How to listen to our private Story Guild Podcast

Paid members for the Quilt Fiction Story Guild have a number of options when it comes to listening to the novel as it is released. One option is the set up your podcast player application to receive the unique RSS link you will be provided. Most — but not all players allow these use of private links. Please find instructions below for each app.

If you use an app that isn’t supported, you always have the option of downloading a simple podcast player such as Overcast and using it exclusively to listen to the Story Guild podcast.

 

Add to Apple Podcasts (on Mac desktop and iTunes on PC)

  • Click File on the Apple Podcasts menu.

  • Click Add Show by URL.

  • Paste your unique URL into the box.

  • Click Subscribe.

Add to Apple Podcasts (on iOS)

  • In the icons list at the bottom of your display, click Library.

  • Click Edit at the top right.

  • Click Add Show by URL.

  • Paste your unique URL into the box.

  • Click Subscribe.

Add to Google Podcasts (on Android)

  • In the bottom menu, click Activity.

  • In the top menu, scroll to Subscriptions.

  • Click the three little dots to the top right.

  • Click Add by RSS feed.

  • Paste your unique URL into the box.

  • Click Subscribe.

Add to Pocket Casts

  • Click Discover in the bottom menu.

  • Paste your unique URL into the Search box at the top of the screen.

  • Click your podcast artwork.

  • Click Subscribe.

Add to Castbox

  • Click Discover in the bottom menu.

  • Paste your unique URL into the Search box at the top of the screen.

  • Click your podcast artwork.

  • Click Subscribe.

Add to Overcast

  • Click the “+” icon in the top menu.

  • Click Add URL.

  • Paste your unique URL into the box.

  • Click Done.

Add to Podcast Addict

  • Click the “+” icon in the top menu.

  • Click the Search icon in the top menu.

  • Paste your unique URL into the search box.

  • Click Search.

  • Check the Private feed box.

  • Click Add.

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Dorothy’s Christmas Star: A Quilting Story


Download a digital copy of Dorothy’s Christmas Star with the block pattern


Hello and happy holidays!

If you’re looking for the free pattern and story download, you’ve come to the right place! I love the star block designed by Patty Dudek especially for this year’s Christmas story, and I know you’ll love it too! 

If you want to know more about the Quilt Fiction Story Guild, you’ve also come to the right place! Just click here to find out how to become a member!

I talked about the Story Guild at the beginning of the podcast, but let’s take a minute review how much fun it’s going to be, shall we?  First of all, we get to spend time with our favorite quilters,  the ladies of the  Milton Falls Wednesday Quilting Bee! We’ve got two new members on board, Edwina Baldwin and Eula’s daughter-in-law, Elise Baker, and you know how adding new people to the mix always complicates things. Yes, dears, there are some surprises in store!

Like Friendship Album, 1933, Friendship Album, 1934: Forget-Me-Not is a work-in-progress. I’ve written ten chapters so far and hope to have at least five more chapters done before Episode One drops on New Year’s Eve. By joining the Story Guild, you’ll be supporting me as I write. That’s right. you’ll be a patron of the arts, and this artist/writer greatly appreciates it!

I’m also super excited to share chapters from another WIP, Diary of a Mad Quilter. I’ve loved creating the modern day Milton Falls and my favorite new family, the Fetzers. Beginning in January, I’ll be sharing weekly excerpts from Marnie Fetzer’s diaries. As the title suggests, there’s a lot of humor in Marnie’s story, and I  hope you’ll enjoy spending time with the newest addition to the Milton Falls quilting roster. 

If you’re here, then you’re a story lover, so you’ll be glad to know that by joining the Story Guild, you’ll get even more Milton Falls quilting stories in your inbox. I’ve got a bunch of new stories in the hopper, including a Dorothy story from 1902, and a contemporary story that features Emmeline’s granddaughters(!). Expect surprise announcements of new audio stories and e-stories for you to download, one more way of saying thanks for your support!

As I mentioned on the podcast, we’ve got special gifts for everyone who joins in December. First, we’ll mail you a set of EIGHT holiday postcards as soon as you join–take a look at the cards on the website; they’re absolutely darling! 

Second, for joining the Quilt Fiction Story Guild this month, you’ll receive a free downloadable Friendship Album, 1933 audiobook with updated chapters, a $39.95 value. Please note, Friendship Album 1933 is no longer available on the free Quilt Fiction podcast. It will be available for sale in our Etsy store in 2023, but if you join the Story Guild in December, you’ll get it for free!  

I hope you’ll consider joining the Story Guild. We’ll do everything we can to make sure you’re getting a whole lot of great stuff in return for your support! 

Finally, a little about this year’s Christmas story.

“Dorothy’s Christmas Star” is set in 1918. If you’re looking for information about everyday life in the US at the turn of the 20th century, most of what you’ll find concerns white communities. This is a problem if you’re writing fiction about a black family and want to get all the details right.  

However, I’m fortunate to live in Durham, NC, home of a historic black neighborhood known as Hayti, about which a great deal has been written. Hayti was founded as an independent community shortly after the Civil War by freed enslaved people who’d come to Durham to work in the tobacco warehouses. By the early 20th century, Hayti was a thriving city within a city, with over 200 black-owned businesses. 

Dorothy’s neighborhood of Lincoln Heights is smaller than Hayti, but Hayti gave me the blueprint for what a self-contained black community in Milton Falls might be like in 1918. Like Hayti, Lincoln Heights has its own doctors, its own schools and its own black-owned businesses. And, like Hayti, it has its own elite, members of what W.B. Dubois called “the talented tenth.”

As a white, 21st century writer, I’m especially careful when writing about Dorothy and her family. While I believe that people of different backgrounds have more in common than not, and that a good writer can write outside of her own lived experience, I also stand by the edict that “You don’t know what you don’t know.” I’ve done my best to dig deep into my research when it comes to writing about Dorothy and her family. I hope I’ve done them justice, since they’re some of my favorite people in the world.

Thanks so much for being here and for supporting Quilt Fiction and my writing. I appreciate it. 

Sending you the warmest holiday wishes and hopes for a very merry Christmas to all who observe!

–Frances


Download a digital copy of Dorothy’s Christmas Star with the block pattern


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Hands All Around, Vol. 1, No. 1

Sorry, you don't seem to be logged in at a level to allow you to view this page. Free site registration is required to read and participate in the Quilt Fiction Forums. Some sections of this site -- especially those with audio files, such as the Friendship Album novels -- require a paid Quilt Fiction Story Guild subscription. Learn more about site registration here.