I listen to a decent amount of audiobooks and I’ll occasionally miss a one-off description of something important. I was wondering if there are projects to add a visual component to audiobooks? Official or fan-made it doesn’t matter. If it does exist what would I search for to find something like this?
Maybe a video with AI generated images and the listener is required to supply their own audiobook or something like that.
I feel like I have seen this done with the Bible several times.
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 months ago
I think these are called “films.”
Seriously, though, I do like the idea of an audio-pop-up-book. But when I was thinking about how it would work my mind said “…isn’t that just a film with extra steps?”
Riven@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 months ago
I’m imagining a picture just pops up occasionally to help with visual. Whenever a new important character is introduced, whenever you arrive to a new place that has descriptions. If an important devise is introduced, it would really depend on the book but ideally you would only glance like once every couple dozen minutes if you wanted too. I already open a tab and Google to see what’s people interpretations are of stuff. This would just make it easier.
CorrodedCranium@leminal.space 7 months ago
That’s exactly it. I was reading At the Mountains of Madness for example and because the Elder Things were such odd creatures I had to look up a photo to put it all together.
Image
CorrodedCranium@leminal.space 7 months ago
What I am after is a bit different than a film or placing down stock footage for some visual stimuli.
In my mind it would be situations where something like the setting or the appearance of the protagonist has been described. Images would come up in a slideshow-like fashion and stay up for maybe a chapter. I could look up things like cover art, fan art, or auxiliary works like graphic novels but it can be a bit distracting to do that.
It would be a bit like some podcasts that are uploaded to Youtube in that way. Mostly just a logo and audio but they occasionally throw up images to accompany something they are discussing but you aren’t missing a tone by not staring at a screen.