Morning Short
A podcast by Audiobook Radio
71 Episodes
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56: "Some Particulars Concerning a Lion" By Charles Dickens
Published: 4/14/2016 -
55: "The Black Sheep" By Sapper
Published: 4/13/2016 -
54: 'The Cook of the "Gannet"' by W. W. Jacobs
Published: 4/12/2016 -
53: "The Piano Next Door" by Elia W. Peattie
Published: 4/11/2016 -
52: "The Music Lover" By Henry van Dyke
Published: 4/10/2016 -
50: "The Cobweb" By H.H Munro
Published: 4/8/2016 -
49: "Following the Fashions" by T.S. Arthur
Published: 4/6/2016 -
48: “The Oversight” By Saki
Published: 4/3/2016 -
47: "Little Annie's Ramble" By Nathaniel Hawthorne
Published: 4/3/2016 -
46: “Belhomme’s Beast” By Guy De Maupassant
Published: 4/2/2016 -
"The Hunter Gracchus" By Franz Kafka [45]
Published: 3/31/2016 -
“The Coffee House Of Surat” By Leo Tolstoy [44]
Published: 3/30/2016 -
"Psyche and the Pskyscraper" By O. Henry [43]
Published: 3/29/2016 -
“Skeleton Lake: An Episode In Camp” By Algernon Blackwood [42]
Published: 3/28/2016 -
“A Redeeming Sacrifice” By L.M Montgomery [41]
Published: 3/27/2016 -
“Semper Idem” By Jack London [40]
Published: 3/26/2016 -
"The Hunting Of The Snark” By Lewis Carroll [39]
Published: 3/25/2016 -
"Sights From a Steeple" By Nathaniel Hawthorne [38]
Published: 3/24/2016 -
“The Carnivore” By Katherine MacLean [37]
Published: 3/23/2016 -
“Et in Sempiternum Pereant” By Charles Williams [36]
Published: 3/22/2016
Enjoy a new, curated short story every episode. We hand-pick 15-25 minute short stories from a pool of award-winning fiction writers. Then we turn them into to mini audiobooks that improve any commute, workout, or walk in the park. Read by professional narrators. Every day is a different story. One morning we might bring you a sci-fi thriller by the legendary Ray Bradbury, and the next morning might be a Sherlock Holmes detective story by Arthur Conan Doyle. Romance? We’ve got it. Narrative poetry? We’ve got that too. Mystery and ghost stories? You bet! |Who listens to Morning Short?| Entire families. Budding writers, poets, and and authors. Immigrants trying to learn English, or improve their listening comprehension. Startup CEOs. You name it! Enjoy our fictional stories today.