It was on my way home to Idaho on a school break from Cornish that I listened to my first-ever audiobook: a novel narrated by Davina Porter. When I popped in the first audiobook cassette in my Dodge Neon as I drove out of Seattle and Davina’s beautifully textured voice filled the car, my eyes filled with tears and I was overwhelmed. I thought, “I want to DO that!” It would be nearly another decade before I would begin my career as a narrator, but that wonderful listening experience planted the seed.
After college I moved to Portland, Maine, to study documentary radio at the Salt Institute, and I fell completely in love with Maine, where I would live for the next 12 years. New England was — and IS — home, and for several years I juggled my day job as a litigation paralegal with commercial work, feature films, and professional theater, including productions at Portland Stage Company (where I earned my first Equity points). I started investing in commercial voiceover training — taking the Concord Coachlines bus from Portland to New York for workshops, coaching remotely with a teacher in LA — but my goal was mastering the craft of audiobooks.
In 2006 I had yet another major foot surgery, and I used my slow recovery to study everything I could about the audiobook industry. I read AudioFile Magazine, researched audiobook publishers and titles, scoured profiles of working voice actors, and listening deeply. Part of my dedication to the pursuit of audiobooks was the knowledge that my physical limitations might not be temporary. I’d been told by my surgeons for decades that I simply could not be an actor — it was too physically demanding for my feet — but I realized that despite virtually any physical setback that might come my way, I could be a great voice actor.
(Just a note: I’m devoted to my fitness and strength, and though I definitely have continuing hard times, I am capable of far more than my surgeons could have ever imagined. So just because someone in a position of power might present a message to you as Ultimate Truth does NOT mean they are correct. Before transferring to Cornish, I was also told by my master teacher at UW that I had absolutely no talent and no future as an actor. I ignored that message, too.)
During that long study period I realized that home recording studios were beginning to be used in the audiobook production process, and I was excited by the possibility of continuing to live in a state I loved and having the opportunity to be an entrepreneurial, self-employed, professional actor. I set up my first bare-bones recording studio (a closet treated with egg-crate foam from JoAnn Fabric and packing blankets from U-Haul). In the spring of 2007 I attended my first Audio Publishers Association Conference, where I met a number of publishers and producers, with whom I shared my audiobook demo. By the fall I landed my first audition, and booked my first job. By 2009 I was working steadily, and had won my first Earphones Award and been nominated for my first Audie Award.
My professional accomplishments are meaningful, but what matters most to me is what my work means to listeners. I myself have been comforted, entertained, and transported by stories told to me by narrators whose work I adore, so I know how deep and personal that bond is. I’m also proud of the tenacity I showed in forging this career and in being relentless in figuring out how I could achieve my goals despite great challenge.