In recent years while e-books were plowing their way through the publishing industry like a big noisy steam engine, audiobooks were chugging along in the background like the Little Engine That Could. These days, that sometimes overlooked segment of the book business is growing at a rapid pace and the industry is looking for new ways to catch listeners' ears.

Robin Whitten, editor and founder of Audiofile magazine, began writing about audiobooks in 1992. Back then, few people had ever heard of them. Now they're a $1 billion industry with more than 35,000 titles published in 2013 alone. Whitten says audiobooks really took off once it became possible to listen to them on a variety of devices.

"You suddenly have a complete recorded file from the first words of a book to the end," she says. "And you're not fumbling around looking for disc four in the middle of some really important scene. And that made a big difference; it made audiobooks much more user-friendly."

It's not just new technology that is luring more listeners to audiobooks. The industry has always drawn on a large pool of professional actors as narrators, but these days producers are signing on more and more celebrities — the narrator is key to the success of an audiobook.

"There's this almost seductive intimacy of this private performance and the power of it," says Don Katz, CEO and founder of Audible, the largest producer and seller of audiobooks. "So many of the customers become aficionados of the narration itself. Many of them buy based on the narrator. They'll literally listen to anything a specific actor reads simply because they like their styles."

Audible has hired such well-known actors as Colin Firth, Anne Hathaway and Nicole Kidman to narrate its books. Katz acknowledges they can be expensive, but he believes they are worth the investment. Jake Gyllenhaal's version of The Great Gatsby was a huge bestseller for Audible.

Now Audible, which is owned by Amazon, is starting to ask well-known writers to create original audio works.

"While performances are being elevated and attuned to this advanced listening experience, why not write to the form in an original way?" says Katz. "So it's not just book authors. TV writers, movie writers, others are flocking in to help us get to the next stage. Which is: What is the, from the ground up, creativity that is right for this emergent private listening aesthetic?"

One writer who heeded the call to audio storytelling is Philip Pullman.

"I love this," he says. "... We are taking part in a little ritual or habit that goes back thousands and thousands and thousands of years — before the first mark was ever made on a stone or tablet. Long before writing, people were telling each other stories and the audiobook goes all the way back to that tradition."

Pullman is best known for the trilogy His Dark Materials and the short story he created for Audible is drawn from that world. The Collectors is narrated by actor Bill Nighy. Pullman says it wasn't any different writing for audio than print, because he always writes for the ear.

"I'm thinking very hard about the rhythm of each sentence as I write it," he says. "I read the words out loud so I can hear if they fit together in a rhythmic, musical sense. ... So I suppose I am thinking about reading aloud even though I am not at that point intending to make it specifically an audiobook."

Audible now has about 30 original audio works in the pipeline. One, which has already been released, is The Starling Project starring Alfred Molina. It was written by bestselling thriller writer Jeffery Deaver and it's more like a radio drama than a book.

Radio dramas, original stories and podcasts are now all part of the audio scene, says Michele Cobb, president of the Audio Publishers Association. It is still a small part of the industry but she's excited to see where it's headed.

"It can interest people who might not listen to a book but might be interested in a different type of program," she says. "So I think there becomes just a wider range of opportunities — when we're recording more and when more people are listening — to be a little more experimental."

One of the advantages of audiobooks is that you can listen anywhere, anytime: while driving, exercising, cooking. But if you just want to sit still and listen to someone tell you a story — you can do that, too.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

Growing segment of the book industry - audiobooks. E-books have been plowing their way through the publishing industry like a big, noisy steam engine, but audiobooks have been chugging along in the background like The Little Engine That Could. NPR's Lynn Neary reports this overlooked part of the business is growing at a rapid pace.

LYNN NEARY, BYLINE: Robin Whitten, editor and founder of Audiophile magazine, began writing about audiobooks in 1992. Back then, few had ever heard of them. Now it's a billion-dollar industry with more than 35,000 titles published in 2013. Whitten says audiobooks really took off once it became possible to listen to them on a variety of devices.

ROBIN WHITTEN: You suddenly have a complete recorded file from the first words of a book to the end, and you're not fumbling around looking for disc four in the middle of some really important scene. And that made a big difference. It made audiobooks much more user-friendly.

NEARY: But it's not just technology that's luring more listeners to audiobooks. The industry has always drawn on a large pool of professional actors as narrators, but these days, producers are signing on more and more celebrities. That's because the narrator is key to the success of an audiobook.

DON KATZ: There's this almost seductive intimacy of this private performance and the power of it.

NEARY: Don Katz is the CEO and founder of Audible, the largest producer and seller of audiobooks.

KATZ: So many of the customers become aficionados of the narration itself. Many of them buy based on the narrator. They'll literally listen to anything a specific actor reads simply because they like their styles.

NEARY: Audible has hired such well-known actors as Colin Firth, Anne Hathaway and Nicole Kidman to narrate its books. Katz acknowledges they can be expensive, but he believes they're worth the investment. Jake Gyllenhaal's version of "The Great Gatsby" was a huge bestseller for Audible.

(SOUNDBITE OF AUDIOBOOK, "THE GREAT GATBSY")

JAKE GYLLENHAL: (Reading) He stretched out his arms toward the dark water in a curious way. And far as I was from him, I could've sworn he was trembling. Involuntarily, I glanced seaward and distinguished nothing except a single green light - minute and far away.

NEARY: Now Audible, which is owned by Amazon, is starting to ask well-known writers to create original audio works - Don Katz.

KATZ: While performances are being elevated and attuned to this advanced listening experience, why not write to the form in an original way? So it's not just book authors. TV writers, movie writers, others are kind of flocking in to help us get to the next stage, which is, really, what is the from-the-ground-up creativity that is right for this emergent private listening aesthetic?

NEARY: One writer who heeded the call to audio storytelling is Philip Pullman.

PHILIP PULLMAN: I love this - the fact that we're taking part in a little ritual or habit that goes back thousands and thousands and thousands of years, before the first mark was ever made on a stone or a clay tablet. Long before writing, people were telling each other stories, and the audiobook goes all the way back to that, and I love it.

NEARY: Pullman is best known for the trilogy, "His Dark Matrials," and the short story he created for Audible is drawn from that world. "The Collectors," narrated by actor Bill Nighy, begins with two men discussing a woman who is depicted in a newly-discovered painting.

(SOUNDBITE OF AUDIOBOOK, "THE COLLECTORS")

BILL NIGHY: (Reading) One moment she looks cold, disdainful, contemptuous even, and then the next, on fire with a sort of lost and hopeless and yet somehow very sexy yearning - a very strong picture.

NEARY: Pullman says it wasn't any different writing for audio than print, because he always writes for the ear.

PULLMAN: I'm thinking very hard about the rhythm of each sentence as I write it. I do speak the words aloud, so I hear that they fit together in a kind of rhythmic, musical sense - that sort of thing. So I suppose I am thinking in terms of reading aloud, even though I'm not - not at that point intending to make it specifically an audiobook.

NEARY: Audible now has about 30 original audio works in the pipeline. One which has already been released is "The Starling Project," starring Alfred Molina. It was written by best-selling author Jeffrey Deaver, and it's more like a radio drama than a book.

(SOUNDBITE OF AUDIOBOOK, "THE STARLING PROJECT")

ALFRED MOLINA: Knocked vehicles off the highway heading up the side drive.

They're not sightseeing. There's nothing here.

Except us. Ready weapons.

Mustafa, any chatter?

Negative.

Get on the glasses, Devin. What do you see?

Two - jeep in lead and truck behind. Oh, man, boss.

What?

Federales.

NEARY: Radio drama, original stories, even podcasts are now all part of the audio scene, says Michele Cobb, president of the Audio Publishers Association. She says it's still a small part of the industry, but she's excited to see where it's headed.

MICHELE COBB: Because it can interest people who might not listen to a book but might be interested in a different type of program. So I think there - there becomes just a wider range of opportunities when we we're recording more and when more people are listening to be a little bit more experimental.

NEARY: One of the advantages of audiobooks is that you can listen anywhere, anytime - while driving, exercising, cooking. But if you just want to sit still and listen to someone tell you a story, you can do that too. Lynn Neary, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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