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Journeys over, and into, the earth
A couple of weeks ago I was interviewed for a Wired article about LibriVox. I don't know if that
article is going to run in the magazine or not, but I thought about
LibriVox a lot today while out on a long bike ride1 during which
I listened to the first 28 chapters of the LibriVox recording of Jules
Verne's A
Journey to the Interior of the Earth2.
The Wired writer, Michael Erard, asked me why I like LibriVox, given
that the recordings are of a quality that a commercial outfit
such as Audible could fairly
characterize as amateurish. It was a great question, and one I hadn't really
considered. I realized that part of what I
cherish is that these recordings aren't commercial
products. They're pure expressions of a love of literature, and a
desire to share that love.
Michael then made an observation that I think is exactly right.
LibriVox, he suggested, taps a
deep well of emotion. For those of us who were read to as children,
and who have in turn read to our own children, there's just
something special about reading aloud.
This past winter, while tramping through the snow, Gordon Mackenzie, Kristen
McQuillen, Jean
O'Sullivan, and Miette brought one of my
childhood memories to life: Jack London's Call of
the Wild. I would never have made time to revisit that book if it
meant carving out a couple of hours of reading time. But on a winter
hike it was the perfect companion.
Today's summer bike ride was, likewise, the perfect time to revisit
Jules Verne's wonderful geological fantasy. The readers who've taken
me through chapter 27 are Vinny Bove, Mark Bradford, Hugh McGuire, Kristin Luoma, Mur Lafferty, Paul S. Jenkins, Alex Foster, and Kristen McQuillen. Thanks everyone!
You made my four-hour lake tour so much more fun than it was the last time.
1
I continue to use Gmaps Pedometer to chart my
rides. But truth be told, I prefer the quality of the maps in Yahoo's new map service and in MSN
Virtual Earth Windows Live
Local. In principle it should be possible to port behaviors, like
Gmaps Pedometer, from one of these mapping services to any other. In
practice that's easier said than done. Still, I'd love to see a
proof-of-concept map-based application done AJAX-style, but for an
abstract interface that's implemented variously for Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft.
2 I always thought the title was Journey to the Center
of the Earth, and apparently that is the more common
variant. However, the Project
Gutenberg version of the tale uses the less common one, and
LibriVox has close ties with Project Gutenberg. Given that the title
of the original version, in French, seems to have been Voyage au
Centre de la Terre, I wonder how the variant title arose?
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