Oct 15

If you’ve ever blogged, you know that it can sometimes feel like a lot of work. I confess that there are many times when I’d rather be reading a book then blogging about reading a book. But then, every so often, I am reminded of the incredible community that has sprung up here, and I realize that I get so much from your participation that it could never really be just “work”.

I had an experience like that just recently. It happened in the comments of Josh Christie’s post Bring on the Tears. Tanya’s comments, and subsequent expansion on those comments, were so powerful that I had to pull them out and give them their own space.

In his post, Josh asked, “What book made you cry?”. Tanya, who works for an audiobook publisher, answered:

This year I read WAITING FOR COLUMBUS (by Thomas Trofimuk) which had such a powerful denouement that I broke down, as did my husband who narrated it (in fact, you can hear him break down on the recording. He wanted to go back and “fix” it, but it was such an honest reading that when he tried to “pull back” it ended up sounded fake! So, the original reading stands…)

I feel like I’ve known Tanya for a long time, thanks to her interaction with us here at Books on the Nightstand, but I had no idea that her husband was an audiobook narrator, and had no inkling that he narrated this book that I loved so much. Of course, I needed to know more, so I asked Tanya to tell us the whole story. Here it is:

“Last April you mentioned WAITING FOR COLUMBUS in a blog/podcast. That’s all you did, mention it, but for some reason I became obsessed with it. I literally couldn’t wait until August to read the book, but I had no way to legitimately, personally, request an Advance Reading Copy from the publisher, so… I asked my boss to look into getting a galley. I was shocked when he came back and told me that our company had acquired the audiobook rights for the book!

The manuscript came to Blackstone and I was so excited, but I was soon thwarted in my attempts to pre-read it! My husband, Grover Gardner, who is the studio director for the company, always vets the galleys in order to make casting choices. He got the first crack at Waiting For Columbus and after reading the first chapter, insisted that he himself was going to narrate! He pre-read the whole of the book and finished right before dinner one night. Fork midway between plate and mouth, he stopped, started crying and left the table. He walked the dog for an hour and a half. All because of Waiting For Columbus. Of all the books he has narrated, this had never happened before. When he came back from his “time-out” I suspiciously queried him as to whether the book was that maudlin. He shook his head and only said “You’ll see.”

I insisted on being the recording engineer for the book. We were in the booth. The first “land mine” hit and I was affected, but okay. The second land mine hit and I could barely hold it together. Grover, even though he had already read the book, fell apart again. It is not maudlin, but beautifully and powerfully written. The book has become a very personal experience for each of us and both of us.

Even now, months after we cut the master, I can quote certain passages and there is one passage in particular which still sends me into a paroxysm of emotion. The book had another impact on me in a much more general way: I now search out books written by poet-novelists. I’ve come to appreciate Ondaatje’s and Margaret Atwater’s word crafting in particular, but it was Thomas Trofimuk’s words that found their way to my heart first.

Anyway, that’s probably way more than you wanted to know, but there it is.
For those who may be interested in the audiobook, you can listen to a sample at the Blackstone Audiobooks page for the title.

Tanya, thank you so very much for sharing your story. It’s amazing, and moving, and I can’t wait to listen to the audio with your and Grover’s experience in mind.

  • http://brownbookproject.blogspot.com Lynnea

    I’ve been wanting to get another audio book lately. My collection of undread books on my bedstand/shelf are far too many to justify buying another one. But an audio one. Besides I find listening to audio books a relaxing and beautiful experience in their own right. I suppose it’s a reminder of being young and being read to. And now I know exactly which audio book I want to get.
    Thank you for this post, it’s just lovely.
    I have a question though. I went to Amazon and looked up the audio book and there were two different audio CD’s listed with extremely disparaging prices. They both say unabridged but one is $24 and the other is $75. Any reason? I don’t want to get the cheaper one and find out I’m missing something. I was sure someone asked this here before but I couldn’t find it.

  • http://brownbookproject.blogspot.com Lynnea

    I’ve been wanting to get another audio book lately. My collection of undread books on my bedstand/shelf are far too many to justify buying another one. But an audio one. Besides I find listening to audio books a relaxing and beautiful experience in their own right. I suppose it’s a reminder of being young and being read to. And now I know exactly which audio book I want to get.
    Thank you for this post, it’s just lovely.
    I have a question though. I went to Amazon and looked up the audio book and there were two different audio CD’s listed with extremely disparaging prices. They both say unabridged but one is $24 and the other is $75. Any reason? I don’t want to get the cheaper one and find out I’m missing something. I was sure someone asked this here before but I couldn’t find it.

  • http://www.booksonthenightstand.com Ann Kingman

    Lynnea,
    The higher priced unabridged audio is created for libraries. The retail unabridged lists for $34.95, and the ISBN (product number) for the retail version is 9781441706492. I’ve found that with audiobooks, it’s often easiest to get the ISBN from the publisher’s website and use that to order, because it can be so confusing.

    Hope this helps.

  • http://www.booksonthenightstand.com Ann Kingman

    Lynnea,
    The higher priced unabridged audio is created for libraries. The retail unabridged lists for $34.95, and the ISBN (product number) for the retail version is 9781441706492. I’ve found that with audiobooks, it’s often easiest to get the ISBN from the publisher’s website and use that to order, because it can be so confusing.

    Hope this helps.

  • http://brownbookproject.blogspot.com Lynnea

    Thanks Ann! It is confusing.

  • http://brownbookproject.blogspot.com Lynnea

    Thanks Ann! It is confusing.

  • Jen Sullivan

    Yay for audiobooks on the nightstand! ;-)

  • Jen Sullivan

    Yay for audiobooks on the nightstand! ;-)

  • Tanya

    Yikes! There’s nothing like getting up in the morning, hitting the blogs and having sticker shock hit you!

    The more expensive edition listed at amazon.com is for the LIBRARY edition. These are CDs that come in a hard plastic case.

    The less expensive edition listed at amazon.com is the retail MP3-CD package, which is one CD with the entire book cut into MP3 tracks.

    The version you probably want actually cost $34.95 and is the RETAIL package (CDs in a cardboard package) and as Ann mentioned can be found under the ISBN search: 9781441706492

    For those into dnloads, you can get it from audible.com and I would also check your local library (OverDrive.)

  • Tanya

    Yikes! There’s nothing like getting up in the morning, hitting the blogs and having sticker shock hit you!

    The more expensive edition listed at amazon.com is for the LIBRARY edition. These are CDs that come in a hard plastic case.

    The less expensive edition listed at amazon.com is the retail MP3-CD package, which is one CD with the entire book cut into MP3 tracks.

    The version you probably want actually cost $34.95 and is the RETAIL package (CDs in a cardboard package) and as Ann mentioned can be found under the ISBN search: 9781441706492

    For those into dnloads, you can get it from audible.com and I would also check your local library (OverDrive.)

  • http://www.subliminalintervention.blogspot.com Dreamybee

    Wow. I think I might have to move this title up my list a little bit! Life of Pi hit me like that, and now I am curious to see if this book will as well and if it will be for similar reasons.

  • http://www.subliminalintervention.blogspot.com Dreamybee

    Wow. I think I might have to move this title up my list a little bit! Life of Pi hit me like that, and now I am curious to see if this book will as well and if it will be for similar reasons.

  • http://longleggedfly.squarespace.com Taueret

    great story- I will add this one to my queue for sure.

  • http://longleggedfly.squarespace.com Taueret

    great story- I will add this one to my queue for sure.

  • http://www.sheistoofondofbooks.com Dawn – She is Too Fond of Book

    I’m so glad you asked Tanya to share the ‘unabridged’ story behind her answer to ‘what book made you cry?’

    Hearing this background, and the emotional reactions she and Grover had, has me adding WAITING FOR COLUMBUS to my want-it-now list. I’ll be afraid to listen to the audio on the treadmill, though, sounds like it’s tough!

  • http://www.sheistoofondofbooks.com Dawn – She is Too Fond of Book

    I’m so glad you asked Tanya to share the ‘unabridged’ story behind her answer to ‘what book made you cry?’

    Hearing this background, and the emotional reactions she and Grover had, has me adding WAITING FOR COLUMBUS to my want-it-now list. I’ll be afraid to listen to the audio on the treadmill, though, sounds like it’s tough!

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