Just Listen Podcast

Paul Smethers

About

Welcome to Just Listen, a celebration of American and English short stories and poetry for your listening pleasure. High school students will happily find many of their literature book selections recorded here, and students with reading challenges will find a ready assist in the audio recordings.

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99 episodes

"The Sequel to a Divorce"

Today we examine another one of the 300 short stories written by the French author Guy de Maupassant, who is featured here on Just Listen several times already but a great favorite of this podcast and considered by many, still, to be the father of the short story.

1s
Apr 22
"Little Selves"

Today’s author, Mary Lerner, had her 1916 story “Little Selves” published in the September issue of Atlantic Monthly and was chosen by editor Edward J. O’Brien for The Twenty Best American Short Stories of 1916, as well as the Best American Short Stories of the Century collection edited by John Updike and Katrina Kenison, published in 1999.In his criticism of the story, O’Brien wrote: “Little Selves” by Mary Lerner is little more than a succession of dream pictures portrayed as they cross the consciousness of an old woman who has lived well and is dying happily.  But these pictures are so delicately woven, and so tenderly touched with beauty, that they will not easily be forgotten. I am tempted to say that a success such as this could not be repeated.  It is a happy accident.”

1s
Mar 25
"Mademoiselle Fifi"

"Mademoiselle Fifi" is a short story by Guy de Maupassant.  In Brussels in 1882 and in Paris the next year, a book with the same name included it in a collection of Maupassant's short stories. It has been reprinted many times.

1s
Oct 30, 2023
"The Remarkable Case of Davidson's Eyes"

One of the things I most enjoy about presenting stories here is the great fun I find in discovering the personal lives of authors. Not only do our authors present us with brilliant literature, but they also give us glimpses into lives that are indeed majestic and fascinating.  People like Jack London and Edith Wharton certainly come readily to mind, giants in their own time, and for me, H.G. Wells stands out among his peers for both the quantity of his work (over l00 books!) and for the human intricacies of his private life – as colorful as almost any of his books.

1s
Sep 25, 2023
"The Ledge"

Today’s story, “The Ledge” by Lawrence Sargent Hall,  won first place in the 1960 O Henry Prize Collection, and has appeared in more than 30 anthologies.

1s
Aug 28, 2023
"The Farmer's Children"

Today’s story, “The Farmer’s Children” by Elizabeth Bishop, an American poetry and short story writer, seems a showcase for the evil stepmother archetype.

1s
Jul 24, 2023
"Desiree's Baby"

Among the stories in the collection Bayou Folk by Kate Chopin is today's story, "Désirée's Baby," a tale of miscegenation in antebellum Louisiana, first published in 1893.

1s
Jun 26, 2023
"A Village Singer"

Through her different genres of work including children's stories, poems, and short stories, Mary Wilkins Freeman sought to demonstrate her values as a feminist.

1s
May 22, 2023
"Two Friends"

Turning once again to one of America’s greatest fiction voices, we present today a story that displays Willa Cather’s keen observation and understanding of men, particularly when they are placed in a locus of trouble or consternation.

1s
Apr 24, 2023
"The White Silence"

We are happy today to bring you our third Jack London story here on Just Listen.

1s
Mar 27, 2023
"The Last of How It Was"

Thomas Reid Pearson, aka T.R. Pearson, is fun, fun, fun to read.  If you haven’t yet encountered this very imaginative author, you’re in for a treat today.  What a story we have to tell here at Just Listen.

1s
Feb 27, 2023
"Roman Fever"

Welcome back to Just Listen!  Today's story, by one of our foremost story contributors, Edith Wharton, has been the subject of scores of critical analyses and touches on numerous themes such as motherhood, aging, the accuracy of memory, and the search for truth, to name just a few.

1s
Jan 23, 2023
"Rip Van Winkle"

Almost anyone could tell you the story of Rip Van Winkle in a sentence or three. Today we get to enjoy the tale in its entirety as presented by one of our favorite authors, Washington Irving.

1s
Dec 26, 2022
Just Listen: The Yellow Wallpaper

Charlotte Perkins Gilman, also known by her first married name Charlotte Perkins Stetson, lived from July 3, 1860 to August 17, 1935, and witnessed everything from the American Civil War to the Roaring Twenties to the Great Depression.

1s
Oct 17, 2022
Just Listen: A Pair of Silk Stockings

The characters in Kate Chopin’s stories are usually residents of Louisiana, and many are Creoles of various ethnic or racial backgrounds. Many of her works are set in Natchitoches in north-central Louisiana, a region where she lived.

1s
Oct 16, 2022
Just Listen Podcast: "Kerfol" by Edith Wharton

Welcome back to our Christmas celebration of ghost stories by Edith Wharton. For the curious, alert, and not-too-easily frightened, we have several collections of Edith Wharton’s ghost stories here at the Nashville Public Library.

1s
Dec 17, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "Afterward," by Edith Wharton, Part II

Happy Holiday greetings! We continue today with our celebration of ghost stories by Edith Wharton and the conclusion of “Afterward,” one of her most famous and loved ghost stories.

1s
Dec 10, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "Afterward," by Edith Wharton, Part I

Gathering around a fire to share ghost stories was a beloved Christmas tradition in the late 1800s into the early 1900s.

1s
Dec 06, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "The Devoted Friend" by Oscar Wilde

We are back with our old friend Oscar Wilde, who has several stories to hear here on Just Listen, with a didactic tale meant to be read to children called “The Devoted Friend.”

1s
Nov 28, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "A Retrieved Reformation" by O. Henry

We welcome again our friend O. Henry, master short story author, poet, and newsman.

1s
Nov 19, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "Araby" by James Joyce

James Joyce was an Irish novelist, short story writer, poet, teacher, and literary critic. He contributed to the modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influential and important writers of the 20th century.

1s
Nov 17, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "Boule de Suif" by Guy de Maupassant, Part II

In our last episode, a group of wartime travelers attempts to escape the Prussian-occupied city of Rouen. They includea prostitute named Boule de Suif and are being held hostage at an inn by a Prussian officer who refuses to let them leave the town of Totes, where they are marooned after a snowstorm.

1s
Nov 07, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: "Boule de Suif" by Guy de Maupassant, Part I

“Boule de Suif,” translated variously as "Dumpling,"  "Butterball," "Ball of Fat," "Tallow Ball," or "Ball of Lard," is a famous short story by the late 19th-century French writer Guy de Maupassant, first published in 1880.

1s
Nov 04, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: The Storyteller

Always one to point out the pretentions of the upper classes, Saki is also famous for usually giving us a wry twist to the endings of his stories.

1s
Oct 17, 2021
Just Listen: Up the Slide

With a youth full high jinks followed by travels through the Yukon and South Pacific, Jack London became during his lifetime one of the highest paid American writers. His stories are still loved all over the world.

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Oct 03, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: The Finish of Patsy Barnes

“The Finish of Patsy Barnes” tells the story of the titular character, a poor young African-American boy, who enters a horse race in order to earn the money he needs to pay for his sick mother's treatment.

1s
Sep 19, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: The Catbird Seat

"The Catbird Seat" is a 1942 short story by James Thurber. The story first appeared in The New Yorker on November 14, 1942. The story was also published in the 1945 anthology The Thurber Carnival.

1s
Sep 13, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: Ashputtle

“Ashputtle,” is one of large number of fairy and folk tales published by the Brothers Grimm – Jacob and Wilhelm. The brothers were Hessian academics, philologists, cultural researchers, lexicographers, and authors who together collected and published folklore during the 19th century.

1s
Sep 05, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: Two Friends

“Two Friends,” by French short story maestro Guy de Maupassant, is a melancholic story about loyalty in which the characters Sauvage and Morissot share far more than a passion for fishing during wartime.

1s
Aug 22, 2021
Just Listen Podcast: By the Waters of Babylon

"By the Waters of Babylon" is a post-apocalyptic short story by American writer Stephen Vincent Benét, first published July 31, 1937, in The Saturday Evening Post as "The Place of the Gods."

1s
Aug 01, 2021