300 episodios

PodCastle is the world’s first audio fantasy magazine. Weekly, we broadcast the best in fantasy short stories, running the gammut from heart-pounding sword and sorcery, to strange surrealist tales, to gritty urban fantasy, to the psychological depth of magical realism. Our podcast features authors including N.K. Jemisin, Peter S. Beagle, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Jim C. Hines, and Cat Rambo, among others.



Terry Pratchett once wrote, “Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.” Tune in to PodCastle each Tuesday for our weekly tale, and spend the length of a morning commute giving your imagination a work out.

PodCastle Escape Artists, Inc

    • Ficción
    • 5,0 • 1 valoración

PodCastle is the world’s first audio fantasy magazine. Weekly, we broadcast the best in fantasy short stories, running the gammut from heart-pounding sword and sorcery, to strange surrealist tales, to gritty urban fantasy, to the psychological depth of magical realism. Our podcast features authors including N.K. Jemisin, Peter S. Beagle, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Jim C. Hines, and Cat Rambo, among others.



Terry Pratchett once wrote, “Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.” Tune in to PodCastle each Tuesday for our weekly tale, and spend the length of a morning commute giving your imagination a work out.

    PodCastle 836: Flight

    PodCastle 836: Flight

    * Author : Charlie Sorrenson

    * Narrator : Rebecca Wei Hsieh

    * Host : Matt Dovey

    * Audio Producer : Devin Martin

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    Previously published by Tor.com

     





    Content warnings for violence, assault, misogyny, and PTSD.





    Rated PG-13

    Flight

    by Charlie Sorrenson

     

    Now

    They are coming out of the woods when Mateo grabs one of Maggie’s wings and tugs, hard. This has long been his way of getting her attention and she has always let him do it, wanting to be a good mother, reminding herself that this is a phase, that he is only five years old, that little boys who do bad things are not destined to become bad men.

    But now she wheels on him, the force of her movement yanking her wing from his grasp. “No!” she says, and he blinks and reels back. Two women are walking ahead of them with their children. At the sound of her voice, their heads flick back to watch. “You’re a big boy now,” Maggie says, her voice rising. “You can’t touch them anymore.” Out of the corner of her eye, she sees the women murmur to each other. Turning their smooth, wingless backs to her, they seize their children’s hands and hurry away. Maggie doesn’t care. Tears pool in Mateo’s eyes but she ignores them, stalking up the big, sweeping lawn toward the place where everyone parked.

    Further up the slope, the man who is not Trace walks quickly, gripping his daughter’s hand. On her arm is a bruise the size and shape of Mateo’s fist. As Maggie watches, the girl tugs her hand out of her father’s and takes off, her empty Easter basket bobbing in her grip. Her father calls out but she keeps running and Maggie urges her on, her heart pounding on the girl’s behalf, as her head says: faster, and her heart says: it will never be fast enough, and all the places where the Brothers took her apart pulse with remembered pain.



    Ten minutes ago

    The man who is not Trace kneels in front of his sobbing daughter and hushes her. Neither he nor Maggie was there to see what happened, but the girl has just told them that Mateo hit her when she wouldn’t give him an Easter egg she had found. Now her father says, “I’m sure he didn’t mean to hurt you.” He winks at Maggie; an invitation to a game she does not want to play. “You know boys.”

    Maggie looks from her son to the bruised girl to the man who is not Trace but who is so much like him, and something flares within her that has been dead a long time.

    “She has a right to her pain,” she says. “She has a right to it.”

    “We’re going,” the man says, to no one in particular, and pulls his daughter away, his fingers wrapping around her hand and enveloping it completely.



    Seventeen minutes ago

    The Easter-egg hunt takes place at the home of some friends of her husband’s, wealthy investor types who live in Marin County and own several acres of old-growth forest. Maggie hasn’t set foot in a forest like this in years, but her husband is out of town and the things that happened to her were such a long time ago and so she agrees to take Mateo.

    The moment she gets under the trees, she knows she has made a mistake. She sees the bobbing lights, hears the Brothers’ laughter, remembers running until she couldn’t. She grasps the trunk of a nearby redwood and inches her hands along its fibrous bark, noting its texture as her therapist has taught her. Gradually, her heart slows.

    • 32 min
    PodCastle 835: TALES FROM THE VAULTS – Titanic!

    PodCastle 835: TALES FROM THE VAULTS – Titanic!

    * Author : Lavie Tidhar

    * Narrator : Ian Stuart

    * Host : Eleanor R. Wood

    * Audio Producer : Eric Valdes

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    Previously published by Apex Magazine and as PodCastle episode 304





    Content warning for violence





    Rated PG-13

    Titanic!

    by Lavie Tidhar

    10 April 1912

    When I come on board the ship I pay little heed to her splendour; nor to the gaily–strewn lines of coloured electric lights, nor to the polished brass of the crew’s jacket uniforms, nor to the crowds at the dock in Southampton, waving handkerchiefs and pushing and shoving for a better look; nor to my fellow passengers. I keep my eyes open only for signs of pursuit; specifically, for signs of the Law.

    The ship is named the Titanic. I purchased a second–class ticket in London the day before and travelled down to Southampton by train. I had packed hurriedly. I do not know how far behind me the officers are. I know only that they will come. He made sure of that, in his last excursion. The corpses he left were a mockery, body parts ripped, exposed ribcages and lungs stretched like Indian rubber, he had turned murder into a sculpture, a form of grotesque art. The Japanese would call such a thing as he a yōkai, a monster, otherworldly and weird. Or perhaps a kaiju. I admire the Japanese for their mastery of the science of monstrosity, of what in our Latin would be called the lusus naturae. I have corresponded with a Dr Yamane, of Tokyo, for some time, but had of course destroyed all correspondence when I escaped from London.

    And yet I cannot leave him behind. I had packed hurriedly. A simple change of clothes. I had not dressed like a gentleman. But I carry, along with my portmanteau, also my doctor’s black medical bag; it defines me more than I could ever define myself otherwise; it is as much a part of me as my toes, or my navel, or my eyes; and inside the bag I carry him, all that is left of him: one bottle, that is all, and the rest were all smashed up to shards back in London, back in the house where the bodies are.

     

    Unfortunately we don’t have the full text to this one, but you can read the rest of the story here!

    • 23 min
    PodCastle 834: All the Better to Taste You

    PodCastle 834: All the Better to Taste You

    * Author : Marisca Pichette

    * Narrator : Julia Rios

    * Host : Kiran Kaur Saini

    * Audio Producer : Eric Valdes

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    PodCastle 834: All the Better to Taste You is a PodCastle original.





    Content warnings for end of life and misgendering.





    Rated PG-13

    All the Better to Taste You

    by Marisca Pichette

     

    This morning I swallowed the Wolf.

    I started with oatmeal — sweetened bitter by fresh maple syrup, sticky all the way down. On top I poured mead inherited from drunken bees bumbling through the windows I always leave open — wide, gaping, hungry.

    I finished with the Wolf. He’s quite small now; time and peace have removed his claws, decades of sweetness have rotted out his teeth. An infestation of fleas conjured by my stepsister forced him to shave completely. His final years were pale, bald, shivering as I carried him from room to room.

    At the end, all that remained to feed his once-formidable muscles were nightmares. First mine, then his — rousing him gasping at midnight. I brought him cocoa, warm milk with a dash of honey.

    At the end, I slept soundly, snuggled in a bed that learned to fit me. I stopped having nightmares years before I swallowed the Wolf whole.

    He stirs in my belly now. Treacle-slow, contemplative, tame. He knew today would come before I ever thought to make his end.



    “You’ll eat me up,” he said the day we met. I wore my white cotton dress, cornflowers embroidered along the hem. He lay in bed under a blanket stitched of lace and grandmother skin.

    Then he was large, gray as ashes, eyes algae-green. I’m sorry to say I was scared of him, thin as I was, still within reach of my teenage years. I couldn’t imagine a day when I would be stronger than the Wolf.

    “With treats and dreams and moon-blood,” he told me the day I moved into the guest room. One suitcase, a twin bed dressed in faded linens. My hands — naked, cold. Standing there, one hallway away from him, I wondered if I’d made the right choice. I wondered if I’d had any choice to make.

    We’d run out of space in my mother’s house. After college, my stepsister had married and brought the Woodsman home. It had never been a mansion, equipped with only enough rooms for a mother and her daughters. The addition of the Woodsman meant the subtraction of someone else.

    My mother asked if I would mind moving out, living with our only other relative: the Wolf.

    “Don’t let her bite you,” she told me as I packed pads and protein bars into my suitcase.

    “It’s he,” I replied, resentful and a little petulant. I knew a little about wolves. My stepsister had known a few in college, though only tangentially. They came more to some families than others, and never before the age of sixty. He was our first, as far as I knew.

    “No, it’s she,” my mother huffed. “She was your grandmother, before.”

    “That doesn’t matter. Now he’s a wolf.”

    She gave me a hand-me-down cardigan and left the room.



    When I moved in, he cooked for me. Quiche in the morning, martinis at lunch, Bolognese for supper. His table manners gave me my first nightmares, mixed up with cold toes and shifting shadows. I rose each morning exhausted, longing for home. The cottage was too quiet. The Wolf didn’t speak much. He seemed as uninterested in my presence as he was unbothered by it. He spent more time in the garden, while I perused the living room,

    • 20 min
    PodCastle 833: This Wooden Heart

    PodCastle 833: This Wooden Heart

    * Author : Eleanna Castroianni

    * Narrator : Kat Kourbeti

    * Host : Matt Dovey

    * Audio Producer : Devin Martin

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    PodCastle 833: This Wooden Heart is a PodCastle original.





    Content warnings for death and references to war and genocide.





    Rated PG-13

    This Wooden Heart

    by Eleanna Castroianni

     

     

    It starts with a seed in your grandfather’s beard.

    Before you were born, when you and your brother were still seeds tucked deep inside your parents’ bodies, your grandfather dreamed for a while: of grainy bark, of sun-kissed leaves, of sweet purple fruit and of milky poison sap.

    Your grandpa: you knew him for a while. He had the eyes of someone claimed by something bigger; the eyes of someone who has known secrets that take root deep below.

    He had the eyes of your brother.

    Your brother: you knew him for a while. His fire burned too bright. And everyone who shines brightly is sent to exile. To this day, your mother thinks her son — your only brother — is imprisoned on a faraway island.

    She doesn’t know that your brother dreams of grainy bark and sun-kissed leaves. She doesn’t know that what started with a seed in her father’s beard has grown wiry roots and curly tendrils around this family’s hearts.

    She can feel the thorns. She can hear the faint beating. She will clutch at her chest with every long breath. But she doesn’t know.

    It starts like this.

     



     

    The story of your grandmother goes like this — or so they told you.

    Rumour had it that the fig grove surrounding the church of Saint Yerasimos in Tholaria could hide one from human eyes. When the Ottomans and the Moors raided, people took to the grove. They knocked on the trees and the spirits of the trees answered. They welcomed them, one trunk now holding two souls.

    In the thick shade of the fig trees, with no birds singing, no cicadas trilling, no bees buzzing, the priest eyed your grandmother with a smirk on his goatish features. The irreverent call priests he-goats, but he truly was one: shiny horns and black jewel eyes, part of the beastfolk of Yerakari. He was the spitting image of Dark Father, one of the Cruel Saints that are honored only in Messara Valley. No doubt this chilling resemblance made him, ironically, popular with the pious. Goats have herbivore eyes; his eyes were a predator’s.

    “It will cost you,” he said. “The church has needs, you know that, child.” He stroked the heavy cross hanging from his neck. The little jewels tucked in the insets must have cost a fortune. Among them, rubies shone bright red. Rubies were a sign of someone who had traded with the Ottomans. Someone who herded the serfs for the sake of the master.

    She clenched her jaw. Of course. The beastfolk of Yerakari cared about one thing only: money. Sometimes it took the form of business, sometimes of sheer thievery. When it came to the church, the beastfolk were a natural partner to the biggest thieves in the country.

    “Name the price,” she said.

    The he-goat went silent for a moment to briefly weigh the odds. “Forty aiyes. With interest.”

    That was a year’s income for a spinner, in good times. Your grandmother was resourceful; she could find a way to pay the instalments. “Expensive, but you have a deal. I have an upfront of ten.”

    “Splendid. Dark Father thanks you.” His goaty eyes shone with greed, and his long-fingered human hands,

    • 46 min
    PodCastle 832: The Adventure of the Faerie Coffin: Being the First Morstan and Holmes Occult Detection – Part Two

    PodCastle 832: The Adventure of the Faerie Coffin: Being the First Morstan and Holmes Occult Detection – Part Two

    * Author : Rebecca Buchanan

    * Narrator : Nicola Chapman

    * Host : Matt Dovey

    * Audio Producer : Devin Martin

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    Previously published by Sherlock Holmes and the Occult Detectives 1 (Belanger Press)





    Rated PG



    ~ Five ~

    Dinner was not silent. While we sat in the kitchen, sipping soup and munching on bread and mutton, Miss Couper maintained an animated lecture on the tumuli and barrows of the British Isles and the Continent.

    “Wayland’s Smithy being a prime Neolithic example. And then there’s Maeshowe up on Orkney. Chambered cairn. Unique to the Orkneys. Don’t see that anywhere else. Well, that we know of. Could change at any moment. Always making new discoveries. Even the Americans are doing good work, digging up Indian mounds —”

    “Miss Couper, could you pass the salt, please?” I held out my hand, smile stiff.

    “Eh? Oh, aye.”

    Miss Baxter hid a smirk behind a bite of mutton.

    Ailis and the other two students, whom I now knew to be Judith Fleming and Beatrice Gordon, sat across the table from me. They remained alarmingly quiet, their gazes fixed on their plates. Like Ailis, Judith and Beatrice also wore older dresses: all charity students, then, without the funds to travel home for the holiday.

    Mrs. Fearghasdan sat at the head of the table, frowning with concern.

    Holmes hovered around the edges of the room, watchful.

    I cleared my throat, shaking some salt into my soup. “How will all of you be celebrating the holiday, then? Cider and carols after church? Will you be bringing a tree in?”

    Miss Couper raised her spoon. “Interesting history to that —”

    “No tree, I’m afraid,” Mrs. Fearghasdan interrupted. “But we plan for a Yule log in the main hearth in the great dining hall. Dawn services at St. Giles, of course.”

    “And you, Miss Morstan?” Miss Baxter smiled at me, her eyes gleaming. “Will you be burning a Yule log?”

    I set aside the salt, folding my hands in my lap. From across the table, Ailis watched me through her hair.

    “I do recall that you and . . . oh, what was her name? Weaver? Walker?”

    “Mrs. Webster.”

    Miss Baxter clapped her hands. “Yes, that’s right! Webster! The two of you would slip away at the oddest times of the year.” She turned to Miss Couper and continued in a loud whisper, “Did you know that Miss Morstan here was the only student at the Academy who had her own nanny? The rest of us, of course, had long outgrown our nannies, leaving them behind in the nursery. But, well, I suppose when one is born in a distant heathen land, one needs some sort of comfort when one rejoins civilization.”

    Miss Couper shifted uncomfortably, her expression uncertain.

    “You are quite right, Evelyn.” I smiled thinly, holding my back and shoulders so stiff that they began to ache. Breathe. In, out. “It was a shock to leave the beauty and warmth of India for Scotland. It took me some time to come to appreciate the lochs and moors and heaths — beautiful, but a spare and striking beauty in comparison to India. And, of course, I had just lost my mother. My father, loyal down to his marrow, would not abandon his duty to the Queen. And so Mrs. Webster kindly agreed to accompany me back to my homeland, to love and care for me as if I were her own daughter. And I came to care for her as a second mother — but more, as a role model, an example of compassion and honor and courage. The sort of woman I could only hope to become myself,

    • 43 min
    PodCastle 831: The Adventure of the Faerie Coffin: Being the First Morstan and Holmes Occult Detection – Part One

    PodCastle 831: The Adventure of the Faerie Coffin: Being the First Morstan and Holmes Occult Detection – Part One

    * Author : Rebecca Buchanan

    * Narrator : Nicola Chapman

    * Host : Matt Dovey

    * Audio Producer : Devin Martin

    *

    Discuss on Forums







    Previously published by Sherlock Holmes and the Occult Detectives 1 (Belanger Press)





    Rated PG

    The Adventure of the Faerie Coffin: Being the First Morstan and Holmes Occult Detection

    by Rebecca Buchanan

     

    Dramatis Personae

    Miss Mary Morstan — a governess with a secret, fiancée of Dr. John Watson

    Mr. Sherlock Holmes — a consulting detective of ruthless logic

    Mrs. Edith Fearghasdan — a concerned headmistress

    Miss Evelyn Baxter — not a friend of Miss Morstan

    Miss Susanna Couper — an opinionated teacher

    Ailis, Judith, and Beatrice — students with a shared secret

    Miss Maighread MacPherson — a teacher skilled at uncovering secrets

    Mrs. MacPherson — her mother

    Mrs. Webster — Miss Morstan’s former governess and mentor

    Mrs. Forrester — Miss Morstan’s current employer, a supposedly respectable society matron

    Dr. John Watson — Mr. Holmes’s flatmate and partner in criminal investigations, Miss Morstan’s fiancé





    ~ One ~

    “Miss Morstan. May I join you?”

    I closed my eyes, shutting out the chaos of the rail station. The sounds of whistles, shouts, and carolers were only slightly dulled by the window.

    Of course he was here.

    I inhaled slowly, feeling the breath fill my chest, spread through my arms and down my legs; an old habit, learned long ago at the feet of one far more skilled than me.

    Calmer now, I turned and offered him a smile. “Of course, Mr. Holmes. Please, have a seat.”

    He was not dressed in his usual attire. His clothes were not neat; rather, they were stained and wrinkled and slightly too large for his frame. His shoes were scuffed. The glasses that perched on his nose — pink from the cold — subtly changed its length and shape. The threadbare hat did much the same for his head, hiding his thinning hair.

    Of course he had altered his appearance. No doubt he had been following me from the moment I left my rooms at Mrs. Forrester’s home. I should never have declined his dinner invitation the previous evening. There had been something in my note — a curious curve to an s, an odd slant to a t, a wrinkle, a stain — that had piqued his curiosity.

    And so here he was, right where and when I least wanted him.

    How John tolerated it, I failed to understand.

    He settled easily into the seat opposite, legs crossed, hands folded in his lap. Silent. Still. Waiting.

    We stared at one another as the whistle blew loud and piercing, and continued to stare as the train lurched forward, down the track, north, away from London. Only when we reached the outskirts of that great city did he finally speak.

    “You are not breaking your engagement with Watson.” A statement, not a question.

    “No.”

    “You have only ever served as a governess in London, therefore you are not paying a sentimental visit to previous charges.”

    “Correct.”

    “This train is bound for Edinburgh. Your mother’s family hails from that country originally, Deòireach being her surname. You were born and lived with your family in India until you were eight. After your mother’s death, your father sent you to the same boarding school that she had attended. The Frazier Academy. You remained there until you were seventeen, at which point you traveled south to seek respectable employment.

    • 46 min

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