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Product Details

Sample
Ben Bova and Orson Scott Card: The Audible Interview
Regular Price:
$0.00
Program Type
Speech
Publisher
Length
29 mins
Audible Release Date
08-07-07
Audio Formats About Formats
2 3 4
Customer Rating

3.81 based on 175 ratings
 

Publisher's Summary

Acclaimed science-fiction authors Orson Scott Card and Ben Bova, along with their shared audiobook producer and occasional narrator Stefan Rudnicki, discuss audiobooks and their works in a joint interview. The authors touch on their thoughts on audiobooks vs. print editions, the effect of technology on literature, religion, science, and many other fascinating topics sure to intrigue both Card and Bova fans, as well as all audiobook enthusiasts.

© and (P)2007 Audio Renaissance, a division of Holtzbrinck Publishers LLC

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Customer Reviews

Showing: 1-5 of 6
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Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0 "Intriguing "
By: Eric (Binghamton)
February 08, 2008
I greatly enjoyed hearing what two of the most prominent authors in this area had to say. Stefan is also one of my favorite narrators, so that was an added bonus. If you are at all interested in what these authors think about current issues, especially relating to literature in the classroom, I highly recommend giving this interview a listen.
Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0 "Nice interview, reminiscing"
By: Mark (Mt Pleasant, SC, USA)
January 02, 2008
This was an interesting discussion of Orson Scott Card and Ben Bova's relationship and OSC's books. It isn't a "WoW!" event, but interesting if you're a science fiction fan. I enjoyed it.
Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0 "A question"
By: Michael (Springfield, IL, USA)
October 06, 2007
I wonder if Orson Scott Card listens to audible. He mentions that he listens to audiobooks, but it seems that he supports going Barnes&Noble and paying $40 or $50 bucks for an audiobook instead of paying an average of $13 dollars a book by purchasing from Audible. My guess is that maybe he sees a service such as Audible as cutting into his profits as an author. In this program he stated that Sci-Fi fans tend to be of a higher intelligence. This is because they tend to be techies and geeks. This is true enough at least in my case. I personally don't claim great intelligence but I am at least as smart as anyone on the planet earth. So I would like to use that and a little basic economics to state a small case. If Orson Scott Card doesn't support audible because he feels that they cut into his profits as an author from a purely economic standpoint this doesn't make any sense. I would venture to say that a majority of listeners would probably not listen if they had to pay the going rates at your average bookstore. $13 is affordable $40 sends me to the local library where his books are free. Audible and Ipods have created a whole new market for Mr.Card and many other authors simply because it's affordable. So economically even if they have to take a smaller cut they still make more money simply because more sales volume at a lesser price almost always equals more money. Besides I can't believe that the authors recieve to terribly much more from an audiobook bought at Border's compared to audible. There's probably tremendous overhead with production and packaging cd's or tapes and tremedous markup on the price because BAM has millions in overhead. With audible there is no packaging cost and overhead is low. So how can he or any author really lose. For someone to insist that MegaBuck books is the place to buy audiobooks is ridiculous. Maybe I'm off here,I'd like to know what Mr.Card's opinion is on the subject. Does he lose; do other writters lose, when the consumer win?
Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0 "Good job!"
By: Kathy (USA)
September 03, 2007
I'm not a Sci-Fi fan, but I certainly enjoy hearing an artist talk about their own work of art. Good job! You may win me over yet.
0 of 1 people found this review helpful:
Rating 1.0Rating 1.0Rating 1.0Rating 1.0Rating 1.0 "Poor Ben"
By: Bev (Alton)
August 28, 2007
Orson Scott Card cannot help himself, he talked so much that this may as well be an interview with him. I like both authors a great deal... I missed Ben.
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