[Nfb-new-hampshire] Fw: Catcher Available Only for the Blind

Ed Meskys edmeskys at roadrunner.com
Thu Oct 21 23:26:56 UTC 2010


Subject: Catcher Available Only for the Blind


'Catcher' caught: Audiobook of Salinger novel made for library
service for the blind
By Hillel Italie (Canadian Press) – 9 hours ago

WASHINGTON — Push the play button and hear the famous teenager's
lament. It is recited in a sly, middle-aged twang, like an adult
reading in a grade school classroom, one about to be told that the
grown-up world is a nest of phonies.
"I mean I've left schools and places I didn't even know I was leaving
them," says the narrator. "I hate that. I don't care if it's a sad
good-by or a bad good-by, but when I leave a place I like to know I'm
leaving it. If you don't, you feel even worse."
The narrator is Holden Caulfield of "The Catcher in the Rye," but the
voice — a light, steady baritone — belongs to Ray Hagen. He is a
longtime reader for the Library of Congress' National Library Service
for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, which provides books on
tape ("talking books") and in Braille. This recording, book number RC
47480 in the library's catalogue, is the closest anyone will likely
come to an official audiobook edition of J.D. Salinger's classic novel.
The author, who died in January at age 91, never granted audio rights
and was known for stopping those who used his material without
permission. But under copyright law, the service is allowed to record
any book, assuming no production is made available to the general
public. Tapes from the program are free and can only be played on
machines provided by the library that work at a different speed than
standard releases.
Phyllis Westberg, Salinger's longtime literary agent, confirmed that
no commercial audio version of "Catcher" exists, but otherwise
declined comment.
Like other works for the blind, the library edition of "Catcher"
includes not just the full text, but the title and copyright pages
and other materials. An introduction warns of strong language,
describes Holden as "an ancient child of 16" and cites his "perfectly
articulated cry of mixed pain and pleasure."
Hagen, 74, recorded a version in the late 1970s and a second one in
1999 — the version currently in circulation — after the original
master deteriorated. During a recent interview at the library
service's recording studio, Hagen noted he was 63 when he rerecorded
"Catcher." He acknowledged he might have been "long in the tooth" for
Holden, but said that the key was "attitude."
"It's a first person book by a teenager, a disaffected teenager,"
says Hagen, animated and reflective with wavy, brushed back hair;
jeans; a denim vest and a brown shirt with buttons in different
colours. "Well, I was a disaffected teenager and I hadn't forgotten
anything about life at that age, so I told the story truthfully, the
way you would act a part in a play."
The National Library Service includes numerous works otherwise
unavailable on tape, from Thomas Pynchon's "V." and "Gravity's
Rainbow" to "The Essays of E.B. White" and Norman Mailer's "The
Armies of the Night." Prominent collections of poetry, an art form
made for being read out loud, can only be heard through the library's
program, including the collected poems of Richard Wilbur, W.S.
Merwin's "Opening the Hand" and Richard Hass' Pulitzer Prize winning
"Time and Materials."
"The reason there isn't an official audiobook for 'Time and
Materials' is because nobody ever asked me to do one," Hass says.
"There's actually a rich shared underground among poets of readings
and lectures and CDS and tapes people send to each other. Somebody
just sent me a CD of (poet) James Wright's last reading. Somebody
else sent me a CD of Christopher Ricks reading obscure English poets
on the BBC."
"To be blunt, those books just don't sell in audio," says Ana Maria
Allessi, vice-president and publisher of HarperMedia, which releases
audiobooks for HarperCollins, Hass' publisher. "A couple of years ago
we did this beautiful package of recordings of poems by Walt Whitman
and Emily Dickinson and several others and nothing happened. It was
so frustrating. You have these giants of American poetry and they
didn't sell. So it's going to be very hard to sell contemporary poets."
The National Library Service, also known as the NLS, was established
in 1931 by the Pratt Smoot Act, which authorized $100,000 for the
Library of Congress to offer "books for the use of the adult blind
residents of the United States." The program has expanded over the
decades, with children's recordings added in the 1950s and music
scores in the early 1960s. In 1966, eligibility was broadened to
include "individuals with other physical impairments that prevent the
reading of regular print."
The NLS was briefly controversial in the 1980s when Rep. Chalmers
Wylie, R-Ohio, objected to a Braille edition of Playboy magazine and
led an effort to cut funding. A federal judge later ruled that the
Playboy release was protected by the First Amendment.
The library's mission ("That All May Read") is unchanged, but the
means have been revolutionized. Recordings at first were made on
large reels for vinyl pressing that allowed for no editing, so that a
single mistake meant a book had to be restarted from scratch. Vinyl
was replaced by cassette tapes, then digital technology.
Around 2,000 books, magazines and other materials are recorded
annually and the budget for the NLS has been rising by more than 10
per cent under both Republican and Democratic administrations and
Congresses, in part to pay for the digital transition. Just over $70
million was allocated for the fiscal year 2010.
Hagen, a native of New York City, worked for years as a singer, stage
performer, writer and film journalist before joining the library in
1973. He retired in 2001, but still comes in twice a week on a
freelance basis. He remembers a very different workplace and work
ethic when he began. There were no written, unified standards for
paid contractors, who were doing most of the recordings. The
Washington office, which now has dictionaries of languages from Greek
to Catalan, had just a single reference work for consultation on
pronunciation. Even famous names were occasionally botched.
"Someone came down to me one day and handed me one of those little
green boxes with the cassettes," Hagen says. "He's half-laughing,
half in horror and he says, 'This got passed through. Listen to the
opening.'"
Hagen heard an elderly woman introduce a celebrated novel, "Other
Voices, Other Rooms," and pronounce the last name of author Truman
Capote as "Ca-POAT."
"We have been fanatics about standards ever since the 1970s," says
Bill West, the audio production specialist at the library until his
retirement last summer. "I can't tell you how many times I was
accused of being a slave driver. I plead guilty to it."
The criteria for taping a book are commercial and critical.
Bestsellers and critical successes are almost automatically recorded,
while some works are taped on request from a customer. Recordings
take place around the country, but the home office is in this plain
brick building north of downtown Washington, where three basement
level studios are used and a sign reads: "This is no dress rehearsal.
We are professionals, and this is the big time." On the walls are
covers of books Hagen has recorded, including Stephen King's "Night
Shift" and Kurt Vonnegut's "Slapstick."
During a recent afternoon, Hagen sat in a windowless studio and read
from Jim DeFelice's "Leopards Kill," an espionage thriller set in
Afghanistan. It was a demanding, sometimes tiring process — sentences
repeated when a single word is flubbed; a discussion over how to
pronounce a key character's name, Guitierrez (GOO'-tee-air-ez).
Around 25 pages were covered over a period of an hour and a half.
"That takes a lot out of you," he says afterward, sipping from a
large plastic bottle of iced tea.
"People think you can just walk in and in one hour record one hour's
worth of fully usable material," West says. "That just doesn't happen."
Some projects are a pleasure, such as "Catcher" ("That's regular
human speech. It's not just fancy writing"), the stories of Isaac
Bashevis Singer and the complete scripts of the British television
comedy "Fawlty Towers." Others are work. Hagen was let down by the
memoirs of Fred Astaire ("I idolize Fred Astaire, but he sure wasn't
a writer"), and dismayed by Obama campaign manager David Plouffe's
"The Audacity to Win" ("Editors seem to have vanished from the book
world"). He found Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea" a bore
— "stilted and self-important."
"I just wasn't nuts about it," he says.
Hagen has read first person accounts by Astaire and by James Cagney,
but avoids imitating the authors of his books. Several years ago, he
took on "The Beatles Anthology," an oral history for which Hagen
ended up reading the words of all four band members. You won't hear
him affect a British accent, but he does turn slightly nasal when
speaking as John Lennon, whimsical as Paul McCartney, deadpan as
George Harrison and droll as Ringo Starr.
"I'm not (impressionist) Rich Little," Hagen says. "It's just
attitude. What is this person's attitude while they're talking?"
Projects can take months or more. Hagen read all of Tony Kushner's
epic play "Angels in America," which on stage lasts more than six
hours and is usually performed on two separate days in two parts. His
greatest task was "On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio,"
an 800-page reference book that compiled more than 1,500 programs and
on cassette filled more than 60 sides.
"It took me a year to finish it," Hagen says, "and then we had
champagne."
Copyright © 2010 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.






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