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Talking Books now FREE for all blind and partially sighted people

On Tuesday 10th November RNIB will celebrate 80 years of Talking Books, a service which provides 4,000 audio books to blind and partially sighted people in the UK every single day. To mark the occasion, RNIB will announce that from today, Talking Books will be entirely free for all blind and partially sighted people

THE TALKING Books service, which provides 4,000 audio books every single day to people with sight loss, is now free for all blind and partially sighted people.

RNIB (Royal National Institute of Blind People), the charity that runs the service, made the announcement to mark the 80th anniversary of Talking Books.

The service was launched in 1935 to help soldiers who had been blinded in the First World War and who were struggling to learn braille.

The National Institute for the Blind (now RNIB) and St Dunstan’s (now Blind Veterans UK) joined forces to create the Sound Recording Committee, which originally recorded Talking Books onto records to be played on gramophones.

Today, almost 30,000 blind and partially sighted adults and children use Talking Books and the RNIB library is the largest of its kind in Europe.

Readers can access the audio books on CD or USB or as a digital download, so that they can listen to them how they choose, whether at home or ‘on-the-go’.

As part of the anniversary celebrations, HarperCollins has become the first publisher to commit to delivering every new title to the RNIB library on the date of general publication.

Anyone who is registered as blind or partially sighted can now borrow up to six Talking Books at any time, completely free-of-charge. Previously, customers contributed an annual subscription of £50.

With more than 360,000 people registered blind or partially sighted in the UK, RNIB hopes thousands more will sign up to the service.

Neil Heslop, Director of RNIB Solutions, said: “At RNIB we feel passionately that reading can change the lives of blind and partially sighted people. After losing my own sight at a young age, I personally know how important the connection to the written word is, both for education and leisure.”

The RNIB Library also offers a range of fiction and non-fiction titles for adults and children in braille and giant print.

To find out more about the RNIB Library or to sign up for Talking Books call the RNIB Helpline on 0303 123 9999 or visit www.rnib.org.uk/library

 

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