Fred’s Fuze: A Canticle for Leibowitz

Sansa FuzeTitle: A Canticle for Leibowitz
Author: Walter Miller, Jr. (Adapted)
Producer: NPR
Type: Audio Drama
Genre: Adaptation of a Novel
Availability: Hard to Find

My Two Cents: Hats off to Chris Dueker for getting me a copy of this classic series released by NPR. Listening to this is tragic not just because of the story (which is a powerful testament to the screwiness of our species and the solipsism of our world), but because this kind of work isn’t being produced anymore. NPR captures a remarkable and distant sound here that isn’t BBC or OTR or anything resembling MAD. It’s its own vibe which sadly only captured by this remarkable drama.

If you’ve never read the novel, A Canticle for Leibowitz is one of the earliest post-apocalyptic stories set in a nuclear future where monks preserve the last bastion of knowledge for when humans will be fit enough to appreciate it again. Imagine Fallout if instead of ultra-violence the protagonists were pacifists. Like, if Mad Max had gone into the priesthood instead of grabbing a dune buggy.

The whole “sound” of Leibowitz is much different than many productions today — the whole audio portrait is subdued, quiet, understated. Compare than to the flash-bang of Hollywood and even most audio drama today. The simple, sparse sound effects and pervasive but muted music underscore a simple time, of simple people, where the truth of the story is allow to bubble up rather than smash you in the face with a mallet. I’m in love with Carol Colin’s narrator. She has transformed the entire idea of the narrator in audio drama.

I’m not sure where you can legitimately get this nowadays, but I recommend you do. It’s an epic journey (7.5 hrs) but well worth the trip.

Talk of the Nation Talks… Audio

Thanks to Brian Price of Great Northern Audio Theater for sharing a great link to an NPR story this past weekend on the thriving audio book industry in an age of declining book sales. Of particular interest to me was the chat with Robin Whitten of Audiofile Magazine, the great audiobooks (and fair share of audio theater) magazine produced nowhere else than Portland, Maine! She makes a great case for audiobooks being treated as real reading and not some sort of inferior habit for the visually disinclined, as well as sharing some commentary on how the properties of our digital world are changing the way audiobooks are shared.

Overall, great to hear an NPR story about audiobooks even though audio theater hardly makes a bubble in this story, as we can only hope that greater awareness of audio stories spurs people to try even more adventurous listening.