The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage
This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of three companions—a mouse, a bird, and a sausage—who live contentedly together, each performing assigned household duties. When the bird becomes dissatisfied and convinces the others to swap roles, a series of catastrophic consequences unfolds that destroys their happy home. Published as part of the Brothers Grimm's influential collection of German folktales, this darkly comedic story functions as a cautionary tale about the dangers of discontent and disrupting established order.
The Riddle
This Grimm fairy tale combines adventure, magical danger, and intellectual contest into a single narrative arc. A King's son encounters a witch whose poison inadvertently becomes the instrument of justice, then must solve an impossible riddle to win the hand of a proud princess. The story rewards cleverness and virtue while punishing wickedness, embodying the moral lessons characteristic of Grimm's collected tales.
The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was
This classic German fairy tale, collected by the Brothers Grimm, follows a remarkably fearless young man on a quest to learn what fear—or "shuddering"—feels like. Cast out by his father for his inability to understand fear, the youth embarks on a picaresque journey through increasingly supernatural and horrifying situations, from gallows and haunted castles to ghostly apparitions and demonic encounters. The story explores the paradox of courage born from ignorance, testing whether true bravery lies in fearlessness or in facing one's terrors with steadfast resolve.
Peter Pan
J. M. Barrie·1911·3h 25m read J. M. Barrie's "Peter Pan" was first performed as a stage play in 1904 before being adapted into this novel form, becoming one of the most celebrated works of children's literature. The story introduces the Darling family—particularly young Wendy—and their mysterious encounter with a boy who never grows up and can fly. Readers should expect a whimsical yet haunting tale that blends domestic realism with magical fantasy, exploring themes of childhood, immortality, and the cost of eternal youth.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
L. Frank Baum·1900·2h 51m read L. Frank Baum's 1900 classic follows Dorothy, a Kansas farm girl swept away by a cyclone to the magical Land of Oz. Stranded in a strange world and desperate to return home, she embarks on a journey to the Emerald City to seek the help of the Great Wizard Oz, gathering companions along the way. This foundational fantasy adventure blends wonder with darker undertones of displacement and the yearning for home.
Through the Looking-Glass
Lewis Carroll·1871·2h 8m read Published in 1871 as the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking-Glass extends Lewis Carroll's exploration of logic, language, and imagination into a chess-themed mirror world. Carroll crafted this novel to delight child readers while embedding sophisticated wordplay and philosophical puzzles that reward closer analysis. Readers should expect whimsical encounters with talking flowers, peculiar insects, and memorable characters like Humpty Dumpty and the Red Queen, all set within a surreal landscape governed by its own backwards logic.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Lewis Carroll·1865·1h 56m read Published in 1865, Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland" began as a serialized story told to entertain a child during a boat journey, and became one of the most influential works of children's literature. This whimsical fantasy follows a young girl who tumbles down a rabbit-hole into a topsy-turvy world where logic is inverted, size is fluid, and curious creatures speak in riddles and non-sequiturs. Readers should expect imaginative wordplay, absurdist humor, and a narrative that plays gleefully with language and reason itself.
The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes
Rudyard Kipling·1888·39 min read First published in 1888, Rudyard Kipling's 'The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes' is a masterwork of psychological horror set in the Indian subcontinent. The story follows a Civil Engineer who accidentally discovers a hidden village populated by 'the living dead'—people who survived their own cremation ceremonies and were exiled to this desolate pit. Through escalating revelations and the protagonist's desperate struggle against both the landscape and his own sanity, Kipling explores themes of isolation, social rejection, and the horrors of being trapped between life and death. Expect a claustrophobic descent into madness rendered in precise, matter-of-fact prose.
My Own True Ghost Story
Rudyard Kipling·1888·14 min read First published in 1888, Rudyard Kipling's "My Own True Ghost Story" is a witty first-person account of the author's encounter with a supernatural presence during his travels through India's dâk-bungalow network. The story blends genuine atmospheric dread with Kipling's characteristic humor, as the narrator investigates inexplicable sounds in a decrepit railway bungalow. Rather than delivering a conventional ghost tale, Kipling subverts reader expectations through a rational explanation that undermines the narrator's own terrifying experience.
The Phantom Rickshaw
Rudyard Kipling·1888·39 min read Written by Rudyard Kipling in 1888, "The Phantom Rickshaw" is a psychological ghost story set in colonial India that explores the supernatural consequences of romantic betrayal. The narrative unfolds as a manuscript by Jack Pansay, a Bengal Civilian haunted by the spectral visitations of Agnes Keith-Wessington, a woman he cruelly abandoned—who subsequently died of heartbreak. Readers should expect a masterwork of Victorian supernatural fiction that questions the nature of guilt, madness, and whether the apparition plaguing Pansay is genuine or a manifestation of his own tortured conscience.
Lot No. 249
Written in 1892, Arthur Conan Doyle's "Lot No. 249" is a supernatural tale set at Oxford University, where a medical student becomes increasingly suspicious of his mysterious neighbour's obsession with an ancient Egyptian mummy. As strange attacks plague the university and relationships fracture, the boundary between academic curiosity and dangerous occultism begins to blur. Readers should expect a methodical, atmospheric mystery that builds from seemingly rational skepticism toward the uncanny.
The Horror of the Heights
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.
The Toll-House
W. W. Jacobs·1909·16 min read Four men accept a wager to spend the night in a notorious house that has claimed at least one life from every family that inhabited it. Written by W.W. Jacobs (1863–1943), a master of short horror fiction, "The Toll-House" exemplifies the author's skill at building atmospheric dread and psychological tension through skepticism challenged by inexplicable events. The story showcases Jacobs' trademark method of placing rational men in situations where reason proves inadequate against genuine supernatural menace.
The Red Laugh
Leonid Andreyev·1905·1h 43m read Leonid Andreyev's 'The Red Laugh' is a fragmentary narrative depicting the psychological and physical devastation of warfare through the eyes of a military officer. Written in 1904 during the Russo-Japanese War, this novella uses surreal, impressionistic prose to convey the dehumanizing horror of combat—not as heroic action, but as descent into collective madness. The reader should expect a disorienting, hallucinatory account that blurs reality and sanity, with recurring imagery of an ominous 'red laugh' that comes to symbolize the absurdity and obscenity of violence itself.
August Heat
W. F. Harvey·1910·8 min read Written in 1910, W. F. Harvey's "August Heat" is a masterwork of psychological suspense that explores the terrifying intersection of coincidence and inevitability. On an oppressively hot August day in London, artist James Clarence Withencroft sketches a criminal in the dock, then encounters the man's exact likeness—a monumental mason named Atkinson—who has inexplicably inscribed Withencroft's name and today's date on a gravestone. The story builds dread through ordinary conversation and inexplicable circumstance, leaving the reader to grapple with questions of fate, premonition, and the thin boundary between coincidence and doom.
The Library Window
Margaret Oliphant·1896·1h 21m read "The Library Window" is Margaret Oliphant's subtle supernatural tale of a young woman spending a summer with her elderly aunt in the Scottish town of St. Rule's. She becomes fascinated by a mysterious window in the College Library opposite their home—one that the townspeople cannot agree even exists—and discovers she possesses an unusual ability to perceive what others cannot. As her perception of the window's interior deepens, she begins to see signs of a mysterious occupant, drawing her into an increasingly absorbing and inexplicable mystery.
The Portrait
Margaret Oliphant·1881·1h 13m read Written by Margaret Oliphant in the Victorian era, "The Portrait" explores the sudden reappearance of a mysterious painting in a country estate—a full-length portrait of a young woman that disrupts the ordered, austere life of a reclusive father and his returned son. The story blends domestic realism with uncanny suggestions as family secrets emerge alongside supernatural implications, inviting readers to question whether the portrait is merely a work of art or something far more unsettling.
The Open Door
Margaret Oliphant·1881·1h 20m read The Wind in the Rose-bush
First published in 1903, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's "The Wind in the Rose-bush" is a masterwork of American Gothic that explores grief, negligence, and supernatural manifestation through the eyes of Rebecca Flint, a schoolteacher who travels to Ford Village to retrieve her young niece Agnes from her father's second marriage. As Rebecca's stay unfolds, she encounters increasingly disturbing phenomena centered on a mysterious rose-bush, strange music, and the evasive behavior of her sister-in-law, leading her to uncover a tragedy far more sinister than she could have imagined. The story exemplifies Freeman's signature blend of rural New England realism and uncanny horror, asking whether the supernatural phenomena are genuine or the product of a mind confronted with unbearable truth.
Luella Miller
Published in 1903, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's "Luella Miller" is a masterwork of American supernatural folklore that examines the destructive power of parasitic beauty and selfishness in a rural New England village. Through the testimony of the long-lived Lydia Anderson, the story traces Luella's mysterious draining effect on everyone who comes into her orbit—her husband Erastus, his sister Lily, various caregivers, and a young doctor—each wasting away in her service. The narrative builds toward a haunting climax that blurs the line between psychological terror and genuine supernatural visitation, exploring themes of complicity, community judgment, and the cost of enabling manipulation.
A Matter of Interest
Originally published in 1896, Robert W. Chambers's 'A Matter of Interest' presents itself as a firsthand account of an extraordinary scientific discovery on Long Island, though dismissed as fiction by contemporary journals. The narrator, a writer, encounters Professor Holroyd and his daughter Daisy conducting a mysterious research project in a remote coastal location, only to find himself recruited into their investigation of something neither fossil nor simply natural. Expect a tale that blurs the boundary between scientific inquiry and the inexplicable, with growing atmospheric dread as the truth of the expedition slowly unfolds.
Pompe Funèbre
Robert W. Chambers' "Pompe Funèbre" is a symbolist meditation on death and loss, written in the author's characteristic decadent style. The narrator follows a sexton beetle through a blighted November forest, observing its instinctive search for the dead, only to discover the dying form of a beloved named Lys. The story weaves naturalistic observation with metaphysical dread, exploring themes of mortality and the presence of death in the natural world.
The Fulness of Life
Edith Wharton·1893·18 min read Published in 1893, 'The Fulness of Life' is Edith Wharton's poignant exploration of unfulfilled spiritual and intellectual longing within marriage. The story follows a dying woman who, upon passing into the afterlife, discovers a kindred soul who shares her refined sensibilities and passion for art, literature, and beauty—everything her earthly husband could never provide. Wharton examines the tension between romantic ideals and domestic duty, asking whether perfect understanding or marital loyalty should define a woman's eternal happiness. Readers should expect a meditation on the costs of compromise and the nature of love itself.
Afterward
Edith Wharton·1910·51 min read Published in 1910, Edith Wharton's 'Afterward' is a masterwork of restrained supernatural fiction that inverts expectations of the ghost story. The Boynes, a wealthy American couple, lease an ancient English manor called Lyng, seeking the romantic past their industrial fortune has denied them. When a friend cryptically mentions the house harbors a ghost 'but you'll never know it,' the stage is set for a slow-burning mystery that unfolds through psychological tension rather than supernatural spectacle. Readers should expect atmospheric suspense, marital unease, and a haunting revelation that arrives only in retrospect.