Collections
Curated reading paths through classic weird fiction
Masters of the Macabre: Victorian and Edwardian Masters
The greatest practitioners of Gothic and supernatural fiction from the 19th and early 20th centuries. From the psychological precision of Robert Louis Stevenson to the atmospheric dread of Arthur Machen.
The Cosmic Dread: Lovecraft and the Call of the Unknown
A deep dive into H.P. Lovecraft's foundational weird fiction, featuring cosmic horror, forbidden knowledge, and the insignificance of humanity before ancient forces. These tales introduced the Cthulhu Mythos and redefined weird fiction for generations.
The Grimm Canon: Folk Horror Foundations
The complete collection of Grimm Brothers stories, spanning from their earliest fairy tales to lesser-known folk narratives. This foundational collection showcases the range of German folklore traditions that influenced all subsequent weird fiction.
The King in Yellow
The King in Yellow is a 1895 collection of short stories that helped lay the foundations of modern weird fiction. The first four stories form a loose cycle centered around a forbidden play—also titled The King in Yellow—which drives its readers into madness. References to Carcosa, Lake Hali, and the mysterious Yellow Sign create an atmosphere of cosmic decay and psychological collapse. While later stories in the collection shift toward romantic and artistic themes set in Paris, it is the opening sequence that became legendary and directly influenced writers such as H. P. Lovecraft and the development of cosmic horror.
Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 1, March 1923
Weird Tales, Volume 1, Number 1, published in March 1923, marks the birth of one of the most influential pulp magazines in speculative fiction history. Founded in Chicago and initially edited by Edwin Baird, it was the first American magazine devoted exclusively to what it called “the unique magazine” of strange, macabre, and fantastic fiction. The debut issue blended horror, fantasy, and early weird fiction, setting the tone for what would become the defining publication of the American pulp era. Although the magazine’s early months were financially unstable, it would soon rise to prominence under later editor Farnsworth Wright, becoming the primary venue for authors such as H. P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, and Robert E. Howard.
The Dreamlands Cycle
A collection exploring otherworldly visions, dreamscapes, and the thin veil between sleep and waking reality. These stories emphasize surreal transformation and cosmic mystery accessed through dreams and the subconscious.