Hidden Village
by Imogen Matthews
Narrator: Liam Gerrard
Length: 9 hours and 48 minutes
Publisher: I M Associates
Released: May 31st 2018
Genre: Historical Fiction
Narrator: Liam Gerrard
Length: 9 hours and 48 minutes
Publisher: I M Associates
Released: May 31st 2018
Genre: Historical Fiction
Wartime Holland. Whom can you trust? Deep in the Veluwe woods lies Berkenhout, a purpose-built village of huts sheltering dozens of persecuted people. But the Germans can find no proof of its existence. The whole community pulls together to help the Berkenhout inhabitants adjust to a difficult new life and, above all, stay safe. Sofie, a Jewish Dutch girl, struggles to adapt to living in Berkenhout, away from her family and friends. As weeks turn to months, she’s worried they’ll abandon her altogether. Young tearaway Jan likes to help, but he also enjoys roaming the woods looking for adventure and fallen pilots. His dream comes true, until he is found out. Henk is in charge of building the underground huts and organizing provisions to Berkenhout, but his contact with the Germans arouses suspicions. Whom can you trust? All it takes is one small fatal slip to change the course of all their lives forever.
Imogen Matthews is English and lives in the beautiful University town of Oxford. Before she wrote The Hidden Village, she published two romantic fiction e-novels under her pen name, Alex Johnson. The Hidden Village is published by Amsterdam Publishers, based in the Netherlands. Imogen has strong connections with the Netherlands. Born in Rijswijk to a Dutch mother and English father, the family moved to England when Imogen was very young. Every year since 1990, Imogen has been on family holidays to Nunspeet on the edge of the Veluwe woods. It was here that she discovered the story of the hidden village, and together with her mother’s vivid stories of life in WW2 Holland, she was inspired to write her next novel.
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- Was a possible audiobook recording something you were conscious of while writing?
- Absolutely not! I didn’t even know it would be possible. In some ways I’m pleased I wasn’t thinking about how The Hidden Village would sound as it might have inhibited my writing. I had a clear idea of how the characters sounded in my head and they shaped my writing. However, having turned The Hidden Village into an audiobook, I’m more mindful of how the words will be spoken as I’m writing my next novel (also set in Holland in WW2).
- How did you select your narrator?
- I was introduced to my narrator, Liam Gerrard, through Catherine O’Brien, CEO of Essential Audiobooks. After reading and becoming very enthusiastic about my novel, she suggested that Liam would be the perfect narrator for the job as he had experience in narrating World War 2 novels, has a fantastic CV as an actor and voiceover artist and has his own recording studio. It gave me the confidence that he would do an excellent job. I asked him to do me an audition of the first chapter which we then discussed in detail, so that he could understand what I was looking for in terms of characterisation, pace and style.
- How closely did you work with your narrator before and during the recording process?
- Most of my involvement took place at the beginning of the project. Once he began recording for real, he didn’t get in touch with me at all until he’d completed the job. I was slightly nervous that I might need to ask him to rerecord sections, but it wasn’t necessary. Listening to his narration the first time through, I was amazed at how he’d interpreted my writing and really brought the story to life.
- Did you give them any pronunciation tips or special insight into the characters?
- I made some voice files for Liam which describe the characters as well as the pronunciation of Dutch and German words and phrases, names and place names. We went through these meticulously and Liam even noticed a couple I’d missed! His attention to detail was extraordinary. He had really read and understood the story which comes out strongly in his narration.
- Were there any real life inspirations behind your writing?
- The Hidden Village is based on a real place in Holland which I discovered on one of my many cycling holidays in the area. Deep in the Veluwe woods is a memorial to the local people who had risked their lives to help Jews hide from the Germans by building a village of underground huts. Not only that, they brought in food, clothing, medicines and all other necessities all the time that the German soldiers were patrolling the woods looking for Jews in hiding. It was an extraordinary feat and the Dutch community almost got away with it. I came across a Dutch book with interviews of people who had lived in the area at the time, including those who had helped with the building of the village and others who’d gone to live there. It is the determination and courage of these people in the face of evil that interested me most.
- My mother was Dutch and I grew up hearing about her experiences and stories of survival during the Hunger Winter in 1944-45. Food ran out, people starved to death but my mother and family survived because she cycled into the bulbfields and dug up tulip bulbs which they boiled as their only source of nutrition. Her stories were both horrifying and uplifting - she was a young woman at the time and often said that she’d found the war to be an exciting time. This is what made me want to have young people as my main character.
- How do you manage to avoid burn-out? What do you do to maintain your enthusiasm for writing?
- I so wanted to get this story down as it’s about my own personal history and the place I love to visit most. I visit Nunspeet in Holland with my husband and other family members at least once a year and when I’m back in the woods the words really flow again.
- Are you an audiobook listener? What about the audiobook format appeals to you?
- I have to confess I’d never listened to an audiobook before my own! (I know, shame on me!). Now, I’ve been through the process, I appreciate just how brilliant an audiobook can be. I’ve started listening in the car, grabbing a chapter or two on short journeys and more on longer ones and have a feeling that I’m getting my reading in without having to pick up a book. I still love reading books as well and think the two are very complementary.
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