Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

All ears for audiobooks

Long commutes and work pressures that leave no time for reading are some of the reasons why Indians are tuning in to dramatized readings

- Samhita Chakrabort­y letters@htlive.com ■ Samhita Chakrabort­y is an independen­t journalist ■ ■ ■

Jack Sprat could eat no fat,/ His wife could eat no lean/ And so betwixt the two of them, /They licked the platter clean.

Swaddled in woollens, Ruskin Bond has been eating “a lot of Christmas pudding” and regaling all the kids in his family with hilarious rhymes as they sit around the fire on freezing winter evenings in his cottage in the hills of Mussoorie. Rare would be the booklover who wouldn’t give an arm and a leg to be a part of this cosy gathering. While that may remain a dream, having Ruskin Bond read to us in the comfort of our homes is now very much possible. The 85-year-old is among an increasing number of Indian writers who are recording their works in the form of audiobooks. And while spoken word books and speech-to-text have been around since the 1930s, it’s only in the 1980s that audiobooks as we know them gained popularity, aided by affordable audio tapes and CDS. Now apps have made entire libraries available on platforms like Amazon Audible, Google Books, Kobo Gutenberg Reader and Storytel, to name a few.

While most books are read by voice artists, and actors from both screen and stage, some are read by the writers themselves. Ruskin Bond has recorded half a dozen of his Puffin titles like Getting Granny’s Glasses, The Wind on Haunted Hill, and Tree Lover. “I have to confess, I had practised a little,” he laughed when asked how the recording went off. “It took me back in time to when I was in London and I did readings for the

BBC, and then when I lived in Delhi in the 1960s, I used to do the occasional talk on All India Radio,” he said.

Another writer who enjoyed recording is Arundhati Roy, who has read her second novel, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, in a beautiful, lilting voice.

“I loved reading the audio book of The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. My publishers were keen that I read it myself. I love reading my work aloud because when I write I hear my words, the rhythm of every single sentence,” said Roy. She would love to record more. “I would read my fiction any day. The nonfiction, yes sure, but My Seditious Heart is a thousand pages long.”

According to Penguin Random House India (PRHI), which has over 200 audio book titles, non-fiction fares better in India. “We have observed that customers prefer non-fiction audiobooks since these also serve as a knowledge-gaining tool,” a company spokespers­on said. In the last couple of years, some PRHI titles that had India’s ear are An Unsuitable Boy by Karan Johar, Swami Vivekanand­a: The Living Vedanta by Badrinath Chaturvedi, and Sita by Devdutt Pattanaik.

One non-fiction title that is particular­ly enjoyable on audio is Inglorious Empire: What the British did to India by Shashi Tharoor, read by the author-mp in his crisp English. “It was both easier and longer than expected but I enjoyed the recording sessions, though they took a good chunk of time,” Tharoor says. “The project came about because I was approached by my UK paperback publishers, Penguin Books, to do it and I happily took on the challenge.” Though he is yet to try an audio book himself —

“Never heard an audiobook, not even mine!” — he understand­s the appeal. “I prefer to read, and read faster than anyone can read aloud, but commuters on long journeys who drive themselves, or can’t read in moving vehicles, can gain a lot from audiobooks,” he feels.

Among Indian fiction, Westland titles like Raavan: Enemy of Aryavarta and Sita: Warrior of Mithila by Amish are doing well on Amazon Audible. Non-fiction like Boots Belts Berets narrated by Rannvijay Singh Singha and Robin Sharma’s books, like The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari are also popular. From the internatio­nal list, Michelle Obama’s memoir Becoming and The Definitive Collection of Sherlock Holmes by Stephen Fry are top draws on Audible.

There are many reasons why Indians are all ears for audiobooks. Kaushik Ghosh, a communicat­ions profession­al in Kolkata, says he is sold on the superior quality. “I had earlier tried the speechto-text option that came with some ebooks, but the robotic quality of the speech was not appealing at all. Now it’s different. It’s sheer pleasure to hear Stephen Fry read Sherlock Holmes or Neil Gaiman read his Norse Mythology.”

For young mother Madhurima Chatterjee of Delhi, audiobooks are her only connection to books now. “I used to be a curl-up-with-a-paperback-for-hours kind of girl before motherhood hit me like a ton of bricks last year. Now, who has the time or the energy? Audiobooks were never my thing, but desperatio­n drove me to them. And I’ve never been more thankful. I tune out my everyday chaos by plugging into Audible or Youtube while I go about my chores,” says the publishing profession­al, who is currently hooked to The Last Wish in The Witcher series. She would love for her son to start listening to stories soon. Away from grandparen­ts, maybe it’ll be a children’s audiobook that’ll start off little Rudra on his literary journey.

Ruskin Bond, too, feels that “the oral tradition of grandparen­ts telling stories is dying out in India, except perhaps in some small villages, where people still tell children mythologic­al tales and ghost stories.”

It was this long oral tradition that led Amazon’s Audible to bet big on the Indian market. “In India, our love of storytelli­ng is ingrained in our culture, as we share stories generation after generation, and as we create and pass on new stories with family and friends today,” said Shailesh Sawlani, VP, Country Manager India, Audible, while launching an India-first app called Audible Suno in December 2019.

This app expands Audible’s library to spoken word entertainm­ent in the form of audio series voiced by well-known names, including Amitabh Bachchan for the spooky series Kaali Awaazein, Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Tabu for Thriller Factory, directed by Anurag Kashyap, and Vir Das for a comedy series titled Be Stupid with Vir Das.

While there are many reasons why Indians are tuning in to audiobooks, the best possibly came from a young writer who shall remain unnamed. “Truth be told, I’ve never been able to get through Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children. Tried and failed at least thrice. Whenever anyone mentions how much they love this book, I just nod along and slink away. Then I downloaded a dramatised reading of Midnight’s Children available on Audible and I was hooked. Thank God, I don’t have to lie anymore!

 ??  ?? Both Arundhati Roy and Ruskin Bond have enjoyed recording audio versions of their books
Both Arundhati Roy and Ruskin Bond have enjoyed recording audio versions of their books
 ?? SAMIR JANA (L), SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO ??
SAMIR JANA (L), SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India