8 min listen
Episode 119 (John C. Calhoun from the Opposite Side of the Line that Divides the Living from the Dead)
Episode 119 (John C. Calhoun from the Opposite Side of the Line that Divides the Living from the Dead)
ratings:
Length:
10 minutes
Released:
Dec 16, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
The Memory Palace is a proud member of Radiotopia, from PRX, a curated network of extraordinary, story-driven shows.
Music
Sad Seine by Lambert.
Titan's Island by Ancient Ocean
Flowering Jasmine as performed by Georgs Pelicis and Gidon Kremer
Malpensa by Julia Kent
Notes
I first came upon the Calhoun bit while re-reading Talking to the Dead: Kate and Maggie Fox and the Rise of Spiritualism by Barbara Weisberg.
Which us, among other places to J.H. Fowler's New Testament "miracles" and Modern "miracles"
And to the delightfully named, The Ordeal of Life: Graphically Illustrated in the Experiences of Fifteen Hundred Individuals Promiscuously Drawn from All Nations, Religions, Classes, & Conditions of Men Alphabetically Arranged and Given Psychometrically, Through the Mediumship of John C. Grinnell, In the Presence of the Compiler, Thomas R. Hazard.
Music
Sad Seine by Lambert.
Titan's Island by Ancient Ocean
Flowering Jasmine as performed by Georgs Pelicis and Gidon Kremer
Malpensa by Julia Kent
Notes
I first came upon the Calhoun bit while re-reading Talking to the Dead: Kate and Maggie Fox and the Rise of Spiritualism by Barbara Weisberg.
Which us, among other places to J.H. Fowler's New Testament "miracles" and Modern "miracles"
And to the delightfully named, The Ordeal of Life: Graphically Illustrated in the Experiences of Fifteen Hundred Individuals Promiscuously Drawn from All Nations, Religions, Classes, & Conditions of Men Alphabetically Arranged and Given Psychometrically, Through the Mediumship of John C. Grinnell, In the Presence of the Compiler, Thomas R. Hazard.
Released:
Dec 16, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Episode 1 (Horrible Deaths): This is the very first episode of The Memory Palace. Done a gajillion years ago to test out a theory about radio storytelling. You do not have to start here. In fact, maybe you shouldn't. It's a little grim. The rest are not. Nate by the memory palace