Grover Gardener: The Return of The Stand



This is good!  Grover Gardner, who has narrated LOTS of audio books, was the reader of both the abridged and unabridged editions of The Stand.  In a recent blog post, Gardner discussed the recent recording of the 1990 version of The Stand.

Mr. Gardner graciously gave me permission to reprint his blog post here.  It comes from Grovers Audiobook Blog, and was originally posted on February 14, 2012.  


The Return of The Stand
by Grover Gardner

Well, it's out on Audible today--Stephen King's The Stand. This is not the edited version I recorded twenty-five years ago, it's the complete, uncut edition published in 1990, all forty-eight hours of it! It took four weeks to record, and I had to pace myself so I wouldn't sound fatigued or thread-bare at any point. I'm pleased with the recording, though I'll be interested to see how it holds up against the earlier version in the memories of King devotees. The old version was only available on cassette and has been out of print for a decade or more. I still get emails from people asking if I have a copy they could borrow and duplicate for themselves. Alas, no, I never got one. But now there's no need. The new version is complete, and in my humble opinion I'm a better narrator than I was twenty-five years ago, so I was delighted to have a chance to re-record it.

There are few better writers for audiobook narration than Stephen King. He gives you all the right cues, creates wonderful characters, keeps the story moving and injects emotional twists and surprises at every corner. Never a dull moment in the booth with this guy.

The odd thing is, as I read the uncut version in preparation, I found that I remembered very little of the story and the characters. The opening scene remains vivid--the clunky old Chevy containing the first victims of the superflu plowing into a lonely little gas station in rural Texas. And I remember Randall Flagg (who could forget Randall Flagg?). But beyond that most of the book felt completely new to me. Perhaps it was the added material that threw me off, I don't know. But it's just as well, since there was no temptation to replicate any voices or characters or moods from the earlier recording. What you hear is as fresh as last month, not a recycled rendition from 25 years ago.

I'll be interested to see what "the critics" say. The proponderance of male characters seemed to hail from the Midwest or Southwest, so there were an awful lot of "good ol' boys" to sort through and make distinguishable. The most difficult characters for me were Harold and Frannie. Harold is a pimply, overweight, pompous-sounding 16-year-old, not an easy person to replicate. And eighteen-year-old Frannie is the emotional core of the book, enormously smart and feisty, but extremely vulnerable--and pregnant. I played around with a Maine accent for her and it sounded just awful, so I let my native East Coast tones predominate. A fifty-five year old man is already handicapped in this regard, and I didn't want her to come off as a caricature. So she's voiced in a pretty straight-forward manner. I gave her father and some of the other Ogunquit characters a dose of down-east, so hopefully that will placate the die-hards.

My favorite character, of course, is Tom Cullen (who doesn't love Tom Cullen?). In the uncut version he really gets fleshed out, and it's truly wonderful to experience his transformation from a fool to a hero. In one critical scene I took a risk that, under normal circumstances, I would have avoided like...well, like the plague. But to do other than what I did seemed like such a cop-out that I took the plunge. I'm curious to see if anyone even notices--and whether they like it or hate it.

But by far the biggest, most overwhelming challenge, of all the challenges in a story so fraught with them, was that of coming up with seventy-plus ways of saying, "NOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!" It seems that every character, at some point in the book, shouts or screams or bellows or rasps the word, "NOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!"

Anyway, it was a terrific experience and it's great to have the story out there again for everyone to enjoy.
.....................
reposted from March 2, 2012

14 comments:

  1. I'll have to get a copy of this at some point. I don't have Audible, but this might be a good reason to sign up...

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  2. I love audible! Just downloaded Salem's Lot. It makes buying HUGE audio books very inexpensive. So the Stand came to a total of $14.95. Now, imagine it on CD in the store. It would be 65 - 70. They also let you pile up credits if you don't buy anything (up to 5).

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  3. I never noticed that every character says "noooo!" -- until Gardner pointed it out.

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  4. Seventy different ways to say Nooooo! Well I hope you just didn't resort to the Hayden Christensen method.

    ChrisC

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  5. Does anyone know when "The Stand" audiobook will be available to the UK?

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  6. yes, but audible.co.uk doesn't list it.

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  7. HOW STRANGE! I would contact audible, as they are the only company selling it.

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    1. Imhave contacted audible.co.uk and they have no idea if they will ever get it. We always get a raw deal on Stephen King audio titles in the UK.

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  8. It's available on iTunes as well. Not in the UK though.

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  9. Not really surpised audible.co.uk doesn't have it. They have a very limited selection of SK titles compared to audible.com. Looks like the only way to get it is to order from amazon.com and pay $67.50 + shipping + import duties. thats what I have done but its been out of stock so not even sent yet. Like I said I'm not surprised we don't get it for download in the UK but I am annoyed!

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  10. amazon price now $100 and still not in stock!

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  11. Still "Temporarily" out of stock. Has it ever actually been in stock at Amazon?? I'm giving up hope of ever getting it :( No sign of it on UK audible either! It's a damned conspiracy!

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  12. Just seen this. Thought I should mention that it's now available on Audible in the UK. And if you do a month's trial from The Guardian website you can get it for nothing!

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