STOP PRESS: An ‘Astounding’ Othello Comes to Naxos Audiobooks
The award-winning production of Othello featuring Chiwetel Ejiofor and Ewan McGregor which sold out its entire run at the Donmar Warehouse and was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 to widespread praise will be released on Naxos AudioBooks on 1 July.
In an enterprising association, director Michael Grandage and Naxos AudioBooks are to bring his stunning realisation of Shakespeare’s great play on jealousy to an international audience.
It will be released on a two-CD set with a DVD containing interviews with the director and members of the cast and production team. It also contains stills from the play which so excited London theatre-goers that tickets were being exchanged for hundreds of pounds on eBay.
The CD/DVD will be available at £13.99. The play will also be on the Naxos AudioBooks Download Shop, but for rights reasons, the DVD will be not included.
Listen/download an exclusive audio sample: Othello (Act 1, scene iii, opening, excerpt, MP3, 2.8 MB)
Further details to come...
Nicolas Soames
Review by Publisher’s Weekly, February 2008
In 1912, Doyle took his Victorian readers deep into the South American jungles where, high atop a treacherous plateau, a small band of British explorers encountered a terrifying world of prehistoric creatures long thought lost to the sands of time. The adventurers included a young newspaper reporter, Ed Malone; the swashbuckling aristocrat, Lord Roxton; the skeptical scientist, Professor Summerlee; and the brilliant and bombastic Professor Challenger, who leads the party. Doyle unfolds high adventure at its best with fantastic encounters with pterodactyls, stegosaurs and cunning ape-men. Glen McCready’s performance captures the time and tone of Doyle’s material perfectly without straying into melodrama. He nicely balances Malone’s sense of youthful wonder with the professors’ scientific pragmatism, while fully exploiting the humor spread strategically throughout, planting numerous chuckles among the thrills. McCready’s entertaining reading more than fulfils the author’s introductory wish to ‘give one hour of joy to the boy who’s half a man, or the man who’s half a boy.’
The Sword In The Stone (unabridged)
Review by Publisher’s Weekly, March 2008
Neville Jason’s approach, he says, is to be ‘humble to the material’ he is working with and to let the ‘powers of absorption work.’ It is apt that in this classic retelling of the King Arthur legend, the wizard Merlin often teaches the boy Arthur (aka Wart) by changing him into other creatures &nash; a fish, a bird –to learn by absorption, by being, with empathy being the least of the lessons taught. It is a perfect fit of sensibilities. Jason, who was awarded the Diction Prize by Sir John Gielgud at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, delivers fully developed characters with such warmth and spark that listeners are instantly transported to Sir Ector’s castle. Originally written in 1938, this audiobook is perfect for any J. K. Rowling fan, as its humor, intellect and playfulness feels as contemporary as a Harry Potter novel. In fact, Rowling has described White’s Wart as ‘Harry’s spiritual ancestor.’ Combined with the brilliant performance by Jason, what more could a fantasy fan want?
The Death of Ivan Ilyich (unabridged)
Review by Publisher’s Weekly, January 2008
In the lovely, low tones of a fine storyteller, Oliver Fox Davies guides us through the stages of Tolstoy’s mini masterpiece. Davies’s skill with inflection, even within words, heightens the social satire of the early section and shifts with Ilyich’s slide into ever increasing pain and irritability. With the terror and anguish of approaching death, his voice grows convincingly hoarse. Until his illness, Ivan Ilyich had never reflected on his life. But he slowly comes to see his life as ‘a terrible, huge deception which had hidden life and death.’ As he lays dying, his lifelong friends think of the promotions that may come their way, and his wife ‘began to wish he would die, but she didn’t want him to die because then his salary would cease.’ He has always avoided human connection, but through the tender ministrations of a peasant he comes to recognize the ‘mesh of falsity’ in which he’s lived.
Written more than a century ago, Tolstoy’s work still retains the power of a contemporary novel.
Review by Sue Arnold, The Guardian, 22 March 2008
The upside of creating the world’s most famous (and smuggest) detective is celebrity, fortune and a knighthood; the downside is that you’re stuck with him. In desperation Conan Doyle killed Sherlock Holmes off, but his publisher insisted he resurrect him.
In 1912, twenty years after his Baker Street sleuth first appeared on the Victorian crime scene, Conan Doyle wrote The Lost World, his best and last non-Sherlock Holmes novel. Cross Scoop with Jurassic Park and you’re getting close. Lovesick young reporter Edward Malone is briskly informed by Gladys that if he wants to marry her he has first to prove his heroism, for it is her wish to bask in the reflected glory of a husband whose great deeds are universally acclaimed. Malone’s kindly news editor suggests he expose a bogus explorer, one Professor Challenger who claims to have stumbled across a lost civilisation in Brazil. Perched on an inaccessible plateau roughly the size and shape of Sussex at the back end of the Amazon, it is inhabited by prehistoric monsters and primitive tribes. Alas, all the evidence – the bones, hides, feathers etc – were lost on the return journey. A second debunking expedition is proposed. Glen McReady reads this good old-fashioned ripping yarn with relish. I liked the pterodactyls roaring as fearsomely as Hendon aerodrome on a race day.
Review by Rachel Redford, The Guardian, 23 March 2008
Magical tale of invisibility and a bejewelled princess still enchants.
The Great Poets – Emily Dickinson
Review by Rachel Redford, The Observer, 17 February 2008
Teresa Gallagher gives Emily Dickinson a New England voice that succeeds in conveying the poet’s distinctive duality: her gentle, mystical other-worldliness underscored by a resolute strength. In these 99 poems, recurring words – sea, Heaven, sun – chime mantra-like, along with the lyrical assonance and rhyme. Dickinson is acutely sensitive to the beauty of light and nature – ‘the colour on the cruising cloud’ – while her metaphors and personification intrigue. Does the 'door ajar' shut her out or invite her in? Is the ‘realm of you’ Heaven or some paradise of earthly love? Even though recurrent themes are death and self-denial, the mood is airy and buoyant, like the angel’s wings Dickinson imagines she wears.
Review from Waterstone’s Quarterly, Spring 2008
Emily Dickinson is remembered as a 19th-century New England recluse, but she is reaching a wider audience than she could ever have expected via this Great Poets audio series. A wide range of the poet’s work is here and, as read by the charismatic Teresa Gallagher, the problem of how to turn dashes into pauses is managed with aplomb. To quote the great lady, ‘Beauty be not caused – it is’; and this is beautiful.
Review by AudioFile, February/March 2008
A sincere thank you to the talented Laurel Lefkow for presenting this splendid 1913 classic in such a delightful manner that even somewhat jaded contemporary listeners will be enchanted. Pollyanna’s sweetly innocent personality and her ‘glad game’ of seeing the best in every situation are in stark contrast to the personalities of her sour and bitter Aunt Polly and even the maid, Nancy, who befriends Pollyanna during her sad early days. Each of these very different characters is warmly rendered by Lefkow. When Pollyanna is badly injured, her beliefs are challenged, a turn of events that brings an element of realism to this old-fashioned story. An excellent insert provides detailed notes about the book.
Review by Audiofile, February/March 2008
This meticulous abridgment does a good job with Burnett’s classic rags-to-riches story. Kindly fate transports an American boy, Cedric Errol, to England when he is discovered to be heir to the earldom of Dorincourt. Prepared to hate the American upstart, the crusty earl finds he can’t resist his grandson’s love. Teresa Gallagher’s gentle, refined voice brings the precocious Cedric into listeners’ hearts with arresting success. Equally well depicted are the pithy sayings of the ancient earl and Cedric’s mother’s bell-like tones. Characters and significant dialogue appear seamlessly, and there are few continuity issues in the abridgment. Narration and script combine to present a merry audiobook.
Review by Karen Robinson, The Sunday Times
This collection of Milton’s poetry is Naxos’s contribution to the celebrations surrounding the 400th anniversary of the birth of the great English poet. It is an accessible choice featuring short poems, the famous sonnets on his deceased wife, Cromwell and blindness, plus some extracts from the epic Paradise Lost (also available from Naxos in a four-hour reading by Anton Lesser). The quality of Derek Jacobi’s audio performances can be erratic, but he is on top form here, his sparkling confidence with meter and rhyme allowing meaning to be revealed. Samantha Bond’s expressive empathy also transcends the complex language and the classical references to deliver powerful ideas on politics (Milton was a republican), religion and love. Musicality is central to the poet’s works: his friend Henry Lawes set many of the poems to music, so it is fitting that his pieces, performed on original instruments, are integral to this production.
Review by Rachel Redford, The Oldie
The image of Little Lord Fauntleroy as a pampered, golden-curled boy in a ridiculous suit of velvet and lace is a travesty of the original and hugely successful 1855 story. Eight-year-old Cedric inherits riches: a castle and a title. He has to leave America where, despite his own poverty, he has befriended unfortunates, to join his old Scrooge of a grandfather in England. Of course his innate goodness and generous little heart win over the curmudgeonly old man. The unsentimental narration – and the drifts of Elgar – lift it into the realm of fable.
Dance Dance Dance (unabridged)
Review by Rachel Redford, The Observer
This is a story of searching, loss, sex and murder in a disjointed society, worked out through Murakami’s crazy collection of people. Narrator Rupert Degas gets it absolutely right. The unnamed ‘ordinary guy’ who becomes entangled in a succession of way-out experiences is rooted in a Japan drenched in American culture, not just Dunkin’ Donuts and rock music, but the corruption of corporate money. Degas’s subtle American narration sustains this duality. He also creates diverse voices brilliantly, such as the disenchantment of teenage Yuki in her monosyllabic ‘huh’, the other-world automaton pronouncements of the Sheep Man and the seductive tones of the call girls. Bewitching.
The Death of Ivan Ilyich (unabridged)
Review by Christina Hardyment, The Times
Tolstoy wrote his short novel The Death of Ivan Ilyich after a dark night of the soul that led him to question his entire life, and eventually to find comfort in Christianity and peasant simplicites. The book is a coded version of his suffering and makes tough, but ultimately deeply rewarding listening. Oliver Ford Davies, the philosopher and actor fresh from a memorably gruff rendering of Diogenes Laertius for the Naxos audiobook Ancient Greek Philosophy, makes the dying Ilyich touchingly human.
Review by Rachel Redford, The Observer
Painfully and slowly, Judge Ivan Ilyich is dying and, as he does so, he comes to recognise the truth about his impeccable life. For all his propriety and success, it has been meaningless and empty. Ilyich loathes his wife and realises his ‘concerned’ colleagues are merely waiting to step into his shoes. And he recognises the selfless devotion with which he is cared for by the peasant boy Gerasim as the only real truth in the whole of his own shallow life. Only at the end, when Ilyich breaks through the ‘black sack’ of death, is he absolved. Ford Davies’s leisurely narration and the passages of Russian music complement Tolstoy’s serious theme and his presentation of Ilyich’s anguished emotions is masterly.
Review by Synergy Magazine
What better way to enjoy a ghost story but by a camp fire, late at night, in the dark, surrounding by friends and ready to be scared? In these days of new technology the audio book of Ghost stories is a great alternative; sitting alone at night, with the lights off and with great narration and chilling music this CD set offers some great ghostly tales.
It is generally believed that the literature of the ghost tale ‘came of age’ in the nineteenth century and this collection certainly bears this out. These stories date from the mid- to late-nineteenth century and therefore show the form in its most developed form. All have a slow and deliberate building of mood, an emphasis on good storytelling and character and only reveal the ghostly or supernatural “twist” at the climax.
To Let by Bithia Mary Croker dates from the 1890s and not only offers a frightfully good ghost tale, but explores the life of the English living in India during this period. The Upper Berth by F. Marion Crawford is a well-known story, which combines all the elements of a good sea-tale with ghostly horror. The sheer descriptiveness of the tale and the nature of the ghost is enough to send shivers down the most reticent of spines.
The collection continues with five tales in all, also including An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street, by J. S. Le Fanu, That Damned Thing, and The Moonlit Road, by Ambrose Bierce. The narration by Jonathan Keeble and Clare Anderson is impeccable and with the addition of mood setting music, this is a superb set of ghost tales which will haunt any late night setting!
A History of the World in 10½ Chapters
Review by Sue Arnold, The Guardian
Fact, fiction, myth, opinion – Barnes’s series of disjointed narratives about Noah’s Ark, terrorist hijackers, shipwreck, woodworm, love and more is all of these. It leaves you torn between thinking that its sum is greater than its parts and that, then again, some of the parts are pretty damned good too, especially the half-chapter titled ‘Parenthesis’. Somehow this pithy new Alex Jennings recording perfectly succeeds in combining the various ‘history is bunk’ and ‘love conquers all’ strands.
Review by Jeanette Larson, Library Media Connection
Naxos AudioBooks continues to release original readings about famous people with Great Scientists and Their Discoveries by David Angus. The short pieces provide a vibrant and intimate look at scientists, from Aristotle to Einstein, within the context of history. The British narrators provide a formality to the reading that is reminiscence of public television programs and the production is the perfect enhancement for science classes.
Great Expectations (unabridged)
Review by Sue Arnold, The Guardian
Maybe you should listen to this first to understand the impact it had on Mister Pip’s pupils. Too bad they didn’t hear Anton Lesser’s version, though chances are if they had, it would have affected them even more powerfully. Lesser reads so many audiobooks – I’ve just finished his beautiful if soporific rendering of Rumi’s Spiritual Verses – that you forget what a huge range his acting skills cover.
This is the perfect vehicle for his array of voices, accents and characters, starting with the terrifying Magwitch on the run (if that’s an appropriate description of a man wearing a leg iron) from the prison hulks moored off the Essex marshes, to cold, arrogant Estella, hardwired to break men’s hearts, and the steely lawyer Mr Jaggers, beside whom Lord Goldsmith looks like Bambi. The adventures of the upwardly mobile apprentice blacksmith turned gentleman have always trailed far behind Hard Times and A Tale of Two Cities on my Dickens hit list – Pip is such an awful snob – but I’m bound to admit that Lesser makes him not only sympathetic but even likeable.