David Copperfield: Chapter 33
4/30/20261 hr 11 min
Welcome to Season 5 of Storytime for Grownups! This season we are reading David Copperfield by Charles Dickens a few chapters at a time, with a few notes along the way. It's like an audio book with built in notes. So brew a pot of tea, find a cozy chair, and settle in. It's storytime!
To submit a question or comment about this episode, click here
To visit the merch store, click here
To become a Storytime for Grownups member and gain access to our online community and monthly voice chats, click here
To visit the Storytime for Grownups webpage, click here
To learn more about your host, Faith Moore, click here
To pick up a copy of Faith's novel, Christmas Karol, click here
To join Faith's mailing list, click here
Follow Faith on X here
To support the show financially, click here
Next time we'll be reading: Chapter 34
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsFaith Moore· Host0:00
Hello, and welcome to Story Time for Grownups. I'm Faith Moore, and this season we're reading David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. Each episode, I'll read a few chapters from the book, pausing from time to time to give brief explanations so it's easier to follow along. It's like an audiobook with built-in notes. So brew a pot of tea, find a cozy chair, and settle in. It's story time. [upbeat piano music] Hello, welcome back. I'm so glad you're here. We have so much to talk about. I feel like maybe even more to talk about after this chapter than after the chapter where it was revealed what the big thing was that was going to happen. I don't know. So many different things happened in this last chapter that I feel like we have lots to discuss, and it's kind of a longest chapter that's coming up, so I won't take too much of your time right now at the beginning. The only reminder that I have is that tonight, so if you're listening in real time, it is tonight, Thursday, April 30th, at 8:00 PM, is Tea Time. Tea Time happens over in our online community, which is called The Drawing Room, because in old Victorian houses, there was always a drawing room, and it was short for withdrawing room because