Freebie Friday
When you need your eyes and hands for something other than a good book, there's the audio route. I prefer MP3s for their versatility. You can burn them on CDs and play them in most modern CD or DVD players, upload them to an iPod or stream them to a networked media device. And if that isn't your cup of tea, you can always burn them back into Audio CD format.
I'm cheap. If someone offers a good free product, it draws more attention than a paid one. Below are some free audio book resources online. All legal. All public domain.
The Human-Read audio books at Project Gutenberg contains a series of LibriVox recordings. What sets LibriVox apart is it's community oriented style. People record themselves reading a chapter of a book then submit it. Though most books appear to be read by the same person, there are times that different chapters are read by different people throughout the experience.
I try to avoid the automated text to speech processes. The old ones were horrific and sounded more like a 1980's TI-99. The newer ones sound like they recorded a person speaking a few hundred words then vicariously cut and pasted the audio. Although an improvement, it lacks the tonal inflection and emotion that makes story listening a pleasurable experience.
Of course, the best way to get enjoyable audio from a good book is to have a loved one read it. I read to my children almost every night and even record a few books for times when I'm away on business. Reading becomes interactive as the children start asking questions and adding their own commentary. It gives me insight to their likes and dislikes and provides the benefit of reminiscing over childrens' books that have been long forgotten from my own youth.
I'm cheap. If someone offers a good free product, it draws more attention than a paid one. Below are some free audio book resources online. All legal. All public domain.
The Human-Read audio books at Project Gutenberg contains a series of LibriVox recordings. What sets LibriVox apart is it's community oriented style. People record themselves reading a chapter of a book then submit it. Though most books appear to be read by the same person, there are times that different chapters are read by different people throughout the experience.
I try to avoid the automated text to speech processes. The old ones were horrific and sounded more like a 1980's TI-99. The newer ones sound like they recorded a person speaking a few hundred words then vicariously cut and pasted the audio. Although an improvement, it lacks the tonal inflection and emotion that makes story listening a pleasurable experience.
Of course, the best way to get enjoyable audio from a good book is to have a loved one read it. I read to my children almost every night and even record a few books for times when I'm away on business. Reading becomes interactive as the children start asking questions and adding their own commentary. It gives me insight to their likes and dislikes and provides the benefit of reminiscing over childrens' books that have been long forgotten from my own youth.
Labels: audiobooks, books, children, freebie, Freebie Friday, storytime