REVIEWS
from The Independent:
'Pigeon
Post' : Gabriel Woolf started reading these abridgements
on BBC Radio 4's Story Time. The risks of receiving loud
raspberries from Ransome's intensely loyal fans were great but Woolf
has exactly the right voice to cope with duffers and pirates alike,
and can casually toss off impossible asides such as 'jibbooms and
boystays' without a hint of self-consciousness. He perfectly captures
both Nancy's headstrong honesty, and Titty's desperate terror of dowsing.
'Swallowdale' : One of the most independent
spirit's in spoken word production. A veritable one-man band. Swallowdale is the latest in the line of definitive abridgements. All are tapes
to treasure.
'Peter
Duck' :
It's a reflection of Woolf's skill both as reader and abridger that
his readings are so popular with his sternest critics, the 2,000-strong
Ransome Society.
from The Times:
'Secret
Water' : Absolutely true to the spirit of the original;
a no-nonsense sympathy. Three-quarters of the way through his 12-year
labour of love. 6 hour recordings.
"The
reason that actors are queuing up to be readers of audiobooks is that
it is more than an ideal occupation while "resting"; it
is a challenge exercise in its own right which requires a genuine
empathy with what is being read, a chameleon-like quality to switch
from character-to-character in a matter of seconds, and the ability
to suppress your own personality in the interests of the story. Gabriel
Woolf's abridgement, narration and publication of Arthur Ransome's Swallows and Amazons novels, a labour of love that has gradually
gained a devoted audience, exemplifies all these skills"
“The Picts and the Martyrs” ....
cleverly filleted, and as sensitively narrated as the others... The
intrepid Amazon Nancy’s interchanges with the formidable great-aunt
are an especial delight.
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