I see we don't have a thread going on producing audio versions of our work. Shame on us. It's a very big thing these days.
Me, I've spent a long time in the Thinking About It stage. Two years ago I bought a microphone to maybe do it myself, should I work up the nerve. Last November I bought a subcription to Revoicer, thinking I might just let their AI voices take care of it. Beginning of this year, I wavered and bought a sound-dampening guard and headphones in case I do it myself, after all.
But I've got so much going on, I've tested Revoicer on only a few pages. Getting what I want with it is going to be more complicated than I'd hoped. And a lot of readers are staunchly anti-AI, so much so, it's a moral issue to them.
Last night and again this morning, I was listening to this episode of The Novel Marketing Podcast, "How to Publish Your Audiobook Through ACX." What they say tells me it might be possible to go that route, if I save my money . . . But isn't there some ongoing scandal about ACX/Audible, where they're not paying writers properly? And even without that, would having an audiobook through them be a good investment, considering the low sales I have in print and ebook?
Especially considering that if I hire the same narrators (male and female) for my whole The Architects series, in addition to being competent voice actors, they'd have to speak/pronounce decent French and German and also be able to carry a tune. These challenges have put the whole idea on the back burner for me, and the podcast has brought it forward only for a while.
But still. Audiobook is very big these days. A lot of people will buy a book in audio, who won't if they have to read with their eyes. We should all strive to publish our work as audiobooks.
So tell us: What has your experience been? Have there been issues you've run up against? What has gone very well?
This thread can be a catch-all for the topic, until it gets so specific we can break new threads off.
Me, I've spent a long time in the Thinking About It stage. Two years ago I bought a microphone to maybe do it myself, should I work up the nerve. Last November I bought a subcription to Revoicer, thinking I might just let their AI voices take care of it. Beginning of this year, I wavered and bought a sound-dampening guard and headphones in case I do it myself, after all.
But I've got so much going on, I've tested Revoicer on only a few pages. Getting what I want with it is going to be more complicated than I'd hoped. And a lot of readers are staunchly anti-AI, so much so, it's a moral issue to them.
Last night and again this morning, I was listening to this episode of The Novel Marketing Podcast, "How to Publish Your Audiobook Through ACX." What they say tells me it might be possible to go that route, if I save my money . . . But isn't there some ongoing scandal about ACX/Audible, where they're not paying writers properly? And even without that, would having an audiobook through them be a good investment, considering the low sales I have in print and ebook?
Especially considering that if I hire the same narrators (male and female) for my whole The Architects series, in addition to being competent voice actors, they'd have to speak/pronounce decent French and German and also be able to carry a tune. These challenges have put the whole idea on the back burner for me, and the podcast has brought it forward only for a while.
But still. Audiobook is very big these days. A lot of people will buy a book in audio, who won't if they have to read with their eyes. We should all strive to publish our work as audiobooks.
So tell us: What has your experience been? Have there been issues you've run up against? What has gone very well?
This thread can be a catch-all for the topic, until it gets so specific we can break new threads off.
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