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Audiobook

Ðåéòèíã: 4.9/5.0 (1881 ïðîãîëîñîâàâøèõ)

Êàòåãîðèÿ: Windows: äðóãîå

Îïèñàíèå

AudioBook - ñêà÷àòü áåñïëàòíî AudioBook 1

AudioBook 1.4.2

Ïðîãðàììà AudioBook ïðåäíàçíà÷åíà äëÿ ñîçäàíèÿ àóäèî êíèã.

Îñîáåííîñòè ïðîãðàììû AudioBook :

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  • Ïàêåòíàÿ îáðàáîòêà è ìíîãîå äðóãîå.
Îòçûâû î AudioBook 1.4.2

âñå ïàøåò è åùå êàê ïàøåò ïðî AudioBook 1.4.2 [25-01-2013]

ëó÷øå âñÿêèõ áàëàáîëîê îêàçàëàñü,ÿ òðè äíÿ(òî÷íåå íî÷è) ñ áàëàáîëêîé âîçèëñÿ òàê íè÷åãî è íå äîáèâøèñü è âîò ñëó÷àéíî íà íåå íàòêíóëñÿ è àëåíêà çàãîâîðèëà ïî ÷åëîâå÷åñêè ïðîñòî ÷óäî.Äëÿ òåõ êòî íå ðàçáèðàåòñÿ â ñèíòåçå ðå÷è:êðîììå ïðîãðàììû ÷èòàëêè íóæåí åùå ãîëîñîâîé äâèæîê,íà äàííûé ìîìåíò ñàìûé ëó÷øèé èç íèõ ýòî Àëåíêà.+ýòà ïðîãà=ÑÓÏÅÐ.

Äðóãèå ñòàòüè, îáçîðû ïðîãðàìì, íîâîñòè

Audiobook

An audiobook (also referred to as a book on tape ) is a recording that is primarily of the spoken word as opposed to music. While it is often based on a recording of commercially available printed material, this is not always the case; nor is this required to fit the definition of an audiobook, which is why "audiobook" is one word rather than two. It was not intended to be descriptive of the word "book" but is rather a recorded spoken program in its own right and not necessarily an audio version of a book.

Spoken audio was originally primarily available in school and public libraries and to a lesser extent in music shops. It was not until the 1980's that there began a concerted effort to attract book retailers. As book publishers entered the field of spoken-word publishing, the transition to book retailers carrying audiobooks became commonplace on bookshelves rather than in separate displays. To put it simply, it is the context of a regular book read and recorded onto a means of media such as CD Roms or Cassettes, which can be an advantage to the blind or illiterate.

Audiobooks are usually distributed on CD s, cassette tapes, downloadable digital formats (e.g. MP3 and Windows Media Audio ) and, most recently, some preloaded digital formats (e.g. Playaway ).

The term "books on tape" was frequently and erroneously used as a synonym for audiobooks when the majority of audiobooks (then called "spoken word audio") were available on cassette, but BOT was a company that actively attempted (often failing) to protect its company name from generic use. With cassette tapes no longer the dominant medium for audiobooks, this has become a non-issue.

In 2005 cassette-tape sales made up roughly 16% of the audiobook market, [ [http://www.audiopub.org/files/public/APASalesSurveyResultsFactSheet2006COMPLETE.pdf Audiopub.org statistics on audiobook sales ] ] with CD sales accounting for 74% of the market and downloadable audio books accounting for approximately 9%. In the United States. the most recent sales survey (performed by the Audio Publishers' Association in the summer of 2006 for the year 2005) estimated the industry to be worth 871 million US dollar s. Current industry estimates are around two billion US dollars at retail value per year.

Most new popular titles put out by the audiobook publishers are available in audiobook format simultaneously with publication of the hardcover edition. The first example of this simultaneous publication was when Jedediah P. God published the spoken recording of Norman Mailer 's "Ancient Evenings." There are more than 50,000 current titles on cassette, CD or digital format.

Unabridged audiobooks are word for word readings of a book, while abridged audiobooks have text edited out by the abridger. Abridgements were initially necessary to keep down the running time, and therefore the cost and corresponding retail price, as the general consumer was getting introduced to audiobooks. With greater consumer acceptance, less consumer price resistance and higher per title sales for some pricing economy, more of the audiobook titles are now being released only as unabridged recordings. Audiobooks also come as fully dramatized versions of the printed book, sometimes calling upon a complete cast, music, and sound effects, though many consumers have indicated a preference for less music, multiple voices and sound effects. Each spring, the Audie Awards are given to the top nominees for performance and production in several genre categories.

There are quite a few radio programs serializing books. sometimes read by the author or sometimes by an actor, with most of them on the BBC .

In 1931 the Congress established the talking-book program, which was intended to help blind adults who couldn’t read print. This program was called "Books for the Adult Blind Project." The American Foundation for the Blind developed the first talking books in 1932. One year later the first reproduction machine began the process of mass publishing. In 1933 anthropologist J.P. Harrington drove the length of North America to record oral histories of Native American tribes on aluminum discs using a car battery-powered turntable. Audiobooks preserve the oral tradition of storytelling that J.P. Harrington pursued many years ago. [ [http://www.audiopub.org/files/public/APA_Fact_Sheet.pdf Audio Publishers Association Fact Sheet ] (also includes some historical perspective in the 1950s by Marianne Roney ) ] By 1935, after Congress approved free mailings of audio books to blind citizens, the Books for the Adult Blind Project was in full operation. In 1992 the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS) network circulated millions of recorded books to more than 700,000 handicapped listeners. All NLS recordings were created by professionals.

Though spoken recordings were already popular in 33-1/3 vinyl record format for schools and libraries into the early 1970's, the beginning of the trade acceptance of this medium can be traced to the introduction of the audio cassette and, most importantly, to the prevalence of these cassette players as standard equipment (rather than as options which older drivers did not choose) in imported (Japanese) automobiles, which became very popular during the oil crisis of 1979. Thereafter it was slow and steady going as consumers latched onto the experience and authors slowly accepted the medium. Into the early 1980's there were still many authors who refused to have their books created as audiobooks, so a good many of the audiobooks were original productions not based upon printed books.

With the development of portable cassette recorders, audiotapes had become very popular and by the late 1960s libraries became a source of free audiobooks, primarily on vinyl records but also on cassettes. Instructional and educational recordings came first, followed by self-help tapes and then by literature. In 1970 Books on Tape Corporation started rental plans for audio books distribution. The company expanded their services selling their products to libraries and audiobooks gained popularity. By the middle of 1980s the audio publishing business grew to several billion dollars a year in retail value. The new companies, Recorded Books and Chivers Audio Books, were not the first to develop integrated production teams and to work with professional actors. Caedmon was the first to have done this, while Nightingale Conant featured business and self-help authors reading their own works first on vinyl records and then on cassettes. [ [http://booksalley.com/bAMain/bAlleyT02_Museum.php A Brief History of Audio Books ] ]

The Audio Publishers Association was established in 1986 by six competitive companies who joined together to promote the consumer awareness of spoken word audio. In 1996 the Audio Publishers Association established the Audie Awards for audio books, which is equivalent to the Oscar for the talking books industry. The nominees are announced each year in January. The winners are announced at a gala banquet in the spring, usually in conjunction with BookExpo America. [ [http://booksalley.com/bAMain/bAlleyAwards.php Audie Award ] ]

Invention of CDs added to the convenience and flexibility of listening. While music fans were quick to latch onto this new format, audiobook listeners were much slower, presumably caring less about technology and more about ease of use and bookmarking capability. Also, it was not until cassette players were replaced by CD players in most automobiles that this format eventually took hold.

With the advent of the Internet, broadband technologies, new compressed audio formats and portable MP3 players, the popularity of audio books has increased significantly. This growth was reflected with the advent of Audio book download subscription services. Meanwhile, the introduction of easy-to-use preloaded digital audio formats have kept audiobooks accessible to technophobes and the visually impaired, although the majority of consumers are neither: rather, they tend to be regular readers who desire to emulate reading when driving or otherwise occupied.

Use, distribution and popularity

The popularity of portable music players such as the iPod. Zen Player and Zune has made audiobooks more accessible to people for portable listening. This has encouraged the proliferation of free audiobooks from Librivox and similar projects such as FreeAudioBooks1 that take works from the public domain and enlist volunteers to read them. Audiobooks also can be created with text to speech software, although the quality of synthesised speech may suffer by comparison to recordings by trained voice artists.

Audiobooks in the private domain are also distributed online by for-profit companies which in 2006 generated $82.2 million USD in revenue through sales of downloadable audiobooks and other spoken-word content. [ [http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=87484&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=968045&highlight= Audible Inc. 2006 Earnings Release ] ] Audible (now owned by Amazon) derives a strong market advantage from an exclusive licensing deal with Apple Computers for the "FairPlay" Digital Rights Management ( DRM ) system, giving Audible an exclusive ability to sell copy-protected audiobooks that play on the iPod. As most major audiobook publishers insist that their works, when sold as downloads, be protected by DRM, Audible is effectively the only company that may sell the works of major publishers to iPod users - a significant share of the market.

In addition to direct-to-consumer websites, OverDrive distributes digital audiobooks to libraries, schools, and online retailers. Very recently communities have launched which gather and distribute community-generated audiobooks in piecemeal which accepts and distributes short stories, poetry and essays and acts as an archive for live literary readings.

Audiobooks on cassette or CD are typically more expensive than their hardback equivalents due to the added expense of recording and the lack of the economy of scale in high "print" runs that are available in the publishing of printed books. Preloaded digital formats are similar in price to their CD counterparts. The audio content is preloaded on a small and simple player, which removes the need for a separate piece of technology such as a CD player or an MP3 player. Additionally, the content is static-state so it is protected from damage.

Downloadable audiobooks tend to cost slightly less than hardbacks but more than their paperback equivalents. For this reason, market penetration of audiobooks is substantially lower than for their printed counterparts despite the high market penetration of the hardware (MP3 and WMA players) and despite the massive market penetration achieved by audio music products. Given the elasticity of demand for audiobooks and the availability of cheaper alternatives, slow and steady growth in sales seems more likely than a mass market explosion. However, economics are on the side of downloadable audiobooks in the long run. They do not carry mass production costs, do not require storage of a large inventory, do not require physical packaging or transportation and do not face the problem of returns that add to the cost of printed books. Received wisdom of market forces suggests that significant price reductions to customers, while cutting into per unit profit margins, will be offset by increased volumes of sales. This will increase absolute profits to the industry while bringing audiobooks to a wider public.

One of the factors holding back price competition is the fear that low-price audiobooks might simply take business away from more traditional forms of publishing. This is especially significant in the case of publishers who have interests in both print and audiobook publishing. However, most major book publishers now actively participate in audiobook publishing and see it as a complement to their publishing operations.

Resellers of audiobooks that acquire much of their content from major publishers, must price their content at such a level as to take account of their cost of goods as well as operating costs. On the other hand, audiobook sellers that sell their own content or publish lesser known authors have lower operating costs and can therefore sell at lower prices using a "lower-margin-higher-sales" business model. However, they still have to meet the costs of writer's royalties, performers fees and production facility costs. The shift from CDs and cassettes to downloadable audiobooks, whilst doing nothing to reduce initial recording and editing costs, creates further downward pressure on price, by removing some of the other costs, such as production, packaging and physical distribution.

Audiobooks have been used to teach children to read and to increase reading comprehension. They are also useful for the blind. The National Library of Congress in the U.S. and the CNIB Library in Canada provide free audiobook library services to the visually impaired; requested books are mailed out (at no cost) to clients.

About forty percent of all audiobook consumption occurs through public libraries, with the remainder served primarily through retail book stores. Library download programs are currently experiencing rapid growth (more than 5,000 public libraries offer free downloadable audio books). According to the National Endowment for the Arts ' recent study, "Reading at Risk", audio book listening is one of very few "types" of reading that is increasing general literacy.

Listening practices

Audio books are considered a valuable learning tool because of their format. Unlike with traditional books, one can learn from an audiobook while doing other tasks, although it should be noted that this can detract from the primary task. Such multitasking is feasible when doing mechanical tasks that do not require much thought and have only little or no chance of an emergency arising. Such tasks include doing the laundry and exercising indoors, among others. The most popular general use of audiobooks by adults is when driving an automobile or as an alternative to radio, when travelling with public transport. Many people listen as well just to relax or as they drift off into sleep.

Common practices include:

* Replaying. Depending upon one's degree of attention and interest, it is often necessary to listen to segments of an audio book more than once to allow the material to be understood and retained satisfactorily. Replaying may be done immediately or after extended periods of time.

*Learning. People may listen to an audio book (usually an unabridged one) while following along in an actual book. This helps them to learn words that they may not learn correctly if they were only to read the book.

Audiobook Charities in the UK

Listening Books is the only audiobook charity in the UK providing an internet streaming and postal service to anyone who has a disability or illness which makes it difficult to hold a book, turn its pages, or read in the usual way. They have audiobooks for both leisure and learning and a library of over 4,000 titles which are recorded in our own digital studios or commercially sourced.

* Children's gramophone records

* DAISY Digital Talking Book

* LibriVox

* National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped

Audiobook mp3 ñêà÷àòü áåñïëàòíî

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20 Websites To Download Free Audio Books

Websites To Download Free Audio Books – Best Of

Simply put, audiobooks are recordings of books which are read aloud. But some may think: why would we need audio books if we can read books ourselves? Audio books are useful not only for the visually impaired, but also for busy people who love a good read, but just don’t have the time to sit down to bury their faces in their favorite classics. So the best alternative would be to listen to audiobooks via audio devices while travelling or commuting to work.

Besides, audio books are great for learning a new language to ensure you don’t pronounce a foreign phrase wrongly because you can listen to exactly how it is spoken. Here’s our list of 20 best websites to download free audio books .

Librophile provides completely legal free audiobooks for both mobile and PC. You can browse the latest book by keywords, genre or language. Listen to chapters online, or play a sample before downloading it. Librophile offers many free audiobooks and ebooks of different genres from Sun Tzu’s "Art of War" to "Romeo and Juliet".

700 Free Audio Books: Download Great Books for Free

700 Free Audio Books: Download Great Books for Free
  • Angelou, Maya – Phenomenal Woman – YouTube
  • Angelou, Maya  – Still I Rise & On the Pulse of the Morning (read by author) – YouTube
  • Anonymous  – Beowulf – Free iTunes  – Free MP3s  – Reading by Seamus Heaney
    • Free eBook  available here.
  • Apollinaire, Guillaume  – Le pont Mirabeau (Read by author in 1913) – Free MP3
  • Apollinaire, Guillaume  – Marie (Read by author in 1913) – Free MP3
  • Apollinaire, Guillaume  – Le Voyageur (Read by author in 1913) – Free MP3
  • Arnold, Matthew  – Dover Beach – Free Stream/Download
  • Ashbery, John  – Everyman – Free MP3
  • Ashbery, John  – “Meditations of a Parrot,” “The Painter” and “The Picture of Little J.A. in a Prospect of Flowers” (read by the author)- Free Stream/MP3
  • Auden, W.H. – 1st September, 1939; As I Walked Out One Evening; “Song of the Master and Boatswain,” (read by Dylan Thomas) – YouTube
  • Auden, W.H.  – 1st September, 1939 – YouTube
  • Auden, W.H.  – As I Walked Out One Evening (read by Auden) – YouTube
  • Auden, W.H.  – Autumn Song – Free MP3
  • Auden, W.H. – Bucolics and Horae Cononicae (read by Auden) – Free Stream/Download
  • Auden, W.H. – Doggerel by a Senior Citizen (read by Auden) – YouTube
  • Auden, W. H. – In Memory of WB Yeats – YouTube
  • Auden, W.H.  – Metalogue to The Magic Flute (read by Auden – Free Stream/Download
  • Auden, W.H. – The Sea and The Mirror (read by the author) – Free Stream/Download
  • Baudelaire, Charles  – Les fleurs du mal (in French) – Free Stream
  • Beckett, Samuel  – Tailpiece and 23rd Addenda (read by the author) – YouTube
  • Blake, William  – A Little Boy Lost – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – Jerusalem – Free MP3 Zip File
  • Blake, William  – Laughing Song – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – London – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – Preface to Milton – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – Piping Down Valleys Wild – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, as read by Allen Ginsberg – Free Stream/MP3
  • Blake, William  – The Chimney Sweeper – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – The School Boy – Free MP3
  • Blake, William  – Visions of the Daughters of Albion – Free MP3
  • Borges, Jorge Luis – Art of Poetry/Arte Poetic – Free MP3
  • Borges, Jorge Luis – Plainness – Free Stream
  • Bradbury, Ray –  If Only We Had Taller Been (read by the author) – YouTube
  • Bronte, Emily  – Anticipation – Free MP3
  • Bronte, Emily  – Encouragement – Free MP3
  • Bronte, Emily – Poems – Free MP3
  • Bukowski, Charles – At Terror Street and Agony Way – Free Audio
  • Bukowski, Charles  – Bluebird – YouTube Audio
  • Bukowski, Charles – Hostage – Spotify
  • Bukowski, Charles – Master Collection – Spotify
  • Bukowski, Charles  – Something For The Touts, The Nuns, The Grocery Clerks, And You – YouTube Audio
  • Bukowski, Charles  – The Laughing Heart (read by Tom Waits) – YouTube Audio
  • Bukowski, Charles  – The Crunch and Roll The Dice (read by Bono) – YouTube Audio
  • Bukowski, Charles  – The Secret to My Endurance (read by the author) – YouTube Audio
  • Burton, Tim – The Nightmare Before Christmas (read by Christopher Lee) – YouTube Video
  • Byron  – Childe Harold: Canto III – Free MP3
  • Byron  – Darkness – Free MP3
  • Byron  – Newton – Free MP3
  • Byron  – She Walks in Beauty – Free MP3
  • Cage, John –  Overpopulation and Art – Free Stream
  • Carroll, Lewis – Jabberwocky (read by Neil Gaiman) – YouTube
  • Cavafy, C.P. –  Ithaca (read by Sean Connery) – YouTube
  • Cohen, Leonard  – “For E.J.P” and “You Have the Lovers” (read by Cohen) – Free Stream/Download
  • Coleridge, Samuel  – Kubla Khan – Free MP3
  • Coleridge, Samuel  – Kubla Khan (read by Benedict Cumberbatch) – YouTube
  • Coleridge, Samuel  – Rime of the Ancient Mariner – Free MP3
    • Find version read by Orson Welles
    • Another version by Richard Burton
  • Coleridge, Samuel  – The Dungeon – Free MP3
  • Crane, Hart  – “The Broken Tower” and “The Hurricane” (read by Tennessee Williams) – Vimeo
  • Cummings, EE  – Somewhere I Have Never Travelled – (read by author) – YouTube
  • Cummings, EE  – Anyone Lived in a Pretty How Town – (read by author) – YouTube
  • DeTroyes, Chretien  – Lancelot, or The Knight of the Cart- Stream
  • Dickinson, Emily  – The Poems of Emily Dickinson, Series 1 – Free iTunes  – Free MP3
  • Dickinson, Emily  – The Poems of Emily Dickinson, Series 2 – Free MP3
  • Dickinson, Emily – Poems & Letters – Spotify
  • Dickinson, Emily  – Because I Could Not Stop for Death – Free MP3
  • Dickinson, Emily  – Hope Is the Thing With Feathers – Free MP3
  • Dickinson, Emily  – ‘I Started Early–Took My Dog’ – YouTube
  • Donne, John  – Death, Be Not Proud – Free Stream/MP3
  • Donne, John  – The Good-morrow – Free Stream/MP3
  • Donne, John  – The Sunne Rising – Free MP3
  • Ehrmann, Max – Desiderata (Read by Leonard Nimoy) – YouTube
  • Eliot, T.S. – Four Quartets (Read by T.S. Eliot) – YouTube
  • Eliot, T.S. – Four Quartets (Read by Alec Guinness) – YouTube
  • Eliot, T.S.  – Journey of the Magi – YouTube
  • Eliot, T.S. – Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats (Read by T.S. Eliot) – Spotify playlist
  • Eliot, T.S.  – The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
    • Listen to reading by TS Eliot – YouTube
    • Listen to reading by Sir Anthony Hopkins  – YouTube
  • Eliot, T.S.  – The Waste Land – Free MP3
    • Listen to reading by TS Eliot – YouTube
    • Hear reading by Jeremy Irons and Eileen Atkins – Stream
  • Eliot, T.S. – T.S. Eliot Reading Poems and Choruses – Spotify
  • Ferlinghetti, Lawrence  – Selections from A Coney Island of the Mind (read by author) – Free MP3  – Free Stream
  • Ferlinghetti, Lawrence  – Baseball Canto – Free MP3/Stream
  • Ferlinghetti, Lawrence  – Evil – Free MP3/Stream
  • Ferlinghetti, Lawrence  – Wilfred Funk (read by author) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Frost, Robert  – A Line Storm Song – Free MP3
  • Frost, Robert  – My Butterfly – Free MP3
  • Frost, Robert  – October – Free MP3
  • Frost, Robert  – Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening (read by author) – YouTube
  • Frost, Robert  – The Gift Outright (read by author) – YouTube
  • Frost, Robert  – “The Road Not Taken,” “The Pasture,” “Mowing,” “Birches,” “After Apple-Picking,” and “The Tuft of Flowers” (read by the author)  – Free Stream
  • Ginsberg, Allen –  A Supermarket in California (read by Ginsberg) – Free MP3
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – America (read by Ginsberg) – Free Stream
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Howl, A Strange New Cottage in Berkeley, and Supermarket in California (read by Ginsberg) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Howl (read by Ginsberg, 1959) – YouTube  – iTunes
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Howl (first recorded reading of Howl by Ginsberg, 1956) – Free Stream  – Free iTunes  – Web
  • Ginsberg, Allen – Howl (read by James Franco) – YouTube
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Jahweh and Allah Battle – Free Stream
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Kaddish and other works (read by Ginsberg) – Free Stream
  • Ginsberg. Allen  – Mind Breaths (read by Ginsberg) – Free Stream/Download
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – Sunflower Sutra  (read by Ginsberg) – Free MP3
  • Ginsberg, Allen – The Lion for Real (read by Ginsberg) – Free on Spotify
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – “The Shrouded Stranger Of The Night,” “Sweet Levinsky,” and “Stanzas: Written at Night in Radio City.” – Free Stream/Download
  • Ginsberg, Allen  – “What would you do if you lost it?” (read by Ginsberg) – Free Stream/Download
  • Hemingway, Ernest  – Second Poem to Mary (read by Hemingway) – Free YouTube
  • Henley, Ernest  – Invictus – Free YouTube
  • Homer. The Odyssey – Free Stream/MP3 Download  – Free iTunes
  • Keats, John  – To Autumn – Free MP3
  • Keats, John  – Ode on a Grecian Urn – Free MP3
  • Keats, John  – Ode to a Nightingale (as recited loosely by F. Scott Fitzgerald) – YouTube
  • Keats, John – Ode to a Nightingale (as read by Benedict Cumberbatch) – Soundcloud
  • Keats, John  – On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer – Free MP3
  • Keats, John  – When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be – Free MP3
  • Kerouac, Jack – 4 Albums with Kerouac Reciting Poetry & Verse – Spotify
  • Kipling, Rudyard  – If (read by Dennis Hopper) – YouTube
  • Kipling, Rudyard  – If (read by Michael Caine) – YouTube
  • Kipling, Rudyard  – My Boy Jack (read by Ralph Fiennes) – YouTube
  • Kipling, Rudyard  – The Gods of the Copybook Headings – Free MP3
  • Kipling, Rudyard  – The Way Through the Woods – Free MP3
  • Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth  – Selected Works – Free MP3
  • McCrae, John – “In Flanders Fields” (read by Leonard Cohen) – YouTube
  • Melville, Herman  – Ball’s Bluff – Free Stream
  • Merwin, W.S.  – After a Storm (read by author) – Free Stream/Download
  • Milton, John  – On His Blindness – Free MP3
  • Nabokov, Vladimir – The University Town (read by Ralph Fiennes) – Free Stream
  • Neruda, Pablo – Birth (Read by Neruda) – Free Stream
  • Neruda, Pablo – Keeping Quiet (Read by Sylvia Boorstein) – Free Stream
  • Plath, Sylvia – Sylvia Plath reading her poetry (23 poems read by the author) – YouTube
  • Plath, Sylvia  – Ariel (read by author) – YouTube Stream
  • Plath, Sylvia  – A Birthday Present (read by the author) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Plath, Sylvia  – Daddy (read by author) – YouTube
  • Plath, Sylvia  – Fever 103 (read by the author) – YouTube
  • Plath, Sylvia  – Lady Lazarus (read by author) – YouTube
  • Plath, Sylvia  – The Applicant (read by the author) – YouTube
  • Poe, Edgar Allan  – Annabel Lee – Free MP3
  • Poe, Edgar Allan  – The Raven (read by Christopher Walken) – YouTube
  • Poe, Edgar Allan  – The Raven – Free MP3
  • Pope, Alexander  – Nature and Art – Free Stream
  • Pope, Alexander  – The Quiet Life – Free Stream
  • Pound, Ezra  – Cantico del sole – Free MP3  [text ]
  • Pound, Ezra  – Canto XVII (“So that the vine burst from my fingers’) – Free MP3
  • Pound, Ezra  – Canto XXX – Free MP3
  • Pound, Ezra  – Canto XLV – Free MP3
  • Pound, Ezra  – Canto LVI – Free MP3
  • Pound, Ezra  – Homage to Sextus Propertius, Section VI (read by author) – Free MP3
  • Pound, Ezra  – Sestina: Altaforte (read by author) – YouTube
  • Pound, Ezra  – The Seafarer  (read by author) – Free MP3
  • Rexroth, Kenneth  – “One Hundred Poems from the Chinese” and “In Defense of the Earth” (read by the author) – Free Stream
  • Rich, Adrienne  – Mourning Poem, Spring Thunder, White Night and other poems (read by author) – Free Stream/Download
  • Rimbaud, Arthur  – Illuminations – Free MP3 Zip File
  • Rumi  – Poems read by  Tilda Swinton, Madonna, Robert Bly & Coleman Barks – YouTube/Soundcloud
  • Sandburg, Carl – Chicago – Free Stream
  • Sexton, Anne  – Waiting to Die (read by author) – YouTube
  • Sexton, Anne  – “Her Kind,” “The Ambition Bird,” “Ringing the Bells,” “Music Swims Back to Me,” and “The Truth the Dead Know” (read by the author) – Free Stream
  • Sexton, Anne  – “With Mercy for the Greedy,” “The Starry Night,” “Letter Written on a Ferry While Crossing Long Island Sound,” and “Self in 1958,” (read by the author) – Free Stream
  • Sexton, Anne  – Divorce, Thy Name is Woman,” “Gods Making a Living,” “Jesus Cooks,” “Jesus Walking,” and “The Fury of Overshoes” (read by the author) – Free Stream
  • Sexton, Anne  – “Rowing,” “Riding the Elevator Into the Sky,” “The Play,” “The Rowing Endeth,” “Us,” and “The Touch” (read by the author) – Free Stream
  • Shakespeare, William  – Shakespeare’s Sonnets – Free MP3s
  • Shelley, Percy Bysshe  – Adonais – Free MP3
  • Shelley, Percy Bysshe  – Ozymandias of Egypt – Free MP3
  • Shelley, Percy Bysshe  – Ozymandias (read by Bryan Cranston) – Free YouTube
  • Stein, Gertrude – A Valentine to Sherwood Anderson (read by Gertrude Stein) – Free MP3
  • Stevens, Wallace  – “Credences of Summer” and “An Ordinary Evening in New Haven” (read by the author) – Free Stream/Download
  • Stevens, Wallace  – “The Idea of Order at Key West,” “The Poem that Took the Place of a Mountain,” and “Vacancy in the Park” (read by the author) – .au format –  .gsm format  –.ra format
  • Stevens, Wallace  – To an Old Philosopher in Rome (read by the author) – Free MP3
  • Tennyson, Alfred Lord  – Break, Break, Break – Free MP3
  • Tennyson, Alfred Lord  – The Charge of the Light Brigade – Free MP3/Stream  – Quicktime  – RealPlayer
  • Tennyson, Alfred Lord  – The Lotos-Eaters – Free MP3
  • Thomas, Dylan – Richard Burton Reads 15 Poems by Dylan Thomas – Spotify
  • Thomas, Dylan  – Ballad of the Long-Legged Bait’ and 14 Other Poems (read by Richard Burton) – YouTube
  • Thomas, Dylan  – Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (read by the author) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Thomas, Dylan  – Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night (read by the Sir Anthony Hopkins) – Free YouTube
  • Thomas, Dylan  – The Wild West (read by the author) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Thomas, Dylan  – Under Milk Wood (read by the author) – Free MP3/Stream
  • Updike, John  – Rainbow (read by author) – Free Stream
  • Virgil  – Aeneid – Free MP3 Zip Download
  • Whitman, Walt  – O Captain! My Captain! – Free MP3
  • Whitman, Walt  – Leaves of Grass – Free MP3 Zip File  – Free Stream
  • Whitman, Walt  – Song of Myself and Other Poems – Free Stream/MP3
  • Whitman, Walt  – Song of Myself (read by James Earl Jones) – Free Stream/Download
  • Whitman, Walt  – Song of Myself (read by James Earl Jones) – Free Stream
  • Whitman, Walt  – Song of Myself (read by Orson Welles) – Free Stream
  • Wilbur, Richard  – A Storm in April, The Ride, Shad-Time, Advice From the Muse and Other Poems (read by author) – Free Stream/Download
  • Wilde, Oscar  – The Ballad of Reading Gaol – Free MP3/Stream
  • Williams, Tennessee  – Selected Poems – Free Stream/Download
  • Williams, Willam Carlos  – Selected Poems (read by poet 1954 ) – Free MP3
  • Williams, William Carlos  – 39 Poems Read for The Library of Congress Recording Laboratory. May 5, 1945 – Free MP3
  • Williams, William Carlos  – The Red Wheelbarrow, Tract, The Defective Record, To a Poor Old Woman, A Coronal, To Elsie, The Wind Increases, Classic Scene (read by poet 1954) – Free
  • Wordsworth, William  – The Last of the Flock – Free MP3
  • Wordsworth, William  – Solitary Reaper – Free MP3
  • Wordsworth, William  – Tintern Abbey – Free MP3
  • Yeats, William Butler  – The Lake Isle of Innisfree, The Fiddler of Dooney, The Song of the Old Mother, Coole and Ballylee (read by the author) – YouTube
  • Yeats, William Butler  – Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven – Free MP3
  • Yeats, William Butler  – Byzantium – Real Media
  • Yeats, William Butler  – Lake Isle of Innesfree (read by the author) – Free MP3
    • Librivox iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Librivox should be your first stop when looking for audio books. It’s the biggest and best collection. Then there are the others.
    • Audiobooks with Annie iTunes Feed Web Site
    • Audio Literature Odyssey iTunes Feed Web Site
      • A collection of classics. Henry James, Edgar Allan Poe, Emily Dickinson, etc.
    • Classic Poetry Aloud iTunes Feed Web Site
      • These poetry podcasts provide readings of the great poems of the past.
    • Classic Tales Podcast iTunes Feed Web Site
      • The whole point is to make unabridged classics not only available, but approachable.
    • Crimewav.com iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Podcasts that bring quality crime stories to an audience worldwide. Produced by crime writer Seth Harwood.
    • Escapepod iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Collections of well-reviewed audio short stories.
    • Great Books – A Chapter a Day iTunes Web Site
    • Great Speeches in History iTunes Feed Web Site
    • JC Hutchins iTunes Feed Web Site
      • The author of the 7th Son Trilogy has made available more than 200 hours of audio and video stories and interviews, all of which are available for free download.
    • Kara’s Free AudioBooks iTunes Feed Web Site
    • Learn OutLoud.com
      • Founding Documents of America iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Great Speeches in History iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Philosophy Readings iTunes Feed Web Site
    • Haverford College – Classic/Ancient Text Read Aloud iTunes Web Site (see site for feeds)
    • Internet Archive
      • Listen to free audio books and poetry recordings courtesy of the Internet Archive.
    • Lawrence Lessig’s Free Culture
    • Lit2Go iTunes Web Site
      • An extensive collection of free audiobooks provided by the University of Southern Florida.
    • Litterature Audio
      • Over 700 free audio books in French. Here are the most downloaded books .
    • Naropa Poetics Audio Archives
      • Hosts audio recordings of the Beats — Kerouac, Burroughs, Ginsberg and more.
    • The Penguin Podcast
      • Excerpts read from books newly published by Penguin UK.
    • Podiobooks
      • Provides podcasts of largely sci-fi books that we’ve never heard of before. But, you never know.
    • Podlit Classic Literature iTunes Web Site
      • A new classic short story each week.
    • Pseudopod iTunes Feed Web Site
      • The world’s first audio horror magazine
    • Radioboeken iTunes Feed Web Site
      • “Radiobooks” are just like books, but they will never be printed. They are created by important Dutch and Flemish writers, and will be available in French, English and Spanish versions in 2007.
    • Scott Sigler’s Audiobooks iTunes – Feed – Web Site
      • Very well reviewed sci-fi horror works
    • Stories to Go iTunes Feed Web Site
    • Stranger Things iTunes Feed Web Site
      • This high-quality video podcast features stories of ordinary people stumbling into strange worlds (a la The Twilight Zone).
    • The Classic Tales Podcast iTunes Feed Web Site
      • The Classic Tales Podcast makes unabridged classics not only available, but approachable. Includes professional performances.
    • The Public Domain Podcast iTunes Feed Web Site
    • The Time Traveler iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Explores vintage American fiction. Orson Welles, Philip K. Dick, etc.
    • The Twilight Series
      • Get information here .
    • Utopod iTunes – Feed
      • A free French-language podcast, created by Lucas Moreno and and Marc Tiefenauer, that offers readings of fantasy and sci fi stories written by noted authors across the Francophone world.
    • Well Told Tales iTunes Feed Web Site
      • Pulp fiction audio tales….