Wednesday, January 20, 2021

TO TELL A STORY

 BY MARGO HAMMOND


Theodore Nordstrom aka Papa reads a bedtime story
to granddaughters Joan, Diane & Margo

Long before Tell Me a Story became a popular TV series reimagining fairy tales as modern-day thrillers...

Long before St. Petersburg romance writer Tamara Lush came out with an erotic series called Tell Me a Story...

Long before novelist Cassandra King Conroy wrote a memoir called Tell Me a Story about her life with Prince of Tides author Pat Conroy...

"Tell me a story" was my bedtime ritual.

Every night before I would agree to go to sleep, my grandfather read a bedtime story to me and my sisters.

When Papa died (I was only 3), my mother stepped in and not only read stories to us from our vast collection of children's books, but also made up ones of her own which involved amazing flights of fancy ("zoom, zoom, zoom on a magic carpet") and a girl named Mary Ann who could do anything she put her mind to do.

Years later when I was book editor at the St. Petersburg Time (and, presumably, had long before  "put childish things behind me"),  I wrote a column decrying the fact that audiobooks were becoming so popular. Wasn't it better to read a book than to listen to it? I asked.

Well, the feedback I received from that column made me reconsider my answer to that question. One of the responses came from the daughter of a blind woman who said her mother wanted me to know that she agreed with me that nothing could replace holding a book in your hands, but that listening to books was all that she had left. Another pointed out that literature -- especially poetry -- was originally orally transmitted. Wasn't I missing the benefits of hearing a tale?

Yes, I was. I realized I had forgotten the thrill of those childhood bedtime stories -- the magic of having a story told to me. I started listening to audiobooks and to my amazement found that many of them provided something I couldn't get just by reading a text.

In David McCullough's biography Truman, for example, the audiobook included an excerpt from an actual speech by Give 'Em Hell Harry. You couldn't get that out of a book. I was hooked. I've never abandoned the thrill of holding a book in my hand, but now there's always an audiobook on my reading list.

I'm not alone. Audiobooks have continued to be the fastest growing segment in publishing -- and thanks to lockdown, interest in them has exploded. In 2020 sales increased by 16 percent in the U.S., generating over $1.2 billion in revenue. For ages 18 and up, the average number of audiobooks consumed last year went up to 8.1 from 6.8 in 2019

The pandemic has given us the time and inclination to listen to stories.

It has also given us the possibility of listening to -- and sometimes even talking with -- the authors of those books. 

In a Washington Post story posted last August, several authors talked about their willingness to join online book clubs that are discussing one of their books. 

"I love to connect with book groups, because it allows me to interact with my readers in a living-room format," Chris Bohjalian, whose latest book, The Red Lotus, is eerily about a pandemic, told the Post. "We talk in a way we never talk at a book signing or speech. It's far more authentic."

St. Petersburg native Mary Kay Andrews has also discovered the virtues of meeting her readers online. She had planned a massive book tour to tout her 2020 title Hello Summer which came out in May. But when COVID 19 hit and prompted so many cancellations, she launched a Facebook Live channel with fellow writers Patti Callahan Henry, Mary Alice Monroe, Kristy Woodson Harvey and Kristin Harmel.

The group -- which they call Friends & Fiction: Five Bestselling Authors. Endless Stories” -- meets every Wednesday at 7 p.m. to talk with each other and guest authors about books and writing. The interviews are now archived on YouTube with more to come in 2021. 

Several Florida festivals -- including the Zora Neale Hurston Festivalthe Florida Storytelling Festival and the Eckerd College's Writers in Paradise  -- and bookstores across the country, including the St. Petersburg-based  Tombolo Bookswhich used to feature in-person programming, now are offering a number of online author events, giving us a unique opportunity to listen to our favorite authors and hear their stories in the comfort of, well, our living rooms. 

And even if you can't make it to the festivals live, materials often are archived online after the events. Recordings, for example, of the conference to be held January 29-30 on  Afrofuturism: What Is its Sound?  -- part of the 32nd annual Zora Neale Hurston Festival -- will be posted after the conference via the ZORA! Festival Academic Academic Conference 2020-2021 Afrofuturism Syllabus.

The conference's keynote -- Oral History, Zora Neale Hurston and the Black Freedom Struggle through Storytelling and Song, by Paul Ortiz, a University of Florida professor of oral history -- celebrates oral storytelling, a speciality of Zora Neale Hurston, a Florida native. 

Florida has had a long history of oral storytelling. This year's online version of the Florida Storytelling Festival (which normally is held in Mount Dora) is organized by the Florida Storytelling Association, a group that began back in 1984. Jennifer Bausman and Annette Bruce, two women who loved storytelling, organized the first Florida Storytelling Camp at a rustic Florida campground, out of which the association sprang.

Who are the members of the Florida Storytelling Association?

"We are storytellers, story listeners and story lovers," the group says on its website, summing up our universal love of telling and listening to stories.

"We are people just like you with a story to tell."


A version of this essay was originally published at Arts Coast Journal, the online journal of Creative Pinellas.

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