PODCAST · fiction
Quiet Horizons
by James
Original science fiction stories for adults who like something to follow without having to pay attention. No explosions, no cliffhangers - just good writing, a warm voice, and as much space as you need to drift, or drift to sleep.
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9
The Proportions
Elias Kade is the kind of man who makes lists before he opens doors. He surveys planets for a living — he goes first, measures everything, and files accurate reports. On the planet catalogued as GJ 514c, he lands three kilometers from a set of ruins, walks to them in the low afternoon light, and begins measuring.The doorways are two meters, four centimeters tall. Standard clearance. Every one of them.A story about careful work, the proportions of things, and what it means to find a door built exactly your size on a world no human has ever touched.The Proportions is episode ten of Quiet Horizons, an original fiction podcast for the long, quiet hours.Send us Fan Mail You're listening to Quiet Horizons - a podcast of original science fiction stories written for the hours when the day is done. From here, there are no interruptions. Just one complete story, beginning to end. Literary, unhurried, and best experienced with your eyes closed. Tonight's story begins now. Support the show
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8
The Counting Signal
Dr. Priya Anand has worked the night shift at a deep underground neutrino observatory for six years. She chose nights deliberately. Then, at two forty-seven in the morning on a Tuesday in March, the anomaly flag sounds.A story about what it means to find something before you are ready to have found it. About the long patience of science, base-twelve mathematics, and a daughter's bridge in Osaka that fits together exactly right.The Counting Signal is episode nine of Quiet Horizons, an original fiction podcast for the long, quiet hours.Send us Fan Mail You're listening to Quiet Horizons - a podcast of original science fiction stories written for the hours when the day is done. From here, there are no interruptions. Just one complete story, beginning to end. Literary, unhurried, and best experienced with your eyes closed. Tonight's story begins now. Support the show
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7
The Friday Gift
Nora Callahan is thirty-four when she first opens her eyes in her childhood bedroom on a Friday the 13th in 2002—her mother alive, the ceiling crack still there, Gerald the water stain still watching from the corner. She is thirty-four in a sixteen-year-old body, with seventeen years of future knowledge and no instruction manual.What follows is thirteen years of Fridays: twenty-three visits to her past self at every age from seven to thirty-nine. Some days she apologizes. Some days she listens. One day she tries to change a major decision and wakes up in a different life entirely. Gradually she stops trying to repair the timeline and starts doing something harder: simply being there, fully, in the unremarkable mornings, the kitchen-table conversations, the coloring books, the ordinary Tuesdays that turn out to be the whole point.A quiet, devastatingly tender companion to the rest of the series, “The Friday Gift” is a meditation on time, presence, and the only direction that ever works—forward—told through the small, irreplaceable days we already lived but can learn to live again.Send us Fan Mail You're listening to Quiet Horizons - a podcast of original science fiction stories written for the hours when the day is done. From here, there are no interruptions. Just one complete story, beginning to end. Literary, unhurried, and best experienced with your eyes closed. Tonight's story begins now. Support the show
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6
The Prior Art
Marcus Webb has spent five years in his Flagstaff garage proving the physics community wrong. When his handmade vehicle finally lifts—quietly, undramatically, perfectly—he and his friend Dolores Vega decide the next logical step is “up.”What begins as a modest orbital joyride becomes something far larger: a lunar-transfer trajectory, an increasingly urgent conversation with U.S. Space Command, and then an encounter with a patient, ancient presence that has been watching Earth’s technological adolescence for a very long time.“The Prior Art” is a grounded, wry, character-rich first-contact story about what happens when an amateur gets there first, what “prior art” really means in the galactic patent office, and why transparency might be the hardest invention of all.The seventh episode in the series that began with “What the Lost Ships Sent,” this story stands alone as a warm, thoughtful near-future piece perfect for fans of Ted Chiang’s precision, The Three-Body Problem’s quiet revelations, and Arrival’s sense of scale in small places.Send us Fan Mail You're listening to Quiet Horizons - a podcast of original science fiction stories written for the hours when the day is done. From here, there are no interruptions. Just one complete story, beginning to end. Literary, unhurried, and best experienced with your eyes closed. Tonight's story begins now. Support the show
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