progress highlighted by this audio collection.

The fight for women’s equality has had proponents throughout history, but the version assembled here begins in Seneca Falls in 1848 with the Declaration of Sentiments presented by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. While this and many other of the early events in the movement are well covered, the real treasure for me are all of the living voices we hear from the front lines of the battle, many of which have been unearthed from NPR’s own early coverage of key events. Included, of course, is Gloria Steinem talking about the founding of Ms., and Geraldine Ferraro on her landmark run for VPOTUS, but there are just as many unsung heroes given voice: Living suffragist Leona Hansberger, the very human plaintiff in Roe v. Wade Norma McCorvey, and one of the first women in a management position at Ford, Dorothy Gilman. Presented together, these voices form an exuberant, diverse, and fascinating chorus, with individuals singing variations of understandable dissonance but equal relevance. The resulting music is an inspiration.

Susan Stamberg. Photo credit: Antony Nagelmann

Susan Stamberg. Photo credit: Antony Nagelmann

The engaging Ms. Stamberg invites you into each story, providing fact and personality-filled historical context. You can hear the smile in her voice convey the humor and admiration that colorful figures such as Bella Abzug, Shirley Chisholm and Betty Friedan require when painting a whole, human portrait. And she is an expert guide through the setbacks, near-misses and triumphs encountered by the early women’s suffrage movement. Susan B. Anthony, Victoria Woodhull, Jeannette Rankin, Elizabeth Cady Stanton – they are all well profiled here. But perhaps my favorite segment covering the events of the early movement also happens to be the oldest example of primary audio on the collection: We are introduced to the actual voice of Frances Perkins, FDR’s choice for Secretary of Labor in 1933, and the first female cabinet member of the United States. Not only did she fight early battles for women’s rights, but she was also responsible for creating key elements in FDR’s New Deal with a vision that would benefit but also transcend the movement. Her initiatives included the Civilian Conservation Corps, Public Works Administration, and the Social Security Act. Simply amazing. I’m positive each listener will make similar discoveries among the many extraordinary individuals featured here.

Since the actual events in this history don’t follow a strictly linear path, neither does NPR’s presentation, and the collection benefits from this loosely chronological approach. Producer Kerry Thompson miraculously condenses a sprawling social history into an illuminating three hours. The result is much like a fine quilt, created by many hands, hearts, and voices. This is an audio we’re proud to have had a hand in creating.

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New Camilla Läckberg Coming May 2014

July 31st, 2013 by Steve Lehman · Acquisition News

Camilla LackbergHighBridge has acquired rights to record The Hidden Child, the fifth in the Erica Falck/Patrik Hedström mystery series by Swedish writer Camilla Läckberg. The audiobook will be published in May 2014 simultaneously with the hardcover from Pegasus. For those not into the Scandanavian mystery/thriller phenomenon or else living on the moon the past few years, Läckberg, the author of The Ice Princess, The Preacher, The Stonecutter, and The Stranger, is the #1 bestselling female author in Europe and possessor of a rapidly expanding American fan base as well. Like The Stranger, this one will be read by the incomparable Simon Vance.

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