For Volunteers

More ideas for listening

Posted on April 30, 2009 by | Posted in about LibriVox, For Volunteers, News, Uncategorized, Weekly Picks | Comments: 10 Comments on More ideas for listening

The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim.
Four women leave dreary post-WWI London for a month in an Italian castle. Highly recommended by listeners. Read by Diana Kiesners.

Multilingual Poetry Collection 004.
Poems in Arabic, Chinese, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Latin, Latvian, Portuguese, Russian and Turkish.

Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens.
A wonderful recording of one of Dickens’ masterpieces. Read by Mil Nicholson.

The Magic World by E. Nesbit.
An enchanting and timeless collection of short stories by this much-loved author. Read by Ruth Golding.

King Lear by William Shakespeare.
This recording marked the 400th anniversary of the first performance of the play on December 26th 1606, and still holds the Librivox record for a major dramatic work – being completed in just a week.

History of the United States, Vol. I: The Colonial Period by Charles and Mary Beard.
The first volume of this seven-part work by the most influential American historian of the early 20th century. Volumes II – V are also available, and Volume VI is currently being recorded.

Zum ewigen Frieden. Ein philosophischer Entwurf von Immanuel Kant.
In der Abhandlung „Zum ewigen Frieden” wendet Kant die Grundsätze seiner Moralphilosophie auf die Beziehungen zwischen Staaten an. Aufgenommen von Christian Al-Kadi.

The Gerrard Street Mystery and Other Weird Tales
by John Charles Dent.
Spooky stories read by Moira Fogarty.

White Fang by Jack London.
Written as a companion to Jack London’s successful Call of the Wild (1903), this is the tale of a wild dog born in the wild and eventually brought to civilization.

Have fun!

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New additions to the catalog

Posted on April 24, 2009 by | Posted in about LibriVox, For Volunteers, News, Uncategorized | Comments: 5 Comments on New additions to the catalog

Thanks to the good people at Archive.org, we are now beginning to add the new items that you have been waiting for! :D

A number of new works have already been cataloged thanks to our intrepid world-wide and sleep deprived MC volunteers, and they’ll continue to chip away at the backlog just as fast as they can. Keep an eye on the New Releases feed for new audio as it becomes available.

And, gentle listeners, as always LibriVox needs you to point out any problems that may occur with the new process. Please post any observed weirdness in the Error Reports forum.

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New staff picks

Posted on April 15, 2009 by | Posted in about LibriVox, For Volunteers, News, Uncategorized, Weekly Picks | Comments: 3 Comments on New staff picks

A new selection of recordings for you to try!

The Voyage of the Beagle by Charles Darwin
2009 is the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s birth. This is a vivid and exciting travel memoir as well as a detailed scientific field journal, read by various readers.

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
Different characters (and readers) in turn take up the narrative of this mystery novel.

The Cosmic Computer by H. Beam Piper
Sci-fi read by Mark Nelson

Märchen 1 by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm
Diese Sammlung umfaßt so berühmte Geschichten wie Rapunzel, Hänsel und Gretel, Rumpelstilzchen.


Rupert of Hentzau
by Anthony Hope
The sequel to ‘The Prisoner of Zenda‘ read by Andy Minter.

Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers
A Lord Peter Wimsey who-done-it read by Kristin Hughes and Kara Shallenberg.

Heidi by Johanna Spyri
The classic children’s story read by Kara Shallenberg.

Heretics by G. K. Chesterton
One of the best known of Chesterton’s works of Christian apologetics, read by Ray Clare.

The Fairyland of Science by Arabella Buckley
Perhaps a little twee in places, but there is still good science for children in this book, written and read (by various readers) in a very accessible way.

La Comtesse d’Escarbagnas par Molière
Une comédie-ballet, cette pièce de théâtre est lu en francais par plusieurs lecteurs.

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WANTED: December Community Podcast contributions (txt/mp3)

Posted on December 2, 2008 by | Posted in about LibriVox, For Volunteers, Librivox Community Podcast | Comments: 1 Comment on WANTED: December Community Podcast contributions (txt/mp3)

Cori writes:

Podcasts are fun. LibriVox podcasts are particularly fun. Please help me put the “Community” in “LibriVox Community Podcast” and consider contributing to one or more of the podcasts planned below.

11th December: LibriVox and the Daily Commute — travel tips for literate listeners
I’ve noticed people talking in the forums about MP3 players in cars, noise-cancelling ear buds on trains … and I know some of you out there listen to LV while canoeing. Please record / message me any travel-related hints you like! Equipment, cautions, how to choose stories, great-listens for journeys you’ve taken (mention where you were going, too, if you like.)
DEADLINE: 4pm GMT next Wednesday 10th Dec (gives me a bit more time to work on it.)

18th December: LibriVoxing Start-up – quick answers to some/all of the following questions:
* What aspect of a project gets your attention most? (Are you attracted by authors you like, projects BCed by friends, particular genres, or what?)
* How do you decide what to record?
* What do you HAVE to do before starting to record?
* What one piece of practical advice would you give to a completely new LibriVoxer? (please assume they already know about “have fun”.)
DEADLINE: 4pm GMT, Weds 17th Dec.

25th December: The best audio-text things you’ve listened to this year!
Commercial audiobooks, podiobooks, podcasts and everything LibriVox. Let’s really celebrate our ears. Just record your part … though if you have the energy, it would be really helpful if you could pick out a sample of any LibriVox books you mention, too.
DEADLINE: 4pm GMT, Monday 22nd December. STRICTLY NO LATE ADMITTANCE

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Possible Queries and Their Answers:

Why bother? Won’t someone else contribute? Actually, no. Some generous people give very freely of their time and text / voice, but mostly I have to PM people directly and ask for podcast content. It’d be lovely not to have to do that at all this month!

Doesn’t it have to be in some whacky audio file format? How long should it be? Nope, regular MP3 will do. Though if you’d like to send me any other format (small WAV, FLAC, OGG, trained parrot, etc.), feel free! Can be as short or as long (within reason) as you like. 30secs is probably the minimum … 5 mins will probably be edited / pruned. Longer than that, and I’ll probably contact you about your own show / an interview / somesuch.

Isn’t it hard to just talk into a microphone without printed / pre-written words? It differs for people, but myself, yes, I think so. I almost always have a script which I write beforehand. It doesn’t take long … I pretty much type out what think anyway, and then I take a bit of time to polish it up and make it sound great. Give it a go.

I can’t think of anything clever / funny / cool. That’s fine, you’ll get paid exactly the same anyway. (Free PD audiobook of your choice! Over 400 days’worth to choose from!) Our podcasts are just meant to be fun to listen to, so you really can just say anything and it’ll be alright.

I can’t record, is there another way to contribute? YES! Just PM me or email, and I’ll get someone to record what you write. Please state if you have a strong preference about voice gender or accent — although if I can’t match that, I’ll record it myself, so be warned. See contact details on this post, or contribute via the Comments below!

I have a WAY better idea for a podcast than any of these! Neato! It’s a lot of fun to put together a podcast, and if you’d like to give it a go, we’ll help in any way we can (you just need to do the audio, for starters, I’ll upload / blog / RSS-feed it.) Or PM me if you don’t feel like hosting and I’ll use it / pass it on to another host.

I have another question?!?! Just post below and ask it.

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