Serendipity Podcast

Serendipity Ep 12:

What Do You Mean? by Cristal Duhaime and Mira Burt-Wintonick

The complicated relationship of robots. "What Do You Mean?" is written by Mira Burt-Wintonick and Cristal Duhaime and with poetry by Kelsey Walsh.

Serendipity Ep 11:

Almost Flamboyant by Rijn Collins and Lea Redfern

A group of ravens is an unkindness. A gathering of rhinos is (appropriately) a crash. So what do you call a flock of flamingos?

Serendipity Ep 10:

Can You Help Me Find My Mom? by The Truth

"Can You Help Me Find My Mom" by Jonathan Mitchell of The Truth podcast and is written by Diana McCorry. In this story, a little girl is lost and can't find her mom. Why won't anyone help her?

Serendipity Ep 9:

Our Time is Up by Erin Anderson

This episode features an abridged version of The Sarah Awards 3rd place winner "Our Time is Up" by Erin Anderson. You can listen to the full piece here.

Serendipity Ep 8:

Quadraturin by Jon Earle and Emma Wiseman

This episode features the Best New Artist Winners Jon Earle and Emma Wiseman for their story "Quadraturin."

Latest

Very, Very, Short, Short Stories Finalists (Part 1)

Serendipity Ep 17:

Very, Very, Short, Short Stories Finalists (Part 1)

In this episode of Serendipity, we play 5 of the 10 finalists for our 2016 Very, Very, Short, Short Stories Contest. Featuring: "Bitterly Cold" by David Garland, "The Staging Area" by Jason Gots, "Noir" by Pa Ying Vang, "#blessed" by Jackie Heltz, and "Blinking" by La Cosa Preziosa. Read More

Sarah Awards 2020 Judges

Essays

Sarah Awards 2020 Judges

We’re excited to bring back the 2020 Sarah Awards with this talented trio of audio fiction judges. Read More

Getting On with James Urbaniak

Reviews

Getting On with James Urbaniak

James Urbaniak is the kind of podcaster that other producers love to hate. His show, Getting On with James Urbaniak, consists of nothing but a single voice reading a fictional soliloquy, often written by someone else. There is almost no elaborate soundscaping, no intricate plot development, little evidence of endless editing sessions to get the thing just right. Getting On sounds like Urbaniak cruised into the studio, an iced latte in hand, and finished recording before his drink grew tepid. None of this would be infuriating if the podcast in question wasn’t so good. Read More