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With Jhumpa in the Park
By Lavina Melwani
Indian authors are entering
the audio books market.
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What would you say if I told you that
Jhumpa Lahiri and Rohinton Mistry have
been accompanying me on my daily walks
in the park and Deepak Chopra has been
chatting with me about spirituality
in my car as we negotiate the traffic
jams into Manhattan?
Yes, it’s all thanks to audiobooks,
that little miracle which make it possible
to have your eyes and hands free for
jogging, driving or commuting, even
as you listen to the best books. It
is one of the great unsung, unknown
joys of our frenetic, multitasking lives,
this delicious ability to be involved
in something totally creative even as
you chop onions or iron a mountain load
of clothes. You can be listening to
Salman Rushdie as you run errands!
I first discovered the audio tapes
of Rohinton Mistry’s A Fine Balance
in the local library, and used them
in my battered journalist’s tape
recorder the next time I went for my
3-mile walk in sprawling Eisenhower
Park, which is reputed to be even larger
than Manhattan’s Central Park.
It was the perfect way to “read”
Mistry — with no distractions,
no ringing telephones or doorbells.
Just the fabulous greenery and seagulls
and squirrels dashing about —
and yes, I got my one-hour walk out
of the way too.
It’s increasingly hard to cram
literature into our tightly packed day,
but audiobooks are a fun way around
the problem. If your subway commute
is loud and noisy and chaotic, you can
calm yourself by shutting it all out
with Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake.
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For the elderly, the blind or those
with failing eyesight, audiobooks open
up a whole new world and depending on
the subject, can bring famous authors,
experts and travelers into their bedroom.
Audiobooks have been in the mainstream
market for almost half a century, and
one of the earliest publishers is Listening
Library, a division of Random House,
which celebrates its 50th anniversary
this year. According to Katherine Sungarian
of Random House, one of the main purveyors
of audiobooks, audiobooks sell about
10 percent of the print edition. One
of the advantages (or disadvantages,
depending on your point of view) of
audiobooks is that they are frequently
abridged, so it doesn’t take long
to catch up on bestsellers that everyone
is reading, but you have no time to
get to.
It seems a bit strange that tapes are
still being produced when most people
have moved on to CDs. Says Sungarian:
“ Tapes are still being produced,
because that’s what the market
demands. Many people listen to audiobooks
in their cars and while most new cars
have CD players installed in them, not
everyone is driving a new car.”
The good news for lovers of fiction
by South Asian writers is that several
books are available on audio from Salman
Rushdie to Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.
Not all books are available on audio,
but Rushdie fans can pick up East West:
Stories, The Ground Beneath Her Feet,
Fury or The Moor’s Last Sigh.
V.S. Naipaul’s A Bend in the
River as well as his latest —
and perhaps his last —novel Magic
Seeds are both available on audio in
unabridged versions. Divakaruni’s
Mistress of Spices is also available
on audio as is Jhumpa Lahiri’s
The Namesake. Rohinton Mistry’s
A Fine Balance and Family Matters are
both available on audio.
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For those that need their Pico Iyer
fix, there’s Falling of the Map.
This wonderful travel book can take
you on a tour through the world’s
loneliest and most eccentric places,
from Iceland to Bhutan to Argentina,
even as you stand in line at the local
bank or pick up your drycleaning in
your neighborhood.
Kirkus Reviews called it “Immensely
resonant: a funny, stimulating, eminently
humane work.” The book is read
by David Chase, who is British, and
has recorded over 800 books. He has
received eight Earphones Awards, and
has been designated one of the Golden
Voices.
A new wrinkle on the audio game is
the digital audio book, which can be
downloaded and heard on the computer,
burnt to CD or transferred to an Ipod
or MP3 player.
Sites like audible.com offer over 18,000
audio titles. Simplyaudiobooks.com,
an audio book rental site, offers a
book club that gets you unlimited audiobooks
on CD every month. Several other websites
offer free audio book downloads. Most
book store chains, Amazon.com and public
libraries, also stock a selection of
audiobooks.
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The Indian author with the largest
number of audiobooks is definitely Spirituality
Guru Deepak Chopra. He must offer solace
to commuters stuck in traffic jams,
in between the beep of their horns!
His pearls of wisdom can be picked
up in several audiobooks, including
Perfect Health: The Complete Mind/Body
Guide, The Seven Spiritual Laws for
Parents: Guiding your Children to Success
and Fulfillment, The Seven Spiritual
Laws of Yoga: A Practical Guide to Healing
Body, Mind and Spirit, and The Seven
Spiritual Laws of Success: A Practical
Guide to Fulfilling Your Dreams.
Now that’s a quick way to become
a super parent, make a ton of money
and achieve all your dreams —
all the time mopping your kitchen floor!
Sungarian of Random House points out
that audiobooks are an excellent literacy
tool: “ Children can enjoy books
that are a few levels above their reading
level because listening comprehension
can be stronger than reading comprehension.
They also benefit from hearing proper
inflection and learn new words while
listening to audiobooks.”
While there are thousands of mainstream
children’s books to choose from,
some Indian titles are appearing too,
including The Conch Bearer by Chitra
Banerjee Divarkaruni, which takes young
readers half way across the world to
Kolkata into the adventurers of three
young travelers.
For teens, there is a charming book
called Bindi Babes by Narinder Dhami,
who is well known in the U.K. for several
novel,s including Changing Places and
Annie’s Game and also wrote the
novelization of the movie Bend it Like
Beckham.
The story deals with the fabulous Dhillon
sisters,Amber, Jazz and Geena, known
to their friends in school as the Bindi
Babes. Their fun lives — and problems
— are narrated on audio by U.K.
actress Nina Wadia who has starred in
Goodness Gracious Me, which won her
an EMMA award, and in White Teeth and
Bend it Like Beckham.
Indeed, one of the great bonuses of
audiobooks are the narrators, usually
topnotch actors. Rohinton Mistry’s
A Fine Balance for instance, has been
read by the great actress Madhur Jaffrey,
for the Oprah Audio Book Club, conveying
all the power and pathos of Mistry’s
novel.
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Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake,
the first novel by the Pulitzer Prize
winning author, takes us from Calcutta
to Boston, deep into immigrant lives
spanning decades.
The book is read by actress Sarita
Choudhury who has acted in Mississippi
Masala and Kamasutra and was recently
seen in the powerful theater production
of Sakharam Binder. Divakaruni’s
The Conch Bearer is narrated by Alan
Cumming, who won the Tony Drama Desk
award for his performance in the revival
of Cabaret.
But perhaps there’s nothing quite
like having the author himself read
to you! Hari Kunzru’s The Impressionist
— a colorful, over the top tale
of the Raj — is read by the author
himself.
You’re not going to forget the
chameleon-like Pran Nath Razdan, son
of an Indian woman and fathered by an
Englishman, as he reinvents himself
again and again. Especially when you
hear it right from the author’s
mouth.
It’s a cozy relationship as you
walk in the park listening to Hari Kunzru’s
voice as he relates the story right
in your ear. We may grow up but we never
lose our love of tall tales, of having
someone tell us about far off worlds
and fabulous people, of dreams and desires.
Now they are here, whispering in your
ears.
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