DiscoverKaidankai: Ghost and Supernatural Stories
Kaidankai: Ghost and Supernatural Stories

Kaidankai: Ghost and Supernatural Stories

Author: Linda Gould

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This weekly podcast of fiction read out loud explores the entire world of ghosts and the supernatural. The stories are touching, scary, gruesome, funny, and heartwarming. New episodes every Wednesday.

November 24 to December 24:
Please support the Kaidankai podcast. Donate any amount via PayPal through the Kaidankai website or Ko-Fi (preferred). For select donations, receive a digital ghost story anthology, a Kaidankai t-shirt, or special readings available only to members.

The Kaidankai website donation link: https://www.kaidankaistories.com/shopdonate.html
Ko-Fi: https://ko-fi.com/kaidankaighoststories#


Have a story you'd like us to read? Send it to kaidankai100ghoststories@gmail.com

Please help us pay contributors. Donate via Ko-Fi or PayPal

Read the stories at our website (kaidankaistories.com)

Follow Kaidankai on Twitter: @GhostJapanese

Instagram: @kaidankaisupernaturalstories

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295 Episodes
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The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear.Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Steam" is written by Hana Carolina, an Edinburgh-based creative and academic writer. Born in Poland, she moved to Scotland and studied literature, film and television for many years. Since then, she has been working as a tutor, interpreter, and researcher, and publishing academically while writing dark stories about horrible people. Her work has been published in Every Day Fiction, Crow & Cross Keys, Five on the Fifth, the Chamber Magazine, BRUISER, The Horror Tree, Black Sheep Magazine, and others. You can find her on X/Twitter @HanaCarolinaSCO and BlueSky @hanacarolina.bsky.social.Website: kaidankaistories.com Follow us on:  Twitter/X Instagram Facebook
When the people are away, a few unusual characters can come out to play. Who they are and what they do is the subject of today's story.L.N. Hunter’s comic fantasy novel, ‘The Feather and the Lamp,’ sits alongside works in anthologies such as ‘The Monsters Next Door’ and ‘Best of British Science Fiction 2022’ as well as Short Édition’s ‘Short Circuit’ and the ‘Horrifying Tales of Wonder’ podcast. There have also been papers in the IEEE ‘Transactions on Neural Networks,’ which are probably somewhat less relevant and definitely less fun. When not writing, L.N. unwinds in a disorganised home in rural Cambridgeshire, UK, along with two cats and a soulmate.Links: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/L.N.Hunter.writer Amazon: https://amazon.com/author/l.n.hunter Linktree (publications list): https://linktr.ee/l.n.hunterYou can read "Poster Children" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com and find LN's other story featured on the Kaidankai here.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear.Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "How Enchanted Paintings Drove Burglars Crazy" is written by Anne Hansell. Deaf since birth, Anne Hansell is a third-generation Japanese-American and a distant relative to a famous samurai. Hansell is a regular contributor to the Kaidankai. She lives in Southern California with her husband, a New England gentleman. Website: kaidankaistories.com Follow us on:  Twitter/X Instagram Facebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear.Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Eli & Judith" is written and narrated by Jeff Short, who lives near Philadelphia with his family. When he is not being harassed by his two cats Odin and Ragnar he writes historical fiction featuring ghosts, vampires and assorted criminals. Website: kaidankaistories.com Follow us on:  Twitter/X Instagram Facebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear.Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "There's Something in the Woods" is written and narrated by Bruce Markuson, who lives with his wife and two children in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Markuson is working on a book series, and he often finds himself obsessed with his stories. He prefers to write the ending first, then work backward. Website: kaidankaistories.com Follow us on:  Twitter/X Instagram Facebook
What is a dream and what is reality? And whose reality is real?Katy England has been writing for longer than she likes to admit. A journalist and communications expert by day, modder and fiction writer by night. She spends much of her time in the great expanse of the Maine woods with her husband, triplets, and select fish. Her greatest accomplishments, to date, is that her children like her stories and that the crows come to her yard when she calls them.You can read "Dream Without Mercy" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com and hear Katy's other story featured on the Kaidankai here.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Annie's Road" is written by Daniel Gene Barlekamp is the author of fiction and poetry for young readers and adults. His middle-grade ghost story “The Curse of the Cat Man” appears in the anthology The Haunted States of America (Godwin Books/Macmillan, 2024), and his poetry has been translated into Mandarin by Poetry Hall. Originally from New Jersey, Daniel now lives with his wife and son in Massachusetts, where he works in immigration law by day and attends law school by night. Find him at dgbarlekamp.com and on Twitter @dgbarlekamp.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Portrait of a Girl With a White Kitten" is written by Sarah Das Gupta, a retired teacher from near Cambridge, UK., who also taught in India and Tanzania. She started writing after spending time in hospital, following an accident. Her work has been published in magazines from 12 different countries, including the US, UK, Australia, Canada, India, Germany, Croatia, and Romania.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Harvest Moon" is written by Patty Panni who lives and writes in Memphis, Tennessee. She enjoys writing fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry. She is currently editing her first full-length manuscript, set in the gritty world of human trafficking and is hard at work on her next, about a young woman dealing with the aftermath of her estranged mother's death. Patty is a member of a fun international writing community called Deadlines For Writers. Her kids have fur – Audrey, a twenty-pound rescue pup with the worst storm phobia in the history of the world, and Hobbes, an orange tabby as chill as the cartoon cat he's named for. She has had short stories published in Spillwords and 101 Words.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
A Japanese woman's life is in turmoil. Can a return to her family home offer any guidance?C.S. Fuqua’s books include Fatherhood ~ Poems of Parenthood, Walking After Midnight ~ Collected Stories, Big Daddy’s Fast-Past Gadget, Native American Flute ~ A Comprehensive Guide, and White Trash & Southern ~ Collected Poems. His work has appeared in publications such as Year's Best Horror Stories XIX, XX and XXI, Pudding, The Horror Show, Pearl, Chiron Review, Christian Science Monitor, The Old Farmer's Almanac, The Writer, and Honolulu Magazine.You can read "Obon" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebookPhoto of incense by David Brooke Martin on Unsplash.
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Burial Mound" is written by Larry Pike, whose fiction and poetry have appeared in a variety of literary journals and anthologies. Finishing Line Press published his poetry collection Even in the Slums of Providence in 2021. He is also a playwright; his play Beating the Varsity, originally produced in 2000, was published in World Premieres from Horse Cave Theatre (MotesBooks, 2009). He lives with his wife, Carol, in Glasgow, Kentucky.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Yamamba" is written by Shirley Smothers, an amateur writer, poet, and artist. She mostly writes short stories, some of which can be viewed at Shirleysmothers@stroystar.com. She recently self-published her second book Shirleysmotherssolasta@pothi.comWebsite: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "The Fur Coat" is written and narrated by Jennifer Weigel, a multi-disciplinary mixed media conceptual artist who utilizes a wide range of media to convey her ideas, including assemblage, drawing, fibers, installation, jewelry, painting, performance, photography, sculpture, video and writing.  Much of her work touches on themes of beauty, identity (especially gender identity), memory & forgetting, and institutional critique. She lives in Kansas, USA with her husband and is an avid art collector who enjoys playing board and role-playing games, junk store thrifting, and mail art. Her spirit animal is the deer. Her favorite foods are unagi don or broiled calamari steak and frosting with or without cake.You can read more of Weigel’s writing on her website here.  https://jenniferweigelwords.wordpress.com/Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
A creepy campfire story that involves werewolves, murderers, teenage campers, s’mores, and a little twist.Jennifer Weigel is a multi-disciplinary mixed media conceptual artist.  Weigel utilizes a wide range of media to convey her ideas, including assemblage, drawing, fibers, installation, jewelry, painting, performance, photography, sculpture, video and writing.  Much of her work touches on themes of beauty, identity (especially gender identity), memory & forgetting, and institutional critique.  She lives in Kansas, USA with her husband and is an avid art collector who enjoys playing board and role-playing games, junk store thrifting, and mail art. Her spirit animal is the deer. Her favorite foods are unagi don or broiled calamari steak and frosting with or without cake.You can read more of Weigel’s writing on her website here.  https://jenniferweigelwords.wordpress.com/You can read "Around the Campfire" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Poltergeists on President Street" is written by LindaAnn LoSchiavo and narrated by Linda Gould. LoSchiavo is a Native New Yorker and Elgin Award winner, She is a member of the British Fantasy Society, Horror Writers Association, Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, and The Dramatists Guild -- and a spooky Scorpio who loves Hallowe’en. Current books:  “Messengers of the Macabre,” “Vampire Ventures,” “Always Haunted: Hallowe’en Poems” [Wild Ink, 2024], “Apprenticed to the Night” [UniVerse Press, 2024], and “Felones de Se: Poems about Suicide” [Ukiyoto Publishing, 2024]."Always Haunted: Hallowe'en Poems" on NetGalley -- https://www.netgalley.com/catalog/book/437468 "Always Haunted: Hallowe'en Poems" on BookSirens -- https://booksirens.com/book/V2LHTGL/XKERWXXClick here for LoSchiavo's bibliography.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Possession" is written and narrated by Tim Law, who has loved to write from a very young age, but has only recently discovered the joy of being published. He is happily married to a wonderful girl, a proud father of three humans, and a reluctant father figure to four cats. He writes fantasy, science fiction, general, detective, humour, and a lot of weird stuff that doesn’t seem to fit anywhere. He encourages everyone to give writing a go. Some of his stranger stories can be found here on the Kaidankai, but if you want to read more try his blog at  https://somecallmetimmy.blogspot.com/?m=1Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "Snowball" is written and narrated by John Krampner, whose short stories and flash fiction have appeared in Eunoia Review, Across the Margin, No Bars And a Dead Battery (published by Owl Canyon Press) and other publications. He lives in Los Angeles and is sarcastic in three languages.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
The Kaidankai is based on the Japanese version of campfire stories. I narrate a story weekly, but this month offers authors the chance to narrate their own stories. Like sitting around the campfire, you never know what you’re going to hear. Each Wednesday, I'll still present the weekly podcast, so be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast on your favorite podcast platform because every story is worth listening to. "The Axe Throwing Murderer" is written and narrated by Bruce Markuson, who lives with his wife and two children in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Markuson is working on a book series, and he often finds himself obsessed with his stories. He prefers to write the ending first, then work backward.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
In "Life in Death," Allister Nelson treats us to a lifetime of interactions between a young woman named Miriam and the angel of death. But why does she alone have this special relationship with the angel?Allister Nelson is a poet and author whose work has appeared in Apex Magazine, The Showbear Family Circus, Eternal Haunted Summer, SENTIDOS: Revistas Amazonicas, Black Sheep: Unique Tales of Terror and Wonder, The Greyhound Journal, FunDead Publications' Gothic Anthology, POWER Magazine, Renewable Energy World, and many other venues.You can read "Life in Death" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebook
In "The World is Always Ending," Maia Brown-Jackson imagines a multiverse of minotaurs, labyrinths and humans."The World is ALways ending" first appeared in "The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction."Maia Brown-Jackson is a symphony of papercuts, banged-up knees, and stubborn determination. She believes in the altruism of strangers, the power of direct action, and the use of the Oxford comma. She strives to offer what she can; here, that offering is her words.You can read "The World is Always Ending" at https://www.kaidankaistories.com.Website: kaidankaistories.comFollow us on: Twitter/XInstagramFacebookPhoto by Everyday Basics on Unsplash
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