JACK\’S GRANNY AUDIO FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES episode artwork

EPISODE · Dec 12, 2021 · 6 MIN

JACK\’S GRANNY AUDIO FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES

from DEBORAH PRUM · host Deborah Prum

JACK’S GRANNYA STORY FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES 0:00 / 0:00 Jack's Granny  Some grannies knit and some grannies bake bread. But Jack’s granny plays the banjo.             Jack’s Granny settled into her rickety rocking chair and began to fiddle with the tuning pegs on her banjo.  Both Jack and his granny could hear excited clucking from the hen house.  Inside the barn, all the hens were getting gussied up for their favorite night of the year: The Spring Chicken Cotillion.             Prudence gazed intently into a cracked mirror.  “Help me glue on my eyelashes, Mother,” she said to a plump old hen who looked on with approval.             “Squaaaaawk!  I’ve got such thin lips,” complained Frieda, as she smeared hot pink lipstick on her beak.  “Do you think pink is my color?” she asked no one in particular.             Etta looked down and exclaimed, “Cluck, cluck, cluck! What skinny legs.  Can’t do much about that.  Guess I’ll just have to paint my toenails fuchsia.”             “Lovely color,” said Etta’s mother.             Each chicken wanted to look her very best.  For, at the end of the night, there could be only one Cotillion Queen.             Unknown to Jack, his granny and the chickens, another creature lurked behind a chinaberry bush by the porch, also preparing for the Spring Chicken Cotillion.  Slim Sly, a skinny red fox with a big fat appetite, stretched and sniffed the evening breeze.  “Chicken,” he whispered.  He smacked his chops and licked his lips.             Slim Sly had found an old sheepskin in the storage shed behind Granny’s house. He draped it over his shoulders, trying to disguise himself. However, his long pointy nose stuck out from under the fleece and his bushy red tail drooped down from behind.             Granny’s first song, The Cajun Capon Two-Step, signaled that the dancing was about to begin.  The chickens high-tailed out of the coop.             Granny plunked out one tune after another:  waltzes, reels, jigs.  The birds schottisched and shimmied.  They mamboed and sambaed.  They did the hokey-poky, buck-and-wing and bunny hop.             The competition was fierce.  Prudence pecked and preened.  Frieda flapped and flew.  But it was Etta who astounded them with a three-toed tap dance.  Her fuchsia nails hypnotized them all.             Everyone agreed when Granny declared, “Etta, you are the Cotillion Queen.”             The chickens bubbled over with frolicking and merriment.  No one but Jack noticed a dark, hairy figure emerging from the barnyard shadows.             The fox inched his way toward Granny, succulent spring chicken on his mind.             “Hold still, Etta honey,” said Jack’s granny as she was about to place a lovely daisy crown on Etta’s head.              Slim Sly crept out from the shadows, asking, “Need a little help with that crown, Granny?”             Jack’s granny took one look at Sim Sly’s long pointy nose and another look at his red scraggly tail.  She knew she wasn’t in the presence of a sheep.             So, Jack’s Granny just rolled her eyes.             Impatient as ever, Slim Sly demanded, “Hand over the Queen, geezer!”             “Slim Sly, you old fox, I’ll make a deal with you.  I’ll play banjo tunes as hard and as fast as I can.  If you can keep dancing for as long as I play, you may have the Cotillion Queen—or any chicken you want, for that matter.”             At that, Jack gasped and a few of the chickens fainted.  However, old Slim Sly merely eyed Granny up and down.  He noted her white hair sticking out every which way. He observed her teeny-tiny eyes set way back behind her thick glasses.  He noticed a stained apron covering a rather plump belly.  Then he looked down and saw one ragged stocking hitched up and one ragged stocking flopped down over thick-soled brown shoes.             “She’s just a crinkled and wrinkled old lady,” he smirked.  “I’ll have me a spring chicken dinner, for sure.”             “You’ve got yourself a deal, Granny,” said Slim Sly with a toothy grin.             So Jack’s granny tuned up her banjo, gave her right hand a good shake, gave her left hand a good shake, and then began to play. Slim Sly slipped off his sheepskin and started in to dance.             Jack’s granny played quick and lively.  The fox, a show-off at heart, whirled and spun, flipped and dipped.  He did the rumba.  He cha-chaed. He cakewalked, polkaed and jitterbugged.  Yes, he even did the fox trot.  Slim Sly was a sight to be seen.             To Jack’s amazement, his granny didn’t tire.  She played one song after another, far into the night.  Those spring chickens gave out, though.  The false eyelashes were heavy on their eyelids.  They dozed off, one by one. The fox danced on…until every bone and muscle ached. Finally, when the sun glimmered pink on the eastern horizon, Granny lit into The Spanish Fandango in triple time.  Her fingers fairly burnt up the banjo.             Old Slim Sly gave a yelp, then collapsed into a sorry looking heap at Granny’s feet.             Granny muttered, “Pitiful creature.”  She picked up that fox by his ratty tail.  Jack watched in awe as she swung the creature over her head once…twice…three times, and then let go.  That fox sailed over the fence and off into the woods, never to be seen again.             Some grannies knit, some grannies bake bread, but Jack’s granny plays the banjo. (Photo by Jen Fariello)Deborah Prum’s fiction has appeared in The Virginia Quarterly Review, Across the Margin, Streetlight and other outlets. Her essays air on NPR member stations and have appeared in The Washington Post, Ladies Home Journal and Southern Living, as well as many other places. Check out her WEBSITE. Check out her DEVELOPMENTAL EDITING SERVICES. Check out her PAINTINGS.  APPLE PODCAST SPOTIFY PODCAST

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Dec 12, 2021

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JACK\’S GRANNY AUDIO FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES

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Deborah Pardes | A Swell Personal Podcast swellcast.com Visit my Swellcast website to reply to my episodes: https://www.swellcast.com/dbpardesThis is the personal podcast of Deborah Pardes, VP of Stories & Voices at Swell. 20 + years in audio, arts & education.To learn more or to start your own personal or community podcast, please visit www.swellcast.com. Shining Moon: A Speculative Fiction Podcast Deborah L. Davitt “Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.” --Anton ChekovInterviews and readings with authors and editors of science fiction, fantasy, horror, and speculative poetry. Hosted by Deborah L. Davitt. The Wargame Sky News Russia knows our weaknesses. But do you?   A major five-part series from Sky News and Tortoise which imagines how a Russian attack on the UK could play out – and invites real-life former ministers, military chiefs and other experts to figure out how to defend the country.   Written and presented by Sky News' security and defence editor, Deborah Haynes.This is Deborah's second podcast series for Sky News. In her first series, Into The Grey Zone, Deborah explores the murky evolution of warfare.What do assassinations, cyber hacks and disinformation have in common? They're all weapons used by states against each other in a grey zone of harm under the threshold of war, but could be just as dangerous if ignored. Durango Local News LNN Durango, Colorado Durango, Colorado Local NEWS is part of Local NEWS Network (LNN), a unique platform to produce and distribute local NEWS programming in communities across the USA. Check us out on TV @ Durango Cable Channel 15 & Purgatory Cable Channel 3, online at www.durangolocal.news or on one of our 10 digital displays around town and at the airport. News Producer - Deborah Uroda, Executive Producer - Laurie Sigillito

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JACK’S GRANNYA STORY FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES 0:00 / 0:00 Jack's Granny  Some grannies knit and some grannies bake bread. But Jack’s granny plays the banjo.             Jack’s Granny settled into her...

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