Episode Summary

The Bauble Who Saved My Christmas ✨🎁Once upon a Christmas Eve, a grumpy bookshop keeper meets a box of tangled fairy lights, and a very mischievous magical bauble decides it has had enough of being treated like a decoration. It wants to be important. It wants to be in charge. It wants to cause a tiny bit of festive trouble, in the most cheerful way possible.The bookshop keeper is not interested in festive trouble. He is interested in quiet. Order. Proper shelves arranged by author and genre. Calm customers who know what they want and leave promptly. He has survived enough Decembers to know that Christmas cheer is lovely as long as it stays several streets away from his shop. His window display is minimal. His decorations are non existent. His commitment to ignoring the season is impressively stubborn.But then the bauble arrives. Delivered in a box. Rolling across the floor with intention. And it is not just shiny. It is persuasive. It twinkles like it has a plan. It makes suggestions that sound entirely reasonable until you think about them properly. It rolls into the wrong places on purpose, positioning itself exactly where it cannot be ignored.At first, the bookshop keeper tries to put it away. Then he tries to return it. Then he tries to pretend it does not exist. None of these strategies work because the bauble has decided this bookshop needs Christmas whether it wants it or not.The bauble starts small. A wish here. A little sparkle there. A reluctant nod to the season. But Christmas Eve has a habit of escalating, and this bauble has the sort of personality that turns a small wish into a whirlwind. The fairy lights tangle themselves with clear intention, wrapping around shelves in patterns that look almost deliberate. The bookshop begins to feel less like a serious place of literature and more like a story that is writing itself. Books start appearing in unexpected places with oddly relevant titles. Customers arrive looking for things they did not know they needed.And the grumpy keeper discovers something surprising. It is surprisingly hard to stay frosty when the world keeps offering you a chance to soften, especially when a magical bauble is orchestrating the whole thing with the determination of a tiny festive director who refuses to take no for an answer.This episode is a festive audio story for children who love Christmas magic, silly surprises, and stories where objects behave as if they have feelings and opinions. It is also for grown ups who want wholesome humour that does not shout, and a funny kids podcast episode that still lands warm and cosy. The laughter is gentle, the chaos is kind, and the ending settles softly into something that feels like a hug, which makes it a lovely choice for bedtime in December.Perfect for family listening while wrapping presents and trying not to get tape stuck everywhere, driving home in the dark with Christmas lights blinking outside the windows, or curling up together when everyone needs a calming bedtime story that still feels fun and festive. If you are looking for a kids storytelling podcast that captures Christmas warmth without being saccharine, and funny bedtime stories for kids that make tired parents smile too, this mischievous bauble is exactly what December ordered.Mr Morton's Barmy Book of Bonkers Bits is wholesome family storytelling with a bonkers twist. Performance driven, kind hearted, and never mean.Episode length: approximately 10 minutesAges: 4 to 400Best enjoyed: bedtime, car journeys, after school wind downFollow the show for more funny bedtime stories for kids that make Christmas feel a little bit kinder and a lot more silly.
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