The Comics Section
Enjoy a light-hearted break with the best of the Sunday funnies, bringing comic relief to your day.
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WRBH 88.3 FM Reading Radio
New and still going on WRBH! Up this week is…
Best Selling Fiction (NEW!) – GO SET A WATCHMAN by Harper Lee and read by Charlotte Travioso (M-F 11AM-12PM; 9:30PM-10:30PM)
Best Seller Non- Fiction – ALL THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE by Matt Bai and read by Peter Spera (M-F 9AM-10AM; 7PM-8PM)
Book Off The Shelf – ONE PLUS ONE by Jojo Moyes and read by Adrienne Petrosini (M-F 2:30PM-3PM; 10:30PM-11PM)
Great Literature – DANDELION WINE by Ray Bradbury and read by Cameron Gamble (M-F 8PM-9PM)
Midday Short Story – A GOOD SCENT FROM A STRANGE MOUNTAIN by Robert Olen Butler (MTThF at 12:30PM-1PM)
Midday Poetry – COLLECTED POEMS OF ROBERT LOWELL by Robert Lowell (W 12:30PM-1PM)
Biographies (NEW!) – IWOZ: COMPUTER GEEK TO CULT ICON by Steve Wozniak (M-F 2PM-2:30PM)
YA Literature (NEW!) – THE SILVER STAR by Jeanette Walls (M-Sun 9PM-9:30PM)
Crescent City Chronicles – DO NOT OPEN FOR 50 YEARS by Patty Friedmann (Sat 5PM-6PM)
Military History – KILLING PATTON by Bill O’Reilly (Sun 2PM-3PM)
Sci-Fi and Fantasy – ENDER’S GAME by Orson Scott Card (Th 1AM-2AM; Sun 10PM-11PM)
Tales of Terror – HELLO MR. BONES & GOODBYE MR. RAT by Patrick McCabe (W 12AM-1AM; Sat 1AM-2AM)
Monday Mystery – ABOMINABLE by Dan Simmons (T 12AM-2AM)
Thrilling Thursday – COME, SWEET DEATH! by Wolf Haas (F 12AM-1AM)
Written by: WRBH
Bill O'Reilly Cameron Gamble Go Set A Watchman Harper Lee Jeanette Walls Orson Scott Card Ray Bradbury Steve Wozniak The Silver Star Wolf Haas WRBH Reading Radio
Enjoy a light-hearted break with the best of the Sunday funnies, bringing comic relief to your day.
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1:30 pm - 2:00 pm
Sundays 2 pm-3pm with replays at 7 pm & 1:30 am
2:00 pm - 3:00 pm
WRBH 88.3 FM, Radio for the Blind and Print Handicapped, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and is the only full-time reading service on the FM dial in the United States. At WRBH, our mission is to turn the printed word into the spoken word so that the blind and print handicapped receive the same ease of access to current information as their sighted peers.