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Stories Fables Ghostly Tales PodcastAuthor: Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast
More than 900 Horror Episodes, and a NO ADVERT Podcast with original Horror narrated in Audio Drama format just for your earball's. Creepypasta, Nosleep, Project Gutenberg, Let's Not Meet, Old Time Radio, Personal Stories and so much more. There is literally a story for everyone on this Podcast and I can't wait to bring them to your lovely ears! Language: en Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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The Reeds of Twilight: The North Kanto Serial Murders Japan
Sunday, 12 July, 2026
⚠ CONTENT WARNING: This episode contains detailed descriptions of a real-world serial crime involving children, systemic judicial failure, and heavy themes of unresolved communal grief. It also contains an extended discussion of traditional Japanese supernatural folklore. Listener discretion is strongly advised.Welcome back to Stories Fables Ghostly Tales. Tonight, we present The Reeds of Twilight: The North Kanto Serial Child Murders — Japan, 1979–1996.Along the gravel bars and misty lowlands of the Watarase River valley, there is a weight that standard criminology cannot seem to lift. We step into the dense river fog of the North Kanto plain to dissect a harrowing cross-prefectural mystery, a devastating failure of justice, and the ancient folklore that steps in when the living choose silence.🎧 The Case: The Wolf in the ValleyBetween 1979 and 1996, within a tiny, suffocating radius of just twenty kilometres along this river valley, five young girls vanished. Hunted from the neon distraction of local pachinko parlours and quiet neighbourhood parks, their stories were ultimately buried under the paperwork of a false conviction. For seventeen years, the state kept an innocent man behind bars to protect institutional face—leaving the real predator to walk the river roads completely free.🌾 The Myth: The Unyielding Weight of the MotherWhen a catastrophic loss is systematically ignored by the world of the living, the old stories say that energy curdles. It pools in the low boundaries where land meets water. Enter the Ubume—the mourning mother spirit of Japanese folklore. She stands in the high reeds at twilight, begging passers-by to hold her swaddled bundle. But what feels like a child quickly turns to solid iron. It is the literal, crushing mass of unresolved grief, anchoring the unprotected to the mud.From modern logistics truck drivers experiencing sudden, atmospheric engine stalls on the Route 51 bridge to elderly fishermen encountering white silhouettes in the pre-dawn mist, we ask: Has the Watarase River valley generated its own manifestation of forgotten justice?Hit play, sit back, and get comfortable.And remember... if the air near the river turns to stone... don't assume you're walking alone.Stay curious.Stay a little scared.Goodnight. 💀













