Uncle Warren's Attic
It’s one of those weeks when the news is dominated by people who view the world through different lenses than I do ... Blog post for Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024
info_outline 1481 I wonder what happened to Ed and MaryUncle Warren's Attic
Blog post for Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2024
info_outline 1480 And I mean listenUncle Warren's Attic
Blog post for Monday, Aug. 19, 2024
info_outline E.T.Uncle Warren's Attic
info_outline 1479 About those 8 thingsUncle Warren's Attic
Blog post for Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024
info_outline 1478 Resist the hobgoblinsUncle Warren's Attic
Blog post for Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024
info_outline 1477 ResolutionUncle Warren's Attic
Blog post for Friday, Aug. 16, 2024
info_outline 1331 Tomorrow and Tomorrow (demo)Uncle Warren's Attic
Demo of a song that will be included in the upcoming w.p. bluhm project New Dog, Old Tricks. Well, I was born in the fifties, and I grew up in the sixties, Paid some dues in the seventies, but never enough to count. I stayed adolescent through my fifties, I kept marking time in my sixties, I hope to live through my seventies to see how it all it turns out. Tomorrow and tomorrow, if I have a tomorrow, Gonna pack my bags tomorrow and see the world. I loved too many girls in the eighties, found the love of my life in the nineties, Just in time for a brave new century, and then I took...
info_outline Uncle Warren’s Attic presents Ebenezer, Stave 5: ‘Boxing Day’Uncle Warren's Attic
This concludes my little presentation of “Ebenezer: A sequel of sorts to A Christmas Carol.” If you want a keepsake copy for yourself or a loved one, this novelette is available as an ebook, paperback or hardcover wherever books are sold online — or your favorite local bookstore can order it for you. I have something to say every day at Warren Bluhm dot com — and that’s B-L-U-H-M — so stop by for a visit sometime. The theme song of this podcast comes from my collection of 78 rpm records and is performed by the Trinity Choir. It was recorded on Oct. 6, 1911. Three months...
info_outline Uncle Warren’s Attic presents Ebenezer, Stave 4Uncle Warren's Attic
With the appearance of the third spirit, Edmund Filliput’s story begins to diverge even more from that of the happy stranger met back in Stave 1. It seems Edmund is a quicker study than the once-dour man from the original story. It all wraps up next Friday — unless, of course, you want to skip ahead and see how it ends right now. You can do that by grabbing the ebook wherever fine ebooks are sold
info_outlineWhen we met Edmund Filliput last week, he was in a dour mood on Christmas Eve, and a cheerful man in a top hat bought him a cup of coffee and a bowl of beef stew and offered to introduce him to some old friends of his that very night.
Today we follow Edmund home, where his dreamless sleep is interrupted by the first of those old friends, whose identity should not surprise anyone who has guessed who the happy stranger was. (And I did not try very hard to disguise him. What’s the name of the story again?)
I’m celebrating my new novelette by reading it in podcast form, a chapter a week, during this Christmas season. Of course, if you’re impatient for what comes next, the book is available for purchase in several formats.