Skip to content
The Horror Library

Dark Sci-Fi

Science fiction with a dark edge — cosmic dread, dystopian futures, alien horror, and humanity pushed to its limits.

6 stories

The War of the Worlds

H. G. Wells·1898·4h 21m read

H.G. Wells' 1898 scientific romance presents an account of a Martian invasion of Earth, narrated by a protagonist who witnesses the arrival and initial attacks of extraterrestrial beings. Written at the height of imperialist anxieties and astronomical speculation about Mars, the novel uses the invasion as a vehicle to explore themes of human vulnerability, technological warfare, and the fragility of civilization. Readers should expect a harrowing chronicle of alien contact rendered in Victorian prose, combining scientific speculation with visceral horror.

The Invisible Man

H. G. Wells·1897·3h 31m read

H.G. Wells's seminal science fiction novel follows a mysterious stranger who arrives in the English village of Iping heavily bandaged and goggled, claiming to be an experimental investigator. Published in 1897, this groundbreaking work explores themes of scientific ambition unchecked by morality and the social isolation of the extraordinary. Readers should expect a gradually escalating mystery punctuated by growing alarm among villagers as the stranger's true nature becomes impossible to ignore.

The Island of Doctor Moreau

H. G. Wells·1896·3h 7m read

H.G. Wells's 1896 novel follows Edward Prendick, a castaway rescued by the enigmatic Dr. Moreau and brought to a remote, unnamed island. As Prendick recovers from his ordeal at sea, he discovers that Moreau's isolated compound harbors a dark secret—the doctor is conducting bizarre biological experiments on animals, creating grotesque human-like creatures through vivisection and forced evolution. What begins as gratitude for rescue transforms into creeping horror as Prendick realizes the true nature of the island's inhabitants and the scientist's unholy ambitions.

The Time Machine

H. G. Wells·1895·2h 21m read

H.G. Wells's groundbreaking 1895 novella introduces the concept of time as a traversable dimension through the tale of an inventor who builds a machine to travel through centuries. First presented as a philosophical paradox to skeptical dinner guests, the Time Traveller then recounts his harrowing journey to a distant future where humanity has undergone profound and unsettling changes. This foundational work of science fiction explores the consequences of technological ambition and imagines a future far stranger and more threatening than its Victorian audience could have anticipated.

The Horror of the Heights

Arthur Conan Doyle·1913·29 min read

Published in 1913, Arthur Conan Doyle's 'The Horror of the Heights' presents a found-document narrative about the disappearance of pioneering aviator Joyce-Armstrong. As aircraft technology advances and pilots fly higher than ever before, Armstrong discovers a hidden ecosystem of strange, gelatinous creatures inhabiting the upper atmosphere—a discovery that costs him his life. The story exemplifies early science fiction's fascination with technological exploration and the cosmic terrors that lurk beyond human reach.