Good podcast

Top 100 most popular podcasts

Season's Readings ? Christmas Stories and Holiday Tales

Season's Readings ? Christmas Stories and Holiday Tales

Free your inner child as you enjoy great holiday season and Christmas stories any time with Season?s Readings.

When the world turns cold, these stories should warm your heart. "Season?s Readings" is your fireside refuge from the season?s noise ? a handpicked collection of classic and original tales, read with warmth and heart by professional voice actor Don McDonald. While most of these holiday tales center on Christmas, they span the season from Thanksgiving through the New Year ? stories both joyful and bittersweet that remind us why light, laughter, and love matter most when the nights grow longest.

It?s the cozy corner of Short Storyverses, where every episode feels like cocoa and candlelight.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Subscribe

iTunes / Overcast / RSS

Website

shows.acast.com/seasons-readings-timeless-holiday-stories

Episodes

Uncle Richard's New Year Dinner ? A Classic Short Story by Lucy Maud Montgomery.

Uncle Richard?s New Year Dinner is a tender, early-20th-century family story about estrangement, reconciliation, and the quiet power of kindness. Set over the course of a single winter evening, it explores how long-standing rifts are rarely healed by grand speeches?but sometimes by a warm stove, a shared table, and a willingness to begin again. It?s a story of kindness, humanity, and hope that arrives without ceremony.


Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874?1942) was a Canadian author best known for her enduring novel Anne of Green Gables. Writing with warmth, wit, and deep emotional intelligence, Montgomery captured the inner lives of ordinary people and the quiet dramas of home, family, and belonging. Her stories often found beauty in small moments and believed?without sentimentality?that kindness, imagination, and patience could heal even long-held wounds. Though her work is rooted in a specific place and time, its emotional truths remain timeless.


If you love short stories, explore our multiverse of timeless tales at shortstoryverses.com


Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-30
Link to episode

The Boy with the Box ? A Classic Christmas Story by Mary Griggs Van Voorhis

First published in 1905, ?The Boy with the Box? is a gentle Christmas story about childhood pride, unexpected generosity, and the quiet ways kindness reshapes a heart. It captures a winter world of skates and shop windows, family love and small sacrifices?where the true gift arrives not in a box, but in understanding.


Mary Griggs Van Voorhis (1876?1938) was an American writer whose short stories often focused on children, family life, and moments of quiet moral awakening. Writing in the early twentieth century, she was known for her warm realism and her ability to find emotional truth in everyday scenes. Her work appeared widely in magazines of the era and remains admired for its gentle humanity and timeless perspective.


If you enjoyed this story, please check out the rest the Season's Reading catalog of holiday tales. You can also find a multiverse of classic and original short stories of various genres at shortstoryverses.com

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-22
Link to episode

The Star ? An Original Short, Short Christmas Story by Don McDonald

This is a special Christmas bonus episode for Season's Readings listeners.


Frank has reasons for not decorating anymore. Christmas is quieter now. Darker. Easier to ignore.


Then a new neighbor moves in next door?six years old, endlessly curious. What starts as a simple conversation turns into a small act of defiance against grief, routine, and the belief that some lights, once turned off, should stay that way.


The Star is a gentle story about unexpected persuasion, borrowed wonder, and how the smallest voices sometimes know exactly where the switch is.


If you enjoy short stories, there are dozens more just waiting to be heard on the Short Storyverses channel or at shortstoryverses.com

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-18
Link to episode

On Christmas Day in the Morning ? A Classic Christmas Story by Grace S. Richmond

On Christmas Day in the Morning is a story about family?not as it is imagined, but as it is lived?and the gifts that arrive without wrapping. It was written with music already echoing between its lines. The traditional song of the same name appears directly in the story, assumed to be familiar to its original readers.


For this performance, the music is included not as embellishment, but as part of the text itself? the way it may have lived in the reader?s mind when the story was first published.


Grace S. Richmond (1866?1959) was an American novelist and short-story writer whose work focused on family life, personal responsibility, and the quiet moral decisions that shape ordinary people.


A frequent contributor to publications such as The Ladies? Home Journal and The Saturday Evening Post, Richmond was widely read in the early 20th century. Her Christmas stories, in particular, favored restraint over sentimentality?using the holiday as a setting for reflection, reconciliation, and emotional truth.


Her fiction was written to be shared, remembered, and reread?often aloud, and often at Christmas.


?I Saw Three Ships (Come Sailing In)? Traditional English carol

Performed by Matt Norris & the Moon

Audio sourced from Wikimedia Commons

Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (CC BY 3.0)

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-16
Link to episode

The Santaverse ? An Original Christmas Story by Don McDonald

BE AWARE: This is a family-friendly work of speculative fiction that asks: what if Santa Claus were something far stranger, and more wonderful, than we ever imagined? THose looking for a traditional Santa story may be disappointed.


In Santaverse, a brilliant researcher completes a quantum experiment that opens a door she never meant to find. What begins as a scientific breakthrough quickly turns into something stranger?and far more personal. On the other side of the connection is a presence that shouldn?t exist, a figure woven from equal parts myth, memory, and physics. And once contact is made, nothing in her world?or any world?stays simple.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-11
Link to episode

The Cure for Holiday Stress

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-09
Link to episode

A Chaparral Christmas Gift - Classic Western Christmas Story by O. Henry

Out on the western chaparral, Christmas doesn?t soften the land so much as sharpen what?s already waiting there?old grudges, old loves, and old wounds that never healed quite right. Madison Lane and Rosita McMullen have built a life together in the years since their wedding was interrupted by a jealous suitor? and a bullet. But Christmas Eve has a long memory in the Frio country, and something?or someone?may be riding back through the brush. O. Henry?s tale unfolds with warmth, tension, and a frontier kind of mercy that arrives in a shape no one expects.


Chaparral Christmas was written by O. Henry (William Sydney Porter), the American master of the gently-twisted tale. Known for his frontier characters, ironic turns, and deep affection for ordinary people under pressure, Porter captured both the humor and the heartbreak of American life at the turn of the 20th century. This story reflects his gift for revealing unexpected kindness in the harshest of places.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-09
Link to episode

The Burglar's Christmas ? A Classic Christmas Story by Elizabeth L. Seymour

The Burglar?s Christmas is Willa Cather?s deeply human Christmas tale?published under the pseudonym Elizabeth L. Seymour?about a young man who has utterly failed in life and reached the end of his rope on a slushy Chicago Christmas Eve. Hungry, cold, and convinced he has squandered every opportunity he ever had, he turns to theft as a last act of survival.


But the home he slips into isn?t just any home. It?s the place where his past?and his pain?wait in the shadows. What follows is a moving story of recognition, forgiveness, and the kind of unconditional love that can pull even the most broken soul back from the brink.


Cather?s tale blends realism with emotional clarity, delivering a Christmas story that avoids sentimentality while celebrating the deepest meaning of the season: the moment when grace replaces despair, and a prodigal child returns to the arms that never stopped waiting.


Willa Cather (1873?1947) was one of America?s finest novelists, best known for My Ántonia, O Pioneers!, and Death Comes for the Archbishop. Early in her career she wrote under the pen name Elizabeth L. Seymour, producing short stories and sketches that revealed her gift for capturing human frailty and quiet courage. The Burglar?s Christmas, first published in 1896, shows her emerging voice?clear, empathetic, and profoundly attuned to the inner lives of ordinary people.


This episode is part of Short Storyverses, a storytelling universe of classic tales, original fiction, children?s adventures, and holiday stories. Explore them all at ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-12-02
Link to episode

The Purple Dress ? A Classic Holiday Story by O. Henry

O. Henry often found the heart of a story in the everyday moments most people overlook. The Purple Dress is one of those pieces ? a small, vivid glimpse into life in early-1900s New York, told with his familiar mix of humor, warmth, and gentle surprise.


William Sydney Porter, or O. Henry, wrote more than six hundred short stories marked by humor, warmth, and his famous twist endings. His work captures the daily lives of ordinary Americans ? especially the clerks and shopgirls of early-20th-century New York ? with compassion and insight.


About Short Storyverses

This story appears as part of Short Storyverses, a collection of storytelling podcasts for every mood:


Explore them all at ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-25
Link to episode

A Visit from St. Nicholas ? a Classic Holiday Short Story

One of the most beloved Christmas poems of all time, A Visit from St. Nicholas ? better known as ?Twas the Night Before Christmas ? first appeared anonymously in 1823. Fourteen years later, it was credited to Clement Moore. This classic tale of a father?s midnight encounter with Santa Claus remains one of the most cherished holiday stories ever written.


For nearly two centuries, debate has surrounded the true authorship of A Visit from St. Nicholas. Though Clement Moore is credited, some literary scholars argue that the style and spirit better match Major Henry Livingston Jr. Regardless of who wrote it, the poem remains one of the most enduring and beloved pieces of Christmas literature.


Season?s Readings is part of Short Storyverses ? discover more timeless tales for every season at shortstoryverses.com.


Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

Jimmy Scarecrow's Christmas ? A Classic Holiday Story by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

A quiet winter story about something overlooked? and the gentle miracle of being seen.

A tale with soft edges, stillness, and a bit of warmth where you least expect it.


Season?s Readings is part of Short Storyverses ? find more holiday tales at ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

Christmas at Red Butte ? a Classic Christmas Story by Lucy Maud Montgomery

On a cold prairie Christmas Eve, a small family waits for something more than presents: the return of a brother who left home to seek his own way. Christmas at Red Butte is a gentle, reflective story about hope, forgiveness, and the way love can knit together what once felt lost. It?s the kind of tale that reminds us that even in the quiet corners of winter, miracles still find their way home.


Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874?1942) was a Canadian writer best known for Anne of Green Gables and its many sequels. Growing up on Prince Edward Island, she drew deeply from its landscapes, communities, and family ties to create stories filled with emotional richness and keen observations of everyday life. Her work has remained beloved for more than a century, cherished for its humor, humanity, and enduring warmth.


Discover more stories like this at ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

A Kidnapped Santa Claus ? a Classic Christmas Story by L. Frank Baum

On Christmas Eve, four mischievous imps decide the world has grown far too cheerful. The source of all that bothersome joy, of course, is Santa Claus himself. So they sneak into his cozy workshop in the Valley of the Laughing Bells and whisk him away. What follows is a struggle between gloom and gladness as Santa?s friends rally to rescue him and restore Christmas. It?s a fantastical little tale filled with whimsy, gentle suspense, and a reminder that delight often needs defending.


L. Frank Baum (1856?1919) is best remembered as the creator of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and its many sequels, but he was also a prolific writer of fairy tales, fantasy stories, and imaginative seasonal fables. He believed that stories should nourish ?the child-heart,? wherever it lives, in both children and adults. A Kidnapped Santa Claus reflects Baum?s signature mix of gentle humor, mythmaking, and moral warmth.


To discover more seasonal stories and classic tales, visit ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

Christmas Every Day ? A Timeless Holiday Tale by William Dean Howells

What if Christmas didn?t come just once a year?but every single day? In William Dean Howells? charming tale, a young girl makes a wish that the holiday spirit might last forever. At first it?s magical: endless presents, feasts, carols, and cheer. But soon the town begins to sag under the weight of too many fruitcakes, too many toys, and far too much goodwill. The joy wears thin. The tinsel droops. Even Santa looks tired. This light-hearted fable reminds us that what makes Christmas meaningful is the anticipation?and the pause?between celebrations.


William Dean Howells (1837?1920), often called the ?Dean of American Letters,? was a guiding voice in the rise of American literary realism. As editor of The Atlantic Monthly, he championed writers like Mark Twain, Henry James, Sarah Orne Jewett, and Mary E. Wilkins Freeman. His own fiction blends humor, social insight, and gentle satire, and stories like Christmas Every Day continue to charm readers more than a century later.


To discover more classic and original short stories, visit ShortStoryverses.com ? your companion for thoughtful, timeless listening and reading.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

A Set of Poe ? a Classic Holiday Tale by George Ade

George Ade?s A Set of Poe follows Mr. Waterby, a man who wants just one indulgence: a beautifully bound set of Edgar Allan Poe. When his wife discourages the purchase, he spirals inward, convincing himself she must be selfish and unloving. The small misunderstanding blossoms into resentment, silent punishment, and wounded pride ? until Christmas morning reveals an entirely different truth. A gentle, funny, and deeply human portrait of how love can be hidden beneath our worst assumptions.


George Ade was an American humorist at the turn of the twentieth century, best known for stories that reveal our everyday vanities and tender blind spots. He had a gift for showing how small misunderstandings can shape lives ? sometimes painfully, sometimes sweetly.


If this story moved you, or made you wince with recognition, I hope you?ll follow, rate, and share Season?s Readings. And explore more short stories, classic and new, at ShortStoryverses.com.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

The Gift of the Magi ? A Classic Christmas Story by O. Henry

Some gifts arrive quietly, without ribbons, tags, or spectacle. They?re born in that private space between two people who love each other more than they love their own comfort. The Gift of the Magi is a story about that kind of love. Not the glossy holiday sort, but the kind that hurts a little? because it asks something of you.


Two young newlyweds, short on money and long on devotion, each set out to give the other a perfect Christmas gift. What happens next has been retold for more than a century for one reason: the ending lands right in the heart.


O. Henry was the pen name of William Sydney Porter, a master of the short story whose work is known for its wit, sharp observation, and always?always?a twist at the end. Born in North Carolina in 1862, he lived a life full of dramatic turns of his own, including years spent working as a draftsman, a bank clerk, and eventually, a prisoner?an experience that helped sharpen his empathy and storytelling voice. His stories, including The Gift of the Magi, The Ransom of Red Chief, and The Last Leaf, remain favorites for their warmth, humanity, and clever construction.


If you love short stories please visit ShortStoryverses.com?a growing library of classic and original tales, told with care.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

A Stolen Christmas ? A Classic Holiday Tale by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

In a small New England village, Christmas can be measured in curtains and lace, in who has a tree and who doesn?t, in who seems to live just one notch above everyone else. And Marg?ret Poole has always felt that notch.


She is raising three bright, restless children on almost nothing ? sewing, scraping, stretching every little thing ? while across the road her neighbor displays beauty like a banner. A tree. Ribboned lace. Comfort. Admiration. And the more Marg?ret pretends not to look, the more she does.


One evening, too-tired hope gives way to something sharper ? and Marg?ret makes a choice she has never made in her life. It is not wickedness, not even temptation. It is hunger for joy, for the children, just once.


But Christmas has a habit of revealing secrets ? and sometimes the hardest part of grace is believing we deserve any.


This is a story of pride, poverty, and a gift that was never stolen at all.


Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (1852?1930) wrote about the quiet negotiations of dignity ? how people survive each other, and themselves. Her New England women are stubborn, tender, fierce, ashamed, proud, and astonishingly real. She does not offer sentiment; she offers recognition. And in this story, she offers mercy.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-14
Link to episode

Reginald's Christmas Revel ? a Classic Christmas Tale by Saki

A holiday gathering, a knowing smile, and a narrator who sees more than he lets on. Reginald?s Christmas Revel blends elegance and humor in that unmistakable Saki way?light as champagne, sharp as its bubbles. A perfect seasonal listen.


If you enjoy this story, you?ll find more like it at ShortStoryverses.com, home of Litreading, New Tales Told, Season?s Readings, and more.


Saki (Hector Hugh Munro) balanced elegance and satire with effortless skill. His stories continue to resonate for their humor, subtle bite, and perfect brevity. If you enjoyed this performance, consider rating or reviewing the podcast, and share it with someone who might appreciate timeless short fiction.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-12
Link to episode

The Gospel According to Joan ? a Warm Holiday Story by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

In a quiet New England village where everyone knows everyone else?s business, Joan stands out for her fierce devotion and unshakable certainty. She believes she?s been called to serve a higher purpose, and with clear-eyed conviction she begins to reshape the life of her small town?one doorstep, one neighbor, one soul at a time. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman invites us into the delicate line between faith and fervor, charity and pride, and the complicated ways good intentions ripple through a community. This is not a sermon. It?s a study of the heart?its hopes, its blind spots, and its astonishing power to change the world around it.


Mary E. Wilkins Freeman (1852?1930) was one of America?s most insightful chroniclers of village life, particularly the lives of women whose strength and will rarely made daily headlines. Through stories grounded in the rhythms, humor, stubbornness, and tenderness of New England towns, she illuminated the quiet heroism of ordinary people. Her work stands as a reminder that the smallest communities can hold the greatest drama.


If this story spoke to you, I invite you to discover more at ShortStoryverses.com, where classic tales live alongside new ones, all waiting for your next quiet moment.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-12
Link to episode

Three Thanksgiving Kisses ? A Classic Holiday Short Story by William Dean Howells

Season?s Readings is your fireside refuge from life?s troubles ? a curated collection of timeless holiday tales read by Don McDonald.


In this episode, we feature Three Thanksgiving Kisses by William Dean Howells, a tender 19th-century story about love, humility, and gratitude in a small New England home.


Discover more classic and original stories at ShortStoryverses.com ? a universe of stories for every season.


Three Thanksgiving Kisses was written by William Dean Howells (1837?1920), the ?Dean of American Letters.? As editor of The Atlantic Monthly and a lifelong friend of Mark Twain, Howells championed realism in American fiction ? finding truth and beauty in everyday lives.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-12
Link to episode

Two Thanksgiving Gentlemen ? A Classic Holiday Short Story by O. Henry

In this beloved O. Henry tale, two men meet every Thanksgiving to share a meal ? a tradition rooted in charity, pride, and an unexpected twist of fate. ?Two Thanksgiving Gentlemen? is both humorous and touching, a timeless reminder that generosity often runs deeper than appetite.


This story was performed by voice actor, Don McDonald for ?Season?s Readings? ? classic and original holiday stories read with warmth and heart. Make sure to check out of other ?Short Storyverses? podcast at shortstoryverses.com


O. Henry (William Sydney Porter, 1862?1910) was an American short-story writer celebrated for his wit, warmth, and trademark twist endings. After working a series of odd jobs ? from bank clerk to cowboy and even serving a stint in prison ? he began writing stories that captured the humor and heart of ordinary life. His best-known works include The Gift of the Magi, The Ransom of Red Chief, and Two Thanksgiving Gentlemen. Porter?s enduring tales continue to charm readers with their humanity and gentle irony.

Season?s Readings is just one corner of the Short Storyverses Multiverse, created for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful pause and a well-told tale. You can explore the rest of the multiverse at shortstoryverses.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

2025-11-12
Link to episode
A tiny webapp by I'm With Friends.
Updated daily with data from the Apple Podcasts.