After leaving home in search of work, Donal Grant accepts a position as tutor to a young boy who lives in a sprawling castle, which also houses an eccentric old man, a beautiful and troubled young woman, and an ancient family legend of a secret room hidden somewhere within the castle. This is the sequel to "Sir Gibbie" by the same author, but is quite capable of standing as a complete and compelling story in its own right. (Devorah Allen)
Type of proof-listening required (Note: please read the PL FAQ): standard
IMPORTANT - soloist, please note: in order to limit the amount of languishing projects (and hence the amount of files on our hard-pressed server), we ask that you post an update at least once a month in your project thread, even if you haven't managed to record anything. If we don't hear from you for three months, your project may be opened up to a group project if a Book Coordinator is found. Files you have completed will be used in this project. If you haven't recorded anything yet, your project will be removed from the forum (contact any admin to see if it can be re-instated). Please don't download or listen to files belonging to projects in process (unless you are the BC or PL). Our servers are not set up to handle the greater volume of traffic. Please wait until the project has been completed. Thanks!
The reader will record the following at the beginning and end of each file:
No more than 0.5 to 1 second of silence at the beginning of the recording! START of recording (Intro):
"Chapter [number] of Donal Grant. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information, or to volunteer, please visit: librivox DOT org"
If you wish, say:
"Recording by [your name], [city, your blog, podcast, web address]"
Say: "Donal Grant, by George MacDonald. Chapter [number], [chapter name]."
For the second and all subsequent sections, you may optionally use the shortened form of this intro disclaimer:
"Chapter [number] of Donal Grant by George MacDonald. This LibriVox recording is in the Public Domain."
If you wish, say:
"Recording by [your name], [city, your blog, podcast, web address]"
Only if applicable, say: "[Chapter title]"
END of recording:
At the end of the section, say: "End of Chapter [number]."
If you wish, say: "Recording by [your name], [city, your blog, podcast, web address]"
At the end of the book, say (in addition): "End of Donal Grant, by George MacDonald. "
There should be 5 seconds silence at the end of the recording, or 10 seconds for files longer than 30 minutes.
Example filename donalgrant_##_macdonald_128kb.mp3 (all lower-case) where ## is the section number (e.g. donalgrant_01_macdonald_128kb.mp3)
Example ID3 V2 tags
Artist: George MacDonald
Title: ## - [Section title]
Album: Donal Grant
Transfer of files (completed recordings) Please always post in this forum thread when you've sent a file. Also, post the length of the recording (file duration: mm:ss) together with the link.
All looks good except there should only be one Genre (sometimes two, but those should be rare cases). I think I would remove general fiction 1800-1900 and remove Romance (romance can easily go in the key words). Which of the others do you think is more important?
I've added the ~ to the front of the subject line, assuming you're looking for a DPL. We can sit in the Launch Pad for a little while, in hopes of snagging one.
All looks good except there should only be one Genre (sometimes two, but those should be rare cases). I think I would remove general fiction 1800-1900 and remove Romance (romance can easily go in the key words). Which of the others do you think is more important?
Back soon with a MW.
Oh, I see. I thought it could fit into more than one. There definitely are elements of Gothic story-telling (huge castle, secret chambers, eerie noises in the middle of the night), but MacDonald does quite a bit of "sermonizing," so Christian fiction is probably more apt.
I see you have all the titles filled in, so I assume you're doing OK with the MW.
So far, so good! I do have one question. I've seen word counts in all the other projects I've worked on. Is this required, or is it more of something that we include for reference so that readers know the length of what they're signing up for?
mightyfelix wrote:I've seen word counts in all the other projects I've worked on. Is this required, or is it more of something that we include for reference so that readers know the length of what they're signing up for?
Exactly. It's so the readers know what they're signing up for. Not needed on a solo!
After the first chapter you can use the optional shorter intro if you wish. Your Scottish accent was fine (though I could actually understand what you were saying).