Sign up to save your podcastsEmail addressPasswordRegisterOrContinue with GoogleAlready have an account? Log in here.
Humans have shared stories for millennia. For most of that time, telling tales was a verbal process. A storyteller would regale an audience with accounts of adventure, bravery, compassion, despair, en... more
FAQs about LitReading - Classic Short Stories:How many episodes does LitReading - Classic Short Stories have?The podcast currently has 122 episodes available.
March 24, 2021The Fly by Katherine MansfieldGrief part of the human condition and we cope with it varies from person to person. When two old men discuss the loss of family members several years after World War I, it is a fly that help illustrate both life’s constant struggles and fragility.The Fly is considered one of Catherine Mansfield’s greatest works because it is personal. Mansfield lost her brother in a training demonstration during World War I.One of the great modernist writers of the early 20th century, Mansfield was both a contemporary and a friend of two other great authors of that period, D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Wolff. Her works are less well known as her career was cut short by terminal tuberculosis at the age of 34.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more17minPlay
March 21, 2021Misery by Anton ChekhovLoneliness is painful enough under normal circumstances, but social rejection in the face of a personal crisis can be devastating.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more15minPlay
March 17, 2021A Telephonic Conversation by Mark TwainThis is more a satirical essay than an actual short story, but it makes me smile. The first telephone was demonstrated at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876. By 1880, many wealthier families were using the new communication device regularly and one of the 19th century’s best known authors and satirists observed some anecdotal differences in the way men and women communicate.Samuel Clemens better known as Mark Twain is one of the most famous American authors of all time. This story was penned 4 years after his success with Tom Sawyer and about 5 years before he completed Huckleberry Finn. In 1884 he formed his own publishing company which went on to posthumously publish the best-selling memoirs of President Ulysses S. Grant.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more9minPlay
March 15, 2021A Pair of Silk Stockings by Kate ChopinMoney has the power to take us away, if only temporarily, from the due routines of life. However, there is always a price to pay for our fiscal flights of fancy and real life eventually hoists its humdrum head again.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more14minPlay
March 10, 2021The Other Two by Edith WhartonWe are complex creatures and grow more so with time. Every relationship adds or subtracts from who we are. No relationship is more life changing than marriage and for a woman thrice married in pre-suffrage America the stigma of mutual divorce seems insurmountable until her third husband’s comes to a startling revelation.Best known for her novels, Edith Wharton was a prolific writer of short stories. Growing up among New York’s upper class, she created realistic portrayals of America’s Gilded Age pseudo aristocracy. In 1921, she became the the first woman to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Literature for her book, The Age of Innocence.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more49minPlay
March 06, 2021The Good and the Bad Little Boy by Mark TwainIn the 19th Century particularly, good boys are supposed to enjoy the fruits of the righteousness, and bad boys were destined for eternal damnation, at least according to Sunday School books, but according to Mark Twain, life often contradicted expectation.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more19minPlay
March 04, 2021The Cactus by O. HenryPride does seem to go before a fall… In this very short story a young man’s life unravels thanks to a small vanity-induced dissimulation.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more11minPlay
March 01, 2021The Man in the Brown Coat by Sherwood AndersonThis special short, short story centers on a different kind of haunting, not from without, but from within. The darkness that comes from a profound loneliness that quietly haunts the souls of many.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more9minPlay
February 28, 2021Poor, Dear Margaret Kirby by Kathleen NorrisHappiness has always been elusive, usually found in unexpected places and, often, in the wake of the worst life eventsIn this heart-warming story, an affluent couple discovers what is truly important in life in the wake of both a fiscal and physical tragedy.Kathleen Norris was, for a time, the highest paid female writer in early 20th-century America.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more28minPlay
February 24, 2021Solid Objects by Virginia WolffVirginia Wolff had a talent for taking mundane observations and weaving them into enchanting tales. Something a normal as watching two men on an ordinary a day at the beach became an impassioned and poignant story in her hands.Born to an upstanding and literary Victorian family, Virginia Wolff suffered from serious psychological issues which may have been part of the genius behind her introspective and emotional powerful writing. She and her husband founded the famous British publishing house Hogarth Press in 1917.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...more18minPlay
FAQs about LitReading - Classic Short Stories:How many episodes does LitReading - Classic Short Stories have?The podcast currently has 122 episodes available.