Those Snowy Nights You Read to Me, They'll Never Be Forgotten
A podcast by Soren Narnia
Categories:
21 Episodes
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Little Boy Games
Published: 11/07/2023 -
The Angle of the Light
Published: 1/02/2021 -
In the Realm of the Eight Dollar Soda
Published: 5/03/2020 -
Town With a Tranquil Name
Published: 30/10/2019 -
Tyrant, Draw Thy Sword
Published: 19/09/2018 -
If I Can Stop One Heart From Breaking
Published: 8/02/2018 -
Joke Meets Ground
Published: 13/08/2017 -
Three Stories for a Rainy Sunday Afternoon
Published: 13/07/2017 -
Bride, Groom, Sunday, Forever
Published: 20/02/2017 -
An Oral History of Hell
Published: 12/09/2016 -
Whatever You Find Within You
Published: 9/04/2016 -
Objects Found in a Faraway Field
Published: 1/02/2016 -
The Tears of Sisyphus
Published: 2/11/2015 -
Toward the Close of November
Published: 24/09/2015 -
New Players Welcome Here
Published: 31/08/2015 -
Song of the Living Dead
Published: 27/07/2015 -
Sketch of a Bird in Flight
Published: 1/06/2015 -
3:13 a.m.
Published: 1/05/2015 -
Loft
Published: 12/04/2015 -
Signs Pass By
Published: 28/03/2015
Works written and produced by Soren Narnia. The text of these stories is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA. Email: [email protected] -- When I was in the fourth grade, my teacher asked me to sit next to a handicapped kid named Sean and help him along a little if I could. It wasn't easy, because he was quite slow, but I tried. When Sean got especially excited about something, or if he was told he had done something well, he would smile and shout out nonsense words. One of them I remember, which he used to shout many times over the few months I sat beside him, was "Sorinarneeya!" Again and again, it was a harmless word he used when he was happy, and seeing my puzzled expression would just make him say it once more, even more pleased than the first time: "Sorinarneeya!" For some reason that word stuck with me for years, until one day as an adult I realized how neatly and curiously it cut in half. And I thought that was so perfect, how this little gem of a thing had sprung from a bit of the absurd and a bit of the tragic. That seemed like all of life to me: momentary bits of perfection out of all the absurdity and tragedy. And amazingly, they just keep on coming. - SN