Tag Archives: johnny heller

Johnny Heller: The Audio Audiobooks Interview

Adam Boretz -- July 26th, 2012

Here at Listen Up, we’re very excited to launch our new Audio Audio Interview Series — Q&As with narrators, audio publishers, and authors, all recorded live, and all presented to you, The Listener, in audio format.

And today, we start things off with a bang: my one-on-one chat the inimitable Johnny Heller, one of the industry’s best narrators, winner of multiple Audie Awards, Listen Up Awards, Golden Earphone Awards, and one of Audiofile’s Top 50 voices of the 20th Century.

Last week, Johnny and I got together at the Recorded Books studio and chatted about everything from his latest project and celebrity impressions to preparing for a recording session and remaining true to the author’s vision. Along the way, Johnny offers tips to aspiring narrators and answers some probing questions sent in from fans via Twitter. And, needless to say, things get a little saucy.

Listen Up would like to give special thanks to Recorded Books, Rob Granniss of Brick Shop Audiobooks, and engineer and editor extraordinaire Marc Avila for all their help and support.

So, without further ado, we give you Johnny Heller: The Audio Audio Interview:

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Now Hear This: June Is Audiobook Month!

Adam Boretz -- June 11th, 2012

June is Audiobook Month is in full swing — with everyone getting in on the act with giveaways, interviews, awards, tributes, deals, and much, much more.

Maybe you’ve seen this #JIAM2012 post from Emily’s Reading Room. Or this Ode to the Audiobook. Or this interview on Home Cooked Books with our pal Michele Cobb about The Audiobook as a Shared Experience and all the great #JIAM2012 deals at Tantor Media.

And, of course, there’s the Daily #JIAM2012 Video, from StudioRFM featuring Robert Fass and the likes of Johnny Heller, Simon Vance, Dion Graham, Simon Prebble — just to name a few.

Here’s Video Number 1 to get you started — you’re going to want to watch them all!

What are you doing for #JIAM2012? Let us know is our Comments Section.

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BEA 2012 Wrap-Up: APAC, Audie Awards, and More!

Adam Boretz -- June 8th, 2012

Here at Listen Up, we had an amazing BEA — we were at APAC, we were at The Audie Awards, we were at the Audio Tea, we were even at Johnny Heller’s amazing Listening Lounge.

What’s that you say? You missed BEA? You couldn’t make it to the Audies? Have no fear. Publishers Weekly has you covered. Check out our coverage of All Things Audio at BEA:

BEA 2012: Tina Fey’s ‘Bossypants’ Wins Big at 17th Annual Audie Awards

Tina Fey’s Bossypants was named Audiobook of the Year and Allan Wolf’s The Watch that Ends the Night: Voices from the Titanic won the award for Distinguished Achievement in Production last night at the 17th annual Audies Gala in New York City.

It was the third consecutive year that a Hachette Audio title grabbed the Audie Award’s top honor, with Fey’s self-narrated Bossypants also winning in the Biography/Memoir category. The Watch that Ends the Night — narrated by Michael Page, Phil Gigante, Christopher Lane, Laural Merlington, and Angela Dawe — was one of three Brilliance Audio titles to take home awards.

For the rest of the story, CLICK HERE.
BEA 2012: Audio All Day

With the growth of online sales and digital formats, the way consumers discover and create buzz about new audiobooks is changing, said Goodreads CEO Otis Chandler in his keynote address that kicked off a busy Audio Publishers Association Conference at the Javits Center on Monday.

With fewer bricks-and-mortar bookstores and more conversations about audiobooks taking place on the Internet and over social networks, audio publishers must leverage online tools to launch and market upcoming releases, asserted Chandler.

For the rest of the story, CLICK HERE.
BEA 2012: Bestselling Authors Hold Court at Audiobook Tea

Lee Child, Debbie Macomber, and Daniel Handler joined narrator and host Dion Graham to celebrate the audiobook industry yesterday at the 12th Annual Audiobook and Author Tea at BookExpo America.

The event, sponsored by the Audio Publishers Association, featured a series of often-hilarious remarks from Child, Macomber, and Handler and concluded with an audience Q&A session.

For the rest of the story, CLICK HERE.

And while BEA is over, June is Audiobook Month has only just begun. We’ll be back on Monday with all the latest #JIAM2012 news, giveaways, updates, and a whole lot more.
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Now Playing: The Zen of Zombie

Adam Boretz -- February 2nd, 2012

According to its publishers, this audiobook will help you “reanimate yourself for success with advice on life, love, and work from the undead!” And let’s be honest, in these troubled times, we need all the help we can get. So, why not take a page from zombies.

This audio edition of Scott Kenemore’s The Zen of Zombie — which will let you “start living your life the undead way” — is narrated by the great Johnny Heller and available from Tantor Audio. Check out THIS LINK for an audio excerpt and get your copy today!

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Audiobook Q&A: Johnny Heller

Adam Boretz -- December 6th, 2011

This week, our Audiobook Q&A Series returns and we chat with Johnny Heller about his recent work narrating The Postmortal, his latest projects, his significant experience ripping bodices, and the importance of always knowing where the restroom is located.

1. You recently narrated Drew Magary’s The Postmortal for Tantor. How was that experience? What was the biggest challenge?

Narrating always has challenges — the major one being that we narrators know that we will not be able to please every fan of a given book! Our job is to be a conduit for the author’s truth — I know that sounds all “actory” but it’s the best way I can explain what we do.

I don’t always get to narrate books I love or would willingly read on my own, but The Postmortal was awesome. I loved the book and I told Magary that I thought he was brilliant. It’s just a tremendous read that I hope is going to be a tremendous listen. My biggest challenge with this title was living up to my own expectations — of making my narration as excellent as the printed word. I think I did, but then again I’m biased! 

2. This is the first book by Magary that you’ve narrated. Does that newness make the job of narrating an audiobook more difficult? Do you think that when you narrate multiple books by the same author, you develop a relationship with their work and are able to slip back into the author’s writing?

Absolutely. When you narrate a series of titles by the same author you get in touch with his rhythms and — hopefully — get to create recurring characters. I get to do that with the Richard Castle books (Naked Heat, Heat Wave, and Heat Rises), with Michael Wiley’s Joe Kozmarsky series for Blackstone, Michael Buckley’s NERDS series, Troy Soos’ Mickey Rawlings mysteries, and Dan Gutman’s baseball card time travel stories all for Recorded Books. Hopefully the author likes the way you handle his or her characters and it begins somehow more collaborative. 

3. The Postmortal is a thriller about a pre-apocalyptic world in which people cannot die of old age — which must make for an exciting audiobook. Does reading a thriller make the process of recording the audiobook easier because you know readers will be engaged at certain points? Do you ever find yourself getting swept away by the story when you’re narrating a thriller?

I don’t know if I’m any more engaged in a thriller than in a biography or a young adult title. Hopefully, if I’ve done my job, the listener will have no idea that I like one book any more than another. 

Truth be told — of course I like thrillers and funny books more than I like other titles I narrate.  I think the audiobook moves along better and easier if the story is good and the author is good and I love the book. I’ve done lots of medical, motivational, and business titles, but it’s much easier to read a thriller — cuz they’re thrilling! Continue reading

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