麻豆视频

PMA prof鈥檚 new audiobook capitalizes on hair-raising adventure

Austin Bunn鈥檚 mountain-climbing story doesn鈥檛 end in death, but it was scary enough to inspire him to write one that does.

written by Bunn, associate professor of performing and media arts in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, will be released Jan. 23 as an Audible Original audiobook. 

man smiling

鈥淥ne of my closest childhood friends is really into mountain climbing so he convinced me to climb Mount Whitney with him in California,鈥 said Bunn, adding that the 14,500-foot climb (the highest in the contiguous U.S.) involves deep snow, ice axes, crampons and altitude sickness. 鈥淎t one point, near the summit, I got a splitting headache and told Josh I couldn鈥檛 go any further.鈥

Bunn sat down and passed out. When he woke up, Josh was gone. 

Cue the whipping winds and foreboding music.

In Bunn鈥檚 own story, Josh returned from his own failed summit attempt and they both made their way off the mountain. But the harrowing experience 鈥 and Bunn鈥檚 own love of real-life disaster survival stories 鈥 inspired him to create the script for 鈥凄贰狈础尝滨,鈥 a twist-laden thriller set on one of the most extreme environments on earth, Mt. McKinley, the highest peak in the Americas.

In the story, three friends set out on a 10-day climb of the rugged Alaskan peak, but after a serious of disastrous mistakes 鈥 and dark ulterior motives 鈥 only two descend alive. One of those two, Finn, ends up writing a best-selling memoir about the trip, while the other, Doug, threatens to expose the true story. Meanwhile, Abby, the sister of the dead hiker, untangles what really happened to her brother. The audio drama 鈥渨ith a full cast鈥 stars Jack Falahee (ABC鈥檚 鈥淗ow To Get Away With Murder鈥), Amit Kaur (Netflix鈥檚 鈥淭he Sex Lives of College Girls鈥), and Jake Lacy (Max鈥檚 鈥淭he White Lotus鈥).

Bunn tells the story through three points of view: present-day scenes, excerpts from Finn鈥檚 memoir and an audio recording Finn made of their ascent.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e climbing in these extreme environments, you鈥檙e really not talking much with your fellow climbers, but there鈥檚 so much internal conversation going on inside your head,鈥 Bunn said. Writing the memoir portion of the story also allowed Bunn to embrace his passion for disaster stories and revisit traditional tropes of boyhood friendships. 

After he sold the idea to Audible, producers and casting staff there hired actors and Bunn spent some time transforming his play into an audio story. That required rewriting a few scenes and changing the organization a bit to something that 鈥渨orks in your ears,鈥 he said. Production began in 2023, with actors Lacy, Falahee and Kaur on synchronous Zoom sessions in three separate sound studios across the continent.

鈥淭here鈥檚 something really natural to murder mysteries and thrillers in the audio format,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey have atmosphere, suspense, and keep you listening.鈥

鈥淒ENALI鈥 isn鈥檛 Bunn鈥檚 first foray into the audiobook world. His audiobook 鈥淭he Brink鈥 was honored at the 2017 Audie Awards in New York City as the winner in the . Often referred to as the 鈥淥scars of spoken word entertainment,鈥 the Audie Awards are given out by the Audio Publishers Association

The written version of 鈥淭he Brink鈥 was published in 2015, with stories that focus on core themes of large-scale change and transformation. 

In October, Bunn released his book, 鈥,鈥 and last summer, 鈥淕hosts,鈥 a film directed by , associate professor in PMA (A&S), and written by Bunn, was one of only 15 films selected for the PBS Short Film Festival. Bunn鈥檚 short film, won the 2023 Provincetown International Film Festival鈥檚 "best queer short" award, the Best LGBTQIA+ Short Award at the 2023 Cleveland International Film Festival and the Best LGBTQ Subject award from the 2023 Jim Thorpe Independent Film Festival.

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audiobook cover with people falling off a mountain