Skip to content
The Horror Library

Stories

63 stories in the library

All1870s Literature (1)19th Century (1)19th Century Literature (1)Absurdist (4)Acrostic (1)Action (1)Adventure (12)Adventure Fiction (1)Afterlife (2)Alchemy (3)Alienation (1)Alien Contact (1)Allegorical (44)Allegory (10)Alpine Horror (1)Ambrose Bierce (2)American Civil War (1)American Gothic (2)American Literature (1)Analytical (1)Ancestral Curse (1)Ancient Civilizations (1)Ancient Egypt (2)Ancient History (1)Ancient Mysteries (1)Ancient Mythology (1)Ancient Religion (1)Animal (1)Animal Characters (3)Animal Communication (1)Animal Fable (1)Animal Fiction (3)Animal Helpers (1)Animal Magic (1)Animals (5)Animal Stories (1)Animal Story (1)Animal Tale (2)Animal Tales (3)Anthropology (2)Anthropomorphic (2)Anticipation (1)Apocalyptic (3)Arctic & Polar (7)Arkham (3)Arthurian Legend (2)Art Students (1)Atlantis (1)Atmospheric (274)Atmospheric Horror (1)Aviation Horror (1)Bargain with a Spirit (1)Bargain with Evil (1)Betrayal (6)Bewitchment (1)Biographical (1)Blessing & Curse (1)Body Horror (35)Breton Folklore (1)British Literature (2)Bureaucracy (1)Buried Alive (3)Canadian Wilderness (1)Cannibalism (1)Carcosa (1)Cascade (1)Castle (1)Cautionary (2)Cautionary Tale (8)Chapel (1)Character Study (1)Charity & Grace (1)Children (1)Children in Peril (2)Children's Literature (2)Christmas (1)Civil War (1)Class Conflict (1)Classical Antiquity (1)Classical Literature (1)Classic Fiction (1)Classic Folklore (1)Classic Horror (1)Classic Literature (13)Clever Hero (1)Clever Heroine (1)Clever Protagonist (1)Colonial India (2)Colonialism (1)Comedy (1)Coming of Age (10)Competition (1)Consequences (2)Corruption (1)Cosmic Horror (71)Court & Nobility (1)Cowardice (1)Crime (1)Crime & Detection (1)Cthulhu Mythos (32)Cult (3)Cumulative Tale (1)Curse (30)Curse & Blessing (1)Curse & Cursed Objects (1)Cursed Objects (1)Curse & Enchantment (1)Curse & Fate (0)Curse & Magic (1)Curse & Redemption (1)Curses & Spells (1)Damnation (1)Dante Alighieri (1)Dark Academia (1)Dark Adventure (1)Dark Comedy (12)Dark Fantasy (103)Dark Humor (1)Darkly Comic (1)Darkness (1)Deal with the Devil (1)Death & Dying (83)Decadent Poetry (1)Decay & Ruin (70)Deception (10)Demon (10)Descent into Insanity (1)Desert Horror (1)Despair & Hopelessness (1)Detective Fiction (4)Devil (1)Devil Pact (1)Devotion (1)Diana (1)Discovery (1)Disguise (1)Disguise & Deception (1)Divine Intervention (5)Divine Justice (1)Divine Retribution (1)Domestic Abuse (1)Domestic Horror (1)Doppelgänger (1)Dragon (1)Dragons (1)Dream fiction (3)Dreamlands (52)Dreams (1)Duty & Obligation (1)Dystopian (4)Edgar Allan Poe (2)Elfland (1)Emotional Horror (1)Enchanted Castle (2)Enchanted Object (1)Enchantment (30)Epic Poetry (2)Episodic Narrative (1)Epistolary (49)Escape (1)Escape & Pursuit (1)Esoteric Teachings (1)Existential (2)Exotic Imagery (1)Expedition Horror (1)Extraterrestrial (1)Fable (20)Fables (1)Faerie (8)Fairytale (1)Fairy Tale (145)Fairy Tale Horror (1)Fairy Tales (6)Family curse (1)Family Drama (4)Family Secrets (4)Fantasy (1)Fate (1)Fate & Destiny (7)Fate & Fortune (4)Fate & Prophecy (7)Faustian Bargain (1)Fear (1)Folk Horror (175)Folklore (11)Folk Magic (1)Folk Tale (8)Folk Wisdom (1)Forbidden Knowledge (193)Forest (3)Fortune & Fate (1)French Setting (1)Gentleman Criminal (1)German Folklore (10)Germanic Folklore (1)Ghost Stories (0)Ghost Story (63)Giant (1)Giants (2)Good vs Evil (8)Gothic (159)Governess (1)Government Conspiracy (1)Grave robbery (1)Greed (9)Greed & Ambition (1)Greed & Consequence (1)Greed & Temptation (1)Grief (3)Grimm (5)Grimm Brothers (25)Grimm's Fairy Tales (3)Grimm Tales (21)Grotesque (2)Guilt (4)Guilt & Conscience (3)Guilt & Obsession (1)Guilt & Redemption (2)Guilt & Remorse (1)Hallucinatory (1)Haunted (1)Haunted House (75)Haunted Love (1)Haunted Objects (1)Haunted Ship (1)Headless Horseman (1)Heaven and Hell (1)Heist (1)Hell (1)Hermetic Philosophy (1)Hidden Meaning (1)Hidden Secrets (1)Historical Adventure (1)Historical Fiction (3)Historical Horror (3)Hubris (1)Humorous Horror (3)Hunting (1)Idleness (1)Immortality (2)Imperial India (1)Imposture (1)Imprisonment (1)India & Colonial (1)Indian Gothic (2)Inheritance & Property (1)Innocence & Betrayal (1)Innsmouth (1)Inquisition (1)Institutional Cruelty (1)Institutional Horror (1)Interdimensional (1)Introspection (1)Invasion (1)Invisible Horror (1)Invisible Monster (1)Irish folklore (1)Irish Gothic (3)Irish Setting (1)Isolated House (1)Isolation (182)Italian Gothic (1)Jealousy (2)Journey (1)Justice (5)Kafkaesque (1)Karma & Retribution (1)Kindness Rewarded (1)Lake haunting (1)Laziness (2)Legend & Mythology (1)Leviathan (1)Literary Criticism (1)London (1)Longing (1)Loss (1)Lost Glory (1)Lost Worlds (1)Lovecraft (1)Loyalty (2)Lyric Poetry (1)Madness (160)Mad Scientist (2)Magic (28)Magical Abilities (1)Magical Adventure (1)Magical Apprenticeship (1)Magical Artifact (1)Magical Artifacts (1)Magical Creatures (3)Magical Objects (6)Magical Quest (1)Magical realism (32)Magical Reward (1)Magical Servants (1)Magical Sword (1)Magical Transformation (6)Magical Wishes (1)Magic & Enchantment (4)Magic Objects (1)Magic & Sorcery (3)Manuscript Horror (1)Man vs Nature (1)Marriage & Courtship (2)Medical horror (1)Medieval (2)Medieval History (1)Medieval Literature (1)Melancholy (1)Memory & Loss (1)Mesmerism (1)Metaphysical (1)Military Horror (1)Misadventure (1)Moral Allegory (1)Moral conflict (1)Moral Corruption (2)Moral Fable (2)Moral Lesson (4)Moral Lessons (1)Moral Reckoning (1)Moral Tale (27)Moral Tales (1)Mountain setting (1)Murder (9)Mysterious (4)Mysterious Artifact (1)Mysterious artifacts (1)Mysterious Assault (1)Mysterious Death (2)Mysterious Deaths (1)Mysterious Disappearance (2)Mysterious Pursuer (1)Mysterious Stranger (1)Mysterious symbols (1)Mysterious Visitor (1)Mystery (15)Mysticism (2)Mythical worlds (1)Mythological (1)Mythology (2)Mythos (1)Napoleonic Wars (1)New England (1)Nostalgia (1)Obsession (8)Occult (0)Occultism (2)Orphan (1)Pact with Devil (1)Pact with the Devil (1)Panic & Mass Hysteria (1)Parable (1)Paranoia (2)Paris (2)Philosophical Horror (4)Phobia (1)Pirate (1)Plague (1)Poem (1)Poetry (6)Poisoning (2)Political (1)Political Allegory (1)Political Drama (1)Political Intrigue (1)Portuguese History (1)Possession (1)Poverty (2)Pre-Christian Religion (1)Predator (1)Prehistoric Fiction (1)Prison (1)Prophecy & Fate (60)Psychological (2)Psychological Breakdown (1)Psychological Horror (168)Psychological Thriller (1)Punishment (4)Puppet (1)Purgatory (1)Puritan Salem (1)Quest (16)Quest & Adventure (1)Redemption (26)Reincarnation (3)Religious (1)Religious Allegory (3)Religious Fiction (1)Religious Horror (2)Rescue (1)Rescue Quest (1)Reunion (1)Revenge (94)Revenge & Wit (1)Reward and Punishment (1)Reward & Punishment (2)Reward & Redemption (1)Rhythmic Narrative (1)Riddle & Puzzle (1)Riddles (1)Riddling (1)Ritual (1)Ritual & Cult (1)Ritual Witchcraft (1)Rivalry (1)River journey (1)Romance (2)Romantic (2)Romantic Horror (4)Romantic Melancholy (1)Romantic Mystery (1)Romantic tragedy (1)Royal (1)Royal Courts (1)Royal Intrigue (1)Rural (107)Russian Literature (2)Russian Society (1)Sacred Grove (1)Sacrifice (4)Satire (5)Satirical (38)Scholarly Horror (1)Science Fiction Horror (13)Scientific Experimentation (1)Scottish Gothic (2)Scottish Horror (1)Sea & Maritime (35)Second Sight (1)Secret Doctrine (1)Secrets (1)Secret Sin (1)Seduction (1)Shape-shifters (1)Sherlock Holmes (2)Siblings (1)Siege of Paris (1)Sisters (1)Small town mystery (1)Social Commentary (1)Social Satire (2)Southern Gothic (1)Spanish Literature (1)Spirits (1)Spiritualism (1)Spiritual Journey (1)Stepmother (1)Strength & Power (1)Supernatural (280)Supernatural Powers (1)Supernatural Revelation (1)Surgical Horror (1)Surreal (50)Survival (6)Suspense (5)Sword and Sorcery (1)Symbolism (2)Tall Tale (1)Tall Tales (1)The Devil (1)The Dianic Cult (1)The Double (58)The Unknown (271)Time Travel (2)Torture (1)Tower (1)Tragedy (9)Tragic (53)Transformation (281)Transylvania (1)Treasure Hunt (1)Trickery (1)Trickster (40)Trickster Hero (1)Trickster Tale (1)Triumph Over Adversity (1)Tropical Island (1)True Love (2)Tudor Period (1)Twisted Ending (1)Twisted Morality (1)Twist Ending (1)Underground (10)Unreliable Narrator (5)Urban (45)Vampire (8)Victorian (4)Victorian Gothic (2)Victorian Horror (7)Victorian Mystery (1)Victorian Romance (1)Virtue & Vice (1)Voyage (1)Walpurgis Night (1)War Fiction (2)War Horror (1)Water Spirit (1)Weird Fiction (100)Welsh folklore (1)Welsh Gothic (1)Werewolf (1)Western European History (1)Whimsical (1)Wilderness Horror (1)Winter Setting (1)Wisdom (1)Wisdom & Cunning (1)Witch (23)Witchcraft (2)Witchcraft & Magic (1)Witch Trials (1)Wit & Cunning (3)Witty (1)Wordplay (1)

The Room in the Tower

E.F. Benson·1912·24 min read

First published in 1912, E.F. Benson's "The Room in the Tower" is a masterwork of psychological supernatural fiction that blurs the boundary between dream and reality. The narrator recounts fifteen years of recurring nightmares about a sinister house and a mysterious room, only to discover the house actually exists—and the horrors of his dreams begin to manifest in waking life. This story exemplifies Benson's skill at building dread through atmosphere and the unreliable nature of perception.

The Open Window

Saki (H.H. Munro)·1914·6 min read

Published in 1914, Saki's "The Open Window" is a masterpiece of short fiction that subverts the ghost story genre with wit and psychological acuity. The story follows Framton Nuttel, a nervous man on a countryside retreat, as he visits a stranger's home and encounters a peculiar tale about a family tragedy. What unfolds is a brilliant exploration of how perception, suggestion, and fabrication can manipulate reality—a story that rewards careful readers with its unexpected turn and darkly comic revelation.

The Trial for Murder

Charles Dickens·1861·21 min read

Originally published in 1865, "The Trial for Murder" is Charles Dickens's exploration of the uncanny and the inexplicable, told as a first-person account by a respectable banker who experiences a series of supernatural visions surrounding a murder trial. The narrator witnesses a ghostly figure—the murdered man—who appears to him before, during, and after serving as jury foreman, wielding an influence over the trial that defies rational explanation. Dickens employs his characteristic attention to atmospheric detail and psychological realism to examine the boundary between objective fact and subjective experience, leaving readers to draw their own conclusions about what truly transpires.

The Haunted House

Charles Dickens·1859·49 min read

Originally published in 1859 as a Christmas serial in Dickens's magazine All the Year Round, "The Haunted House" is a collaborative ghost story that blends Victorian skepticism with genuine supernatural dread. The narrator and his sister attempt to debunk the reputation of an allegedly haunted country house by inviting a select group of friends to lodge there over Christmas and scientifically document any phenomena. What begins as a rational investigation into mass hysteria and servant superstition gradually reveals something more unsettling beneath the surface.

A Christmas Carol

Charles Dickens·1843·2h 4m read

Charles Dickens's *A Christmas Carol* (1843) is a novella that emerged from the author's social concerns about poverty and morality in Victorian England. The story follows Ebenezer Scrooge, a miserly businessman, as he encounters supernatural visitations on Christmas Eve that challenge his worldview and offer him a chance at redemption. Readers should expect a tale blending Gothic atmosphere with profound moral instruction, where ghosts serve as instruments of spiritual awakening rather than mere horror.

The Canterville Ghost

Oscar Wilde·1887·50 min read

Oscar Wilde's 'The Canterville Ghost' is a comedic supernatural novella published in 1887 that subverts the Gothic ghost story tradition by pitting a proud, three-hundred-year-old English phantom against a practical American family unburdened by superstition. Rather than terror, the story derives its humor from the collision between Old World propriety and New World materialism, as the ghost finds his carefully cultivated haunting techniques thwarted by stain removers, lubricants, and schoolboy pranks. Readers should expect a delightful satirical tale that gently mocks both Victorian excess and American commercialism while ultimately revealing unexpected depths of humanity and redemption.

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Washington Irving·1820·54 min read

Published in 1819 as part of Irving's "The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent," this American classic established many conventions of the ghost story and local legend. Set in the Dutch settlements along the Hudson River, the tale explores themes of superstition, ambition, and the clash between old-world folklore and rationality through the experiences of a hapless schoolmaster. Readers should expect a richly atmospheric narrative that balances humor and genuine unease.

The Dead Man's Tale

Willard E. Hawkins·1923·1h 9m read

This supernatural narrative, purportedly received through automatic writing by psychical investigator Dr. John Pedric, follows Richard Devaney's consciousness after his death in World War I. Trapped between worlds as a disembodied spirit, Devaney schemes to reclaim the love of Velma Roth by manipulating the living body of Louis Winston, his wartime rival. A meditation on obsession, possession, and spiritual reckoning, the story explores the consequences of vengeful passion and the possibility of redemption through suffering.

The Weaving Shadows

W. H. Holmes·24 min read

In this early 20th-century supernatural tale, detective Chet Burke investigates a disturbing case brought to him by Chet Hayden, a carpenter haunted by inexplicable manifestations in his sister's old farmhouse in the Hudson Highlands. Hayden describes witnessing shadowy, weaving forms that appear nightly in his attic room, accompanied by pools of mysterious blood and a terrifying compulsion. Burke's investigation will uncover a dark secret hidden within the house's very walls, connecting past murders to present supernatural torment.

The Ghost Guard

Bryan Irvine·1923·26 min read

"The Ghost Guard" is a supernatural revenge tale set in Granite River Prison, where the inflexible guard Asa Shores—disliked by every convict yet beloved by his fellow guards—is murdered by an unknown assailant. Published in the pulp tradition, the story explores themes of duty, justice, and the supernatural when Shores' ghost appears to return from beyond the grave, terrorizing the very convict who may have orchestrated his death. Readers should expect a tense atmospheric narrative that blends prison drama with genuinely eerie supernatural elements, culminating in a darkly ironic fate.

The Lost Stradivarius

John Meade Falkner·1895·3h 36m read

Written in the late 19th century, 'The Lost Stradivarius' is a masterwork of supernatural fiction that unfolds through the epistolary narrative of Miss Sophia Maltravers. The story centers on her brother John's mysterious encounters with an unseen presence in his Oxford rooms, which manifests whenever a particular suite of seventeenth-century Italian music is played. What begins as unexplained acoustic phenomena evolves into a haunting exploration of love, music, and the thin veil between the living and the dead, as John becomes convinced that a spirit has been drawn to his chamber night after night.

The Phantom of the Opera

Gaston Leroux·1910·5h 43m read

Gaston Leroux's serialized novel, first published in 1909-1910, introduces the legendary Phantom of the Opera—a mysterious supernatural figure haunting the Paris Opera House. Set against the backdrop of a gala performance marking the retirement of the opera's previous managers, the story weaves together the disappearance of a scene-shifter, the miraculous rise of an unknown singer, and the strange presence of an invisible inhabitant who claims Box Five as his own. Readers should expect a masterful blend of Gothic atmosphere, romantic intrigue, and puzzle-box plotting that transformed the opera ghost from urban legend into literary immortality.

The Red Room

H. G. Wells·1894·18 min read

H. G. Wells' "The Red Room" is a masterwork of psychological horror published in 1896 that deconstructs the ghost story tradition by suggesting that fear itself—rather than any supernatural entity—is the true haunting. A skeptical young man accepts a dare to spend the night in a notoriously haunted chamber at Lorraine Castle, only to encounter something far more terrifying than any apparition. The story exemplifies Wells' gift for exploring the rational mind's encounter with the inexplicable and remains one of the most psychologically penetrating tales of its era.

Viy

Nikolai Gogol·1835·1h 3m read

Gogol's "Viy" is a darkly fantastical tale set in 17th-century Ukraine that blends folk horror with psychological terror. First published in 1835, the novella emerged from Gogol's fascination with Ukrainian folklore and his exploration of the supernatural as a vehicle for examining human weakness and moral ambiguity. The story follows a seminary student whose encounter with a mysterious woman sets in motion a sequence of increasingly nightmarish events, culminating in a contest between faith and ancient, unknowable forces.

The Turn of the Screw

Henry James·1898·3h 5m read

Henry James's novella, serialized in 1898, remains one of the most psychologically complex and debated ghost stories in English literature. A young governess arrives at an English country estate to care for two beautiful children, only to become convinced that malevolent supernatural presences—ghosts of former staff members—are haunting the house and corrupting her charges. The narrative is presented through multiple frames: a group of people reading an account during the Christmas season, the account itself derived from the governess's own written testimony, which she conveyed years earlier to the narrator. Readers are left to wrestle with the central question of whether the apparitions are real or products of the governess's increasingly unstable imagination.

The Death of Halpin Frayser

Ambrose Bierce·1891·25 min read

Published in 1909, Ambrose Bierce's "The Death of Halpin Frayser" is a masterwork of psychological horror that blurs the boundaries between dream and reality. The story follows a man who falls asleep in a California forest and experiences a nightmarish vision involving an uncanny encounter with his dead mother. Bierce constructs a layered narrative that interweaves Frayser's backstory—his obsessive relationship with his mother and his mysterious disappearance in the West—with the investigation of his corpse, leaving readers uncertain about what is supernatural and what is madness.

The Moonlit Road

Ambrose Bierce·1894·16 min read

This classic American ghost story, structured as three interconnected first-person accounts, explores the supernatural consequences of jealousy, murder, and guilt. The narrative begins with a young man's account of his mother's brutal murder and his father's inexplicable disappearance, then shifts to the confessions of a man tormented by fragmented memories of committing a similar crime, before concluding with the perspective of the murdered woman herself speaking through a spiritualist medium. The story exemplifies the power of unresolved trauma to blur the boundaries between the living and the dead.

The Invisible Girl

Mary Shelley·1833·25 min read

Written by Mary Shelley in the 1820s, "The Invisible Girl" is a Gothic tale of love, persecution, and mysterious redemption. When a traveler seeks shelter in a ruined tower during a storm, guided by an unexplained beacon light, he discovers a portrait titled "The Invisible Girl"—and learns the tragic story of a young woman who disappeared under cruel circumstances. The story combines Shelley's characteristic exploration of human suffering with supernatural elements and romantic themes.

The Familiar

Sheridan Le Fanu·1872·1h 1m read

Written by Sheridan Le Fanu in the mid-19th century, "The Familiar" is a masterwork of psychological terror that probes the thin boundary between supernatural persecution and mental deterioration. Captain Barton, a rationalist and former naval officer, returns to Dublin only to be haunted by mysterious footsteps, cryptic letters, and a small, menacing figure—all apparently connected to a dark secret from his past. The story exemplifies Le Fanu's genius for creating mounting dread through ambiguity, leaving readers uncertain whether Barton is genuinely cursed or descending into madness.

The Haunted Baronet

Sheridan Le Fanu·1871·3h 41m read

Written by Irish master Sheridan Le Fanu, 'The Haunted Baronet' is a Gothic mystery set in the isolated lakeside village of Golden Friars. The story unfolds through local gossip and a folk legend about a drowned woman and her child whose spectral form haunts Snakes Island, connected to the dark past of the aristocratic Mardykes family. As the long-absent baronet Sir Bale Mardykes returns to his ancestral hall and his mysterious companion Philip Feltram arrives in town, the reader is drawn into a tale of family secrets, supernatural visitations, and the inescapable consequences of past wrongs.

An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street

Sheridan Le Fanu·1853·37 min read

Originally published in the 1850s, Sheridan Le Fanu's 'An Account of Some Strange Disturbances in Aungier Street' is a masterwork of Victorian ghost fiction that explores the haunting of an ancient Dublin townhouse through the experiences of two medical students. Le Fanu's narrative frame—the narrator addressing skeptical readers by the fireside—establishes an intimate, psychological atmosphere as the story unfolds through detailed accounts of supernatural encounters that blur the line between dream, apparition, and malevolent reality. Readers should expect meticulous atmospheric building, ambiguous manifestations, and a profound meditation on how rational minds confront inexplicable terror.

Green Tea

Sheridan Le Fanu·1871·56 min read

"Green Tea" is a Gothic novella by Sheridan Le Fanu, presented as a case study by the mysterious German physician Dr. Martin Hesselius. Originally published in the 1870s, the story explores themes of spiritual affliction and psychological dissolution through the experiences of a troubled English clergyman. Readers should expect a slow-burn supernatural mystery framed as medical documentation, blending rationalism with the occult as the protagonist grapples with an inexplicable presence that may be neither wholly external nor imaginary.

Carmilla

Sheridan Le Fanu·1872·2h 2m read

Carmilla, serialized in The Dark Blue magazine (1871–1872) and published as a novella in 1872, predates Bram Stoker's Dracula by 25 years and stands as a formative work in vampire fiction. Told through the first-person narrative of Laura, a young woman living in an isolated Styrian castle, the story chronicles the mysterious arrival of the beautiful and enigmatic Carmilla and the strange, unsettling events that follow. Le Fanu masterfully blends atmospheric Gothic dread with psychological ambiguity, as Laura finds herself drawn into an intimate friendship while subtle horrors accumulate around her.

Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad

M. R. James·1904·35 min read

Written in 1904, M.R. James's "Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You, My Lad" is a cornerstone of English supernatural fiction and exemplifies the author's mastery of the ghost story genre. When a skeptical Cambridge professor discovers an ancient whistle at the ruins of a Templar preceptory on the Norfolk coast, his rational worldview begins to unravel as inexplicable nocturnal disturbances escalate. Readers should expect a slowly building sense of dread, atmospheric coastal settings, and a creature of ambiguous but terrifying nature that defies the protagonist's scientific materialism.