COMPLETE: Short Nonfiction Collection, Vol. 087 - jo

Solo or group recordings that are finished and fully available for listeners
Sue Anderson
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Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

FULL: Short Nonfiction Collection, Vol. 087

This project is now complete.  All audio files can be found on our catalog page here:

https://librivox.org/short-nonfiction-collection-vol-087-by-various/


This is an ongoing collection of short nonfiction works in English, chosen by the readers, which are in the Public Domain (generally meaning that they were published prior to 1926). Nonfiction includes essays and speeches; letters and diaries; biography and history; film, book and music reviews; descriptions of travel; politics and sports; instructional manuals; even a favorite recipe from a Public Domain cookbook! Your recording can be on any topic. Some suggestions for source material can be found here.

For clarification of what "in the Public Domain" means read this. Try to stay with works that run less than 60 minutes [74 minutes is the absolute max]. You may read a maximum of 2 selections per volume. There is no need to sign-up before recording, as long as the work is clearly in the Public Domain. But please note: Wikisource CAN NOT be used as a source. See "Our policy on text sources."

After 20 recordings are submitted, we will prooflisten, catalog and make them available to the public.

Basic Recording Guide: http://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/Newbie_Guide_to_Recording

1. RECORD:
  • Be sure to set your recording software to: 44100Hz, 32-bit.
  • At the BEGINNING say: "[Title of Work], by [Author Name]" "This is a Librivox recording. All Librivox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit Librivox.org"
  • At the END, say: "End of [Title], by [Author Name]"
  • If you wish, you may also say: "Read by...your name."
  • Please leave no more than 1 second of silence at the beginning of your recording. Add about 5 seconds of silence at the end of your recording.
2. EDIT and SAVE your file:
  • Need noise-cleaning? See this LibriVox wiki page for a complete guide.
  • Save or export your recording to an mp3 file at 128kbs. The uploader will add the mp.3 to the end of your file name when it uploads. Please use the format shown. Your file name should have this format before you upload it:

    snf087_titleofwork_authorlastname_yourinitials_128kb
  • After it is uploaded, it should have this format:
    https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_titleofwork_authorlastname_yourinitials_128kb.mp3
  • FILE NAMES HAVE RULES!
    Just a word or two to identify the title. Omit "a," "the," etc. Author's LAST NAME only. Everything lower case, including author's last name & your initials!
3. UPLOAD your recording:
  • Upload your finished recording using the LibriVox uploader: http://librivox.org/login/uploader. When your upload is complete, you will receive a link - copy and post it to the current nonfiction thread. If you don't post that you've uploaded your recording, the nonfiction book coordinator won't know that you did it!
    Image
  • If you have trouble reading the image above, please send a private message to any admin.
  • To upload, you'll need to select the MC, which for the Short Nonfiction Collection is: knotyouraveragejo
  • If this doesn't work, or you have questions, please check our How To Send Your Recording wiki page
4. POST the following information in this thread:
  • Title of the work.
  • Author of the work.
  • The link to your file you copied from the uploader.
  • A URL link to the source from which you read (etext URL). If posting from Gutenberg, please provide the link to the download page, e.g. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/# (where # is the Gutenberg project number for the book). Note: WikiSource is not accepted as a source for a recording.
  • Length in minutes.
  • If this is your first Librivox recording, we will also need your name as you would like it to appear in the LibriVox catalog, and, if you have a web page and want it linked to your name in the catalog, the URL of the web page.
5. PROOF LISTENING AND DEADLINE FOR EDITS on recordings you have submitted:
  • The SNF Collection has SPECIAL STANDARDS for PLing, which reflect our concern for accuracy in reading nonfiction material.
  • We proof listen for the following:
    • Has the recording passed "Checker?" This LibriVox app looks for common problems associated with LibriVox recordings. https://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/Checker
    • Does the recording have errors that change the meaning of the text? This includes words accidentally added, omitted, mispronounced, or misread!
    • Does the recording have the LibriVox into? Are there any long silences or pauses, stumbles or repeats that need to be edited out? Are there 5 seconds of silence at the end of the recording?
  • We ask that you complete any editing requested by the Dedicated Proof Listener within two weeks of the request, or, if you need more time, that you post in this thread to request an extension. There’s no shame in this; we’re all volunteers and things happen. Extensions are, however, at the discretion of the Book Coordinator. To be fair to the other readers, sections which cannot be edited in a timely manner will be deleted from the current volume of the Nonfiction Collection, but they can always be included in a future volume when the edits are complete.

Magic Window:



BC Admin
Last edited by Sue Anderson on October 25th, 2021, 6:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

Welcome to Volume 087 of the Short Nonfiction Collection. This is a place to share a special interest by recording a short work of public domain nonfiction. If you haven't something already in mind that you'd like to record, there are many bookshelves at Gutenberg.org to explore http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/bookshelf/. The bookshelves for Countries, Education, Fine Arts, History, Music, Periodicals, and Technology are some places to start.

Hathi Trust and Archive.org are good resources:

https://archive.org/
https://www.hathitrust.org/

The Online Books Page has over 2 million PD listings! It was suggested by LibriVoxer Soupy.
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/lists.html

The Biodiversity Heritage Library is a great source for natural history. It was suggested by LibriVoxer MillionMoments. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/

The Linda Hall Science, Engineering, and Technology Library has some unique items in its Digital Collection https://www.lindahall.org/collections/

Please note: Wikisource CAN NOT be used as a source. See "Our policy on text sources." If you are interested in reading a text you have found on Wikisource, I will be happy to help you locate an alternative reading source. Just post me a query on the thread.

If you have any doubts about the public domain status of anything you want to read for the collection, please feel free to post the source along with your query in the thread, and I will be glad to help you! Thanks!

Please note: There is a limit of two selections per reader for this volume of Short Nonfiction.

Please check the "vitals" of your recording with Checker https://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/Checker before sending it up to the Nonfiction Collection! :) Checker is an easy to use "open source tool that looks for common problems with recordings for LibriVox... Checker saves time by checking contributions for common issues before files are uploaded." Thanks! :) :)

Sue (Book Coordinator, Short Nonfiction Collection)
Piotrek81
Posts: 4705
Joined: November 3rd, 2011, 2:02 pm
Location: Goat City, Poland

Post by Piotrek81 »

To start this project off, here are two sections about two Polish military worthies, in keeping with the theme set by the section on Kościuszko:

https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/40641/pg40641-images.html#ar118 koniecpolski
https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_koniecpolski_encyclopediabritannica_pn81_128kb.mp3 Stanislaus (Stanisław) Koniecpolski duration 3:26
https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/31447/pg31447-images.html#ar24 chodkiewicz
https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_chodkiewicz_encyclopediabritannica_pn81_128kb.mp3 Jan Karol Chodkiewicz duration 4:27

Both active in roughly the same period, and both met with disturbingly similar response when they were asking for a monetary support of their eforts...

I fixed some typos in the placenames using wikipedia as a reference. Also, I really think "battle at Abazd Basha" should be "battle against/with Abazd Basha" as this was the name of a military commander, but I left it intact. Maybe I should have changed it too? Or would that have been too much of an intervention into the text?

And here's a short drone video of the fortress in Khotyn/Chocim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXJPVDhc7zs (today's South-Eastern Ukraine)
Want to hear some PREPARATION TIPS before you press "record"? Listen to THIS and THIS
TommyMer
Posts: 514
Joined: December 28th, 2012, 4:33 am

Post by TommyMer »

Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

Piotrek81 wrote: October 3rd, 2021, 3:23 am To start this project off, here are two sections about two Polish military worthies, in keeping with the theme set by the section on Kościuszko:

https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/40641/pg40641-images.html#ar118 koniecpolski
https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_koniecpolski_encyclopediabritannica_pn81_128kb.mp3 Stanislaus (Stanisław) Koniecpolski duration 3:26
https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/31447/pg31447-images.html#ar24 chodkiewicz
https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_chodkiewicz_encyclopediabritannica_pn81_128kb.mp3 Jan Karol Chodkiewicz duration 4:27

Both active in roughly the same period, and both met with disturbingly similar response when they were asking for a monetary support of their eforts...

I fixed some typos in the placenames using wikipedia as a reference. Also, I really think "battle at Abazd Basha" should be "battle against/with Abazd Basha" as this was the name of a military commander, but I left it intact. Maybe I should have changed it too? Or would that have been too much of an intervention into the text?

And here's a short drone video of the fortress in Khotyn/Chocim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXJPVDhc7zs (today's South-Eastern Ukraine)
Hi Piotrek81, Thanks for getting volume 087 off to a good start with these two short biographies of Polish military heroes! :D I must say that these brief forays into Polish history leave me gasping at the complexity of Poland's history! Chodkiewicz leading forces first against Sweden, then against Moscow, and then defending the southern Polish frontier from the Turks at the Fortress of Khotyn... Wow...The video of Khotyn really helped me visualize! Thanks for including it!

I sympathize with your frustration at the confusion between people and place names (Abazd Basha), but you were probably wise to leave the issue alone. Time does odd things with names... It would seem that a quote from the EB11 article on Koniecpolski has made it into world of Scrabble as part of the definition of "terrific" This is what came up when I googled "Abazd Basha."

Definition of terrific | Is terrific a word in the scrabble dictionary?https://www.wordgamedictionary.com › dictionary › ter...
... and the Turks, with terrific loss, at Abazd Basha.0 | 0 |. About 12:20 a terrific roar and a great sheet of flame rose high above the din.0 | 0 |. 8-)


Both selections are PL OK! :thumbs:
Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »


Mark Twain (1835-1910)
Willa Cather (1873-1947)

Hi TommyMer,

Thanks for this lively bit of early (1895) journalism by Willa Cather! :D I laughed along as I read it, but at the same time I was trying to figure how old the author (Cather) was when she wrote it, because it had, for me, a strong flavor of youthful snobbery/insecurity/disdain for the older generation. Cather: "Why, in these days it is as necessary for a literary man to have a wide knowledge of the French masterpieces as it is for him to have read Shakespeare or the Bible." Cather was 22.

The book in question (Outre Mer by Paul Bourget), and the at-odds reviews by Mark Twain and Max O'Rell are all available on the web at this point:

Outre Mer: Impressions of America, by Paul Bourget, 1895
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=loc.ark:/13960/t71v5xw2b&view=1up&seq=1&skin=2021

"What Paul Bourget Thinks of Us," by Mark Twain
North American Review, 1895
https://archive.org/details/jstor-25103456

"Mark Twain and Paul Bourget," by Max O'Rell,
North American Review, 1895
https://archive.org/details/jstor-25103487/mode/1up


https://cather.unl.edu/writings/journalism.
Online, too, is the first installment of all of Cather's journalism. To date, her articles for the Nebraska State Journal for 1891 are available here. This might be a place to browse for future SNF contributions...

Your reading is PL OK! :thumbs:
seandalton
Posts: 37
Joined: August 19th, 2021, 2:36 pm

Post by seandalton »

Natural Law by Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.: https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_naturallaw_holmes_sd_128kb.mp3

Source: https://archive.org/details/jstor-1327676/page/n1/mode/2up

Time: 9:11

As this is my first Librivox recording, may my name please appear in the Librivox catalog as "Sean Dalton"? Also, I appreciate any pointers y'all may have, and I'm excited to join the party!
Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

seandalton wrote: October 3rd, 2021, 11:24 pm Natural Law by Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.: https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_naturallaw_holmes_sd_128kb.mp3

Source: https://archive.org/details/jstor-1327676/page/n1/mode/2up

Time: 9:11

As this is my first Librivox recording, may my name please appear in the Librivox catalog as "Sean Dalton"? Also, I appreciate any pointers y'all may have, and I'm excited to join the party!
Hi Sean, Welcome to LibriVox and to the Short Nonfiction Collection (SNF)! :D We're pleased that you picked the SNF for your first recording. As I'm sure you know, Jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1841-1935) is [in the words of Wikipedia], "one of the most widely cited United States Supreme Court justices in history, particularly for opinions on civil liberties and American constitutional democracy..." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Wendell_Holmes_Jr. The reasons for his continued popularity were made clear to me, listening to your recording. I was surprised by the engaging way he addressed the concept of Natural Law.

"Certitude is not the test of certainty. We have been cock-sure of many things that were not so... The jurists who believe in natural law seem to me to be in that naive state of mind that accepts what has been familiar and accepted by them and their neighbors as something that must be accepted by all men everywhere... "
Oliver Wendell Holmes

You read very clearly, and your reading was word perfect, as I would think a selection from the Harvard Law Review should be. The recording also passed "Checker," the app that checks for common problems in LibriVox recordings. Bravo! :D


I see that from your posts about the 1-minute test that you had a question about uploading a revised file.
seandalton wrote: August 20th, 2021, 4:04 pm Thank you! Whenever I uploaded the new file under the same name, the link went to the old file, so I had to give this new file 2 underscores for differentiation. I hope that is all well, here's the file: https://librivox.org/uploads/tests/test__seandalton.mp3
Actually, any new file uploaded with exactly the same file name as the previous file will override the old file on the server. The old file will then be automatically "renamed" by the server. So, unless a Book Coordinator (BC) or Metacoordinator (MC) asks you to change a file name, please don't add anything new like extra underlines to a revised file. This prevents confusion and keeps the number of files on the server to a minimum.

I'm going to ask for only one small "edit," on your recording. The edit is that, at the end of your recording, you finish it, as it is in the printed text, with "Oliver Wendell Holmes, August, 1918." The addition of the date serves to position Holmes' thought in the context of World War I. Sometimes it's these small details that really "set off" a recording.

I don't know whether you are familiar with HathiTrust as a source for recordings, but Hathi has the Harvard Law Review available here: https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/000050054

With best wishes,
Sue (Book Coordinator)
seandalton
Posts: 37
Joined: August 19th, 2021, 2:36 pm

Post by seandalton »

Thank you! I've updated the file.
Sue Anderson
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Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

Thanks, Sean, for the quick response! PL OK! :thumbs:
MaryinArkansas
Posts: 1403
Joined: October 4th, 2008, 8:06 pm
Location: Arkansas

Post by MaryinArkansas »

“Reading one book is like eating one potato chip.”
―Diane Duane, So You Want to Be a Wizard.

Mary :)📚
Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

MaryinArkansas wrote: October 5th, 2021, 3:57 pm I think this article about mules from a 1911 issue of the Saturday Evening Post is interesting.

https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_caseofmule_pattullo_mh_128kb.mp3
Hi Mary, Thanks for this! :D I had a pet donkey when I was a kid, so I've got a curiosity about mules, and I hope to learn something about them from this article. I'll try to PL it tomorrow.
david wales
Posts: 7040
Joined: May 2nd, 2011, 5:46 pm
Location: Los Angeles

Post by david wales »

Here's an account of a historical event in American history. Hope it's ok for this collection.

• Title of the work.
• A Letter From The Fire Being An Account Of The Great Chicago Fire Written In 1871

• Author of the work.
• Thomas D. Foster

• The link to your file
https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_letterfromfire_foster_dw_128kb.mp3

• A URL link to the source from which you read (etext URL).
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66472

• Length in minutes.

• 37.24


Thanks
Peace, David
Sue Anderson
Posts: 5207
Joined: July 24th, 2008, 11:48 am
Location: Midwest, USA

Post by Sue Anderson »

Sue Anderson wrote: October 5th, 2021, 7:08 pm
MaryinArkansas wrote: October 5th, 2021, 3:57 pm I think this article about mules from a 1911 issue of the Saturday Evening Post is interesting.

https://librivox.org/uploads/knotyouraveragejo/snf087_caseofmule_pattullo_mh_128kb.mp3
Hi Mary, Thanks for this! :D I had a pet donkey when I was a kid, so I've got a curiosity about mules, and I hope to learn something about them from this article.
Hi again, Mary,

Thanks for this 1911 article about the usefulness of mules, the differences between mules bred in different parts of the U.S., and, what was most interesting to me, the personality of mules and their loyalty to one another! :D

There's only one small slip in your reading, on page 46, 2nd paragraph, at 15:07. The text reads: "They were fine, upstanding mules--big of bone and muscle; but expectations were not realized." Because of the way the word "expectations" was split over two lines, you saw it as "exceptions." Not a big thing, but it would make better sense if you could make the edit.
MaryinArkansas
Posts: 1403
Joined: October 4th, 2008, 8:06 pm
Location: Arkansas

Post by MaryinArkansas »

Thanks for catching the error, Sue. I’ll get it corrected and resubmit the recording.
“Reading one book is like eating one potato chip.”
―Diane Duane, So You Want to Be a Wizard.

Mary :)📚
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