

Other awards include the 2009 Tristen Award for Best Actress as Sally Bowles in Cabaret and the 2006 Roselyn E. AudioFile magazine named her one of the Best Voices of 2013 for her work in Gulp. She began her voice-over career by voicing animation in Asia. He records from his home studio in Portland, Oregon.Įmily Woo Zeller is an artist, actor, dancer, choreographer, and voice artist who has won Earphones Awards and the prestigious Audie Award for Best Narration in 2018. It includes the description of the inauguration ceremony and citations from his speech and about his journey to being a freedom fighter. AudioFile magazine has commended him for “an absolutely mesmerizing listening experience” and as “an outstanding narrator who adds a healthy dose of personality to each of the characters.” As a classically trained actor with an MFA from the Old Globe/University of San Diego, he has appeared off Broadway and on regional stages, as well as in film and television. In the last chapter of the novel, 57-year-old Landon reflects on the 40 years that. It's filled with edge-of-your-seat escapes and accounts of lifesaving kindnesses in the harsh desert.Neil Shah is an Audie-nominated narrator and winner of multiple AudioFile Earphones Awards who has recorded over 150 audiobooks. Jamies slow, painful walk down the aisle is, indeed, a walk to remember. The Hundred-Year Walk is a harrowing account by Dawn Anahid MacKeen of her grandfather Stepan Miskjians survival during the Armenian Genocide (1915-1918), as well as her own travels to Turkey and Syria in an attempt to retrace his footsteps and better understand his ordeal. Part reportage, part memoir, The Hundred-Year Walk alternates between Stepan's tale of resilience and Dawn's remarkable journey, giving us a rare firsthand account of the twentieth century's first genocide. Using his long-lost journals as a guide, she reconstructs her grandfather's odyssey to the far reaches of the Ottoman Empire, where he found himself in the midst of unspeakable atrocities. Longing for a fuller picture of Stepan's life-and the lost home her family fled-Dawn travels alone to Turkey and Syria, across a landscape still rife with tension.

Growing up, Dawn MacKeen heard fragments of her grandfather Stepan's story, of how he was swept up in the deadly mass deportation of Armenians during World War I and of how he miraculously managed to escape. "The inspiring story of a young Armenian's harrowing escape from genocide and of his granddaughter's quest to retrace his steps. And it's in the desert that Dawn finds the unexpected: the secret to Stepan's survival". It's filled with edge-of-your-seat escapes and accounts of lifesaving kindnesses in the harsh desert. Daniel returns home, and prepares to engage in the Year Walk anyway. Part reportage, part memoir, The Hundred-Year Walk alternates between Stepan's tale of resilience and Dawn's remarkable journey, giving us a rare firsthand account of the twentieth century's first genocide. Year Walk begins with the protagonist Daniel Svensson visiting his lover, Stina, who hints that she has been proposed to, and warns the player about the dangers of year walking, implying that her cousin had died while engaging in the activity.

