The Evening Reader: Classic Short Stories Read Aloud

PODCAST · fiction

The Evening Reader: Classic Short Stories Read Aloud

The Evening Reader is a podcast for anyone who has ever felt something they couldn't quite put into words.Every episode, Sara reads one classic short story aloud, drawn from the golden age of American literature, when writers were putting onto the page things that had never been said out loud before. The weight of what goes unsaid. The way a single moment on a ship, or in a parlour, or at the edge of a field can change everything inside you while nothing on the outside moves at all.These stories are a hundred years old. They will feel like they were written about your life.Each episode is intimate, unhurried, and made for evenings. Put your headphones in. Let someone tell you a story.All of the stories on The Evening Reader are drawn from the public domain, written before 1928, mostly forgotten, and completely worth your time. Some were rejected by publishers for being too honest. Some were written under the cover of an ambiguous narrator because their au

  1. 1

    On the Gulls' Road by Willa Cather

    A portrait hangs on the wall. For twenty years, its subject has spoken to no one. Tonight, the story behind it is finally told — of a love found at sea, and quietly, painfully left there. Willa Cather, 1908. Read by Sara Brooks.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Evening Reader is a podcast for anyone who has ever felt something they couldn't quite put into words.Every episode, Sara reads one classic short story aloud, drawn from the golden age of American literature, when writers were putting onto the page things that had never been said out loud before. The weight of what goes unsaid. The way a single moment on a ship, or in a parlour, or at the edge of a field can change everything inside you while nothing on the outside moves at all.These stories are a hundred years old. They will feel like they were written about your life.Each episode is intimate, unhurried, and made for evenings. Put your headphones in. Let someone tell you a story.All of the stories on The Evening Reader are drawn from the public domain, written before 1928, mostly forgotten, and completely worth your time. Some were rejected by publishers for being too honest. Some were written under the cover of an ambiguous narrator because their au

HOSTED BY

Sara Brooks

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!