The Green Mouse
Published in 1910, Robert W. Chambers's 'The Green Mouse' is a whimsical supernatural tale that explores the intersection of magic, class, and romance in early 20th-century New York. The story follows a ruined gentleman who discovers his only marketable talent is sleight of hand and animal control, while a young woman from a wealthy family encounters increasingly uncanny evidence of his secret magical practice. As their worlds collide through a chance meeting in Central Park, both the magician's illusions and the boundaries between reality and impossibility begin to blur in unexpected ways.
The Evil Guest
Sheridan Le Fanu·1850·3h 20m read Written by Sheridan Le Fanu in the 19th century, 'The Evil Guest' explores the dark undercurrents of a decaying English estate and the moral corruption lurking within its walls. The story centers on the mysterious arrival of Sir Wynston Berkley at Gray Forest, the gloomy mansion of his estranged cousin Richard Marston, and the unsettling entanglement between the wealthy baronet, the beautiful French governess Mademoiselle de Barras, and Marston's increasingly troubled household. Le Fanu masterfully builds an atmosphere of suspicion and psychological unease as hidden secrets begin to surface and dangerous deceptions come to light.
The Secret Glory
Arthur Machen·1907·4h 40m read Published in 1907, Arthur Machen's "The Secret Glory" is a philosophical meditation on education, spirituality, and the corruption of institutional life disguised as a school narrative. Following young Ambrose Meyrick through his brutal experiences at Lupton, a public school, the story uses visceral scenes of cruelty to interrogate the systems that normalize suffering. Readers should expect a blend of naturalistic realism with increasingly mystical undertones as Meyrick matures and discovers alternative sources of meaning.
The Hill of Dreams
Arthur Machen·1897·4h 47m read Arthur Machen's "The Hill of Dreams" follows young Lucian Taylor, a scholarly boy who discovers a Roman hill fort near his Welsh home and experiences a transformative, erotically charged encounter within it that blurs the boundary between dream and reality. Written in the 1890s, the work exemplifies Machen's distinctive approach to supernatural fiction, weaving together Celtic mysticism, classical archaeology, and psychological intensity to explore themes of isolation, sexuality, and the allure of forbidden knowledge. Readers should expect a densely atmospheric narrative that privileges mood and internal experience over conventional plot, with ambiguity about whether the fort's magic is literal or psychological.
Four Beasts in One—The Homo-Cameleopard
Edgar Allan Poe·1836·12 min read Plays of Gods and Men
Lord Dunsany·1917·15 min read "A Night at an Inn" is a one-act play by Lord Dunsany, first published in 1916, that masterfully blends adventure with supernatural horror. Four merchant sailors who have stolen a ruby idol's eye from an Indian temple take refuge in a remote inn, where their leader—the clever and unflappable Toff—believes he can outwit the three priests pursuing them through sheer intellect and foresight. What unfolds is a tense battle of wits that gradually reveals the inexorable, otherworldly nature of their pursuers and the futility of human cunning against forces beyond comprehension.
The Book of Wonder
Lord Dunsany·1912·1h 32m read The Book of Wonder is a collection of fantastical short stories by Lord Dunsany, originally published in 1912, showcasing his distinctive blend of fairy tale conventions and darkly ironic twists. These tales transport readers to imaginary lands filled with gods, demons, thieves, and cursed artifacts, where ambition and transgression inevitably lead to doom. Readers should expect lyrical prose, an ornate and archaic style, morally complex protagonists, and endings that subvert traditional expectations with a touch of grim humor.
The Star-treader, and Other Poems
This collection of poems by Clark Ashton Smith, published in the early 20th century, showcases the author's mastery of visionary and cosmic verse. Smith blends classical mythology with modern philosophical anxiety, exploring themes of beauty's transience, the vastness of space, and humanity's insignificance against cosmic forces. Readers should expect ornate, archaic language and densely metaphorical meditations on death, imagination, and the hidden meanings of the natural world.
Haïta the Shepherd
Ambrose Bierce·1891·10 min read Ambrose Bierce's 'Haïta the Shepherd' is a philosophical allegory written in his characteristic style of strange and ironic tales. The story follows a simple shepherd whose contentment is disrupted when he begins to question the nature of existence and mortality, only to encounter a mysterious maiden who embodies happiness itself. Readers should expect a deceptively simple narrative that gradually reveals itself as a profound meditation on the paradox of seeking fulfillment—a theme Bierce explores with characteristic wit and dark wisdom.
The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter
Published by Ambrose Bierce in 1893, this novella presents a first-person account by Brother Ambrosius, a young Franciscan monk sent to a remote monastery in the Bavarian Alps in 1680. The narrative combines religious introspection with mounting supernatural dread as the monk becomes increasingly fascinated with Benedicta, the shunned daughter of the local hangman, leading to a journey into forbidden passion and dark revelation. Readers should expect a slow-building Gothic atmosphere, moral ambiguity, and the gradual unraveling of the monk's spiritual certainty.
The Stranger
Ambrose Bierce·1891·9 min read First published in 1891, Ambrose Bierce's 'The Stranger' is a masterwork of American supernatural fiction that exemplifies the author's signature style of economical storytelling and ambiguous dread. A mysterious visitor appears at a desert campfire and recounts the desperate fate of five prospectors trapped in a cave by Apache attackers thirty years prior, narrating in haunting detail the deaths of his four companions. As the tale unfolds, the campfire witnesses begin to realize they may be encountering something far more uncanny than a mere mortal traveler with a gruesome story to tell.
The Human Chord
Written by British master of supernatural fiction Algernon Blackwood, 'The Human Chord' explores the dangerous intersection of mystical power and human vulnerability through the story of Robert Spinrobin, a young man drawn into the mysterious household of an extraordinary retired clergyman. When Spinrobin accepts a peculiar position as secretary to the enigmatic Mr. Skale—a man conducting secret experiments in sound—he discovers himself caught in a web of supernatural forces that manipulate the very fabric of human connection and identity. The novella exemplifies Blackwood's fascination with occult philosophy and the hidden currents that flow beneath ordinary reality.
The Promise of Air
Written by Algernon Blackwood, a master of the supernatural and weird fiction, "The Promise of Air" follows Joseph Wimble, an ordinary young man consumed by an extraordinary passion for birds and the freedom of flight. When he meets Joan, a farmer's daughter who seems to embody the grace and mystery of his aerial yearnings, he believes he has found his soulmate—only to discover that their shared transcendence cannot survive the weight of earthly reality. This philosophical and dreamlike tale explores the tragedy of aspiration meeting mundane life.
The Bright Messenger
Written by Algernon Blackwood in the early 20th century, 'The Bright Messenger' explores the life of Dr. Edward Fillery, a psychiatrist and healer devoted to understanding human consciousness and its untapped supernormal powers. When a mysterious letter arrives proposing an unusual case—a young man of uncertain nature raised in isolation in the Swiss Jura mountains—Fillery finds his rationalist worldview challenged by an encounter that transcends conventional psychology and forces him to confront possibilities his previous knowledge had ruled out of consideration.
The Centaur
"The Centaur" is Algernon Blackwood's mysterious tale of Terence O'Malley, a wandering Irish correspondent who encounters two strangers aboard a Mediterranean steamer—a father and son whose physical presence seems to defy ordinary perception. Written in Blackwood's characteristic style, the story explores themes of hidden nature, spiritual kinship, and the boundaries between human and animal consciousness. Readers should expect an introspective, atmospheric narrative that privileges intuition and mystical experience over rational explanation, culminating in an encounter that challenges the protagonist's understanding of identity and transformation.
The Education of Uncle Paul
Paul Rivers, a solitary wood cruiser who has spent twenty years in the Canadian wilderness, returns to England at age forty-five to claim an inheritance and reconnect with his estranged sister. Haunted by his inability to express his deep spiritual yearnings and aesthetic sensibilities, he arrives carrying an elaborate emotional disguise—a carefully constructed mask of gruff middle age meant to hide his childlike, dreaming nature. What unfolds is an exploration of a man struggling between his authentic self and the persona he believes the world demands, as he faces the unsettling prospect of encountering children who may penetrate his defenses and expose the undeveloped aspects of his soul.
The Garden of Survival
Written by Algernon Blackwood, this epistolary narrative explores the relationship between twin brothers, focusing on one man's failed marriage to Marion—a woman whose mysterious power over him masked a deeper spiritual mission. After Marion's death, the narrator discovers he is not alone; an inexplicable force guides his life toward success, operating with uncanny precision. As he struggles to understand this presence, questions emerge about identity, duty, and whether Marion's final words—'I shall try again'—hint at something beyond death itself.
The Thing on the Door-Step
H. P. Lovecraft·1924·46 min read Published in 1929, "The Thing on the Doorstep" stands as one of H.P. Lovecraft's most disturbing explorations of cosmic violation and bodily autonomy. The story follows the narrator's account of his best friend Edward Derby's marriage to the mysterious Asenath Waite, a woman descended from the debased people of Innsmouth with knowledge of ancient, forbidden magic. As the narrator observes Edward's gradual transformation and comes to understand a horrifying truth about exchanged consciousness and identity theft, he faces an impossible moral choice. Expect a masterwork of psychological dread that uses the familiar architecture of Lovecraft's universe—the Necronomicon, cyclopean ruins, and cosmic entities—to explore intimate betrayal and the terror of losing oneself.
Paradise Lost
John Milton·1667·5h 47m read John Milton's Paradise Lost, published in 1667, is an epic poem that retells the biblical account of humanity's fall from grace through the lens of Satan's rebellion against God. Written during the English Civil War and Restoration, the work ambitiously attempts to "justify the ways of God to men" while creating one of literature's most compelling and complex portraits of evil. Readers should expect grand, philosophical verse exploring themes of pride, ambition, free will, and divine justice across multiple books of theological and dramatic intensity.
Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World
Jonathan Swift·1726·7h 35m read Published in 1726, Jonathan Swift's *Gulliver's Travels* is a masterwork of satirical fantasy that uses extraordinary voyages to distant lands as a vehicle for biting social and political commentary. Through the adventures of Lemuel Gulliver—a ship's surgeon who encounters bizarre civilizations including tiny Lilliputians and enormous giants—Swift skewers human nature, institutional corruption, and the follies of his era. Readers should expect a blend of fantastic adventure, crude humor, and sharp intellectual critique that grows progressively darker across its four voyages.
King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table
Sir Thomas Malory·1919·6h 55m read This is an adaptation of the Arthurian legend from Sir Thomas Malory's 15th-century compilation, tracing the prophesied birth and rise of King Arthur from the tumultuous reign of Uther Pendragon through his miraculous coronation. The narrative establishes the magical foundations of Arthurian tradition—Merlin's prophecies, the sword in the stone, and the magical sword Excalibur—while depicting Arthur's emergence as a legitimate king despite the skepticism of ambitious barons. Readers should expect elaborate medieval romance with magical elements, courtly intrigue, and martial spectacle.
Le Morte d'Arthur
Sir Thomas Malory·1470·24h 58m read Sir Thomas Malory's 'Le Morte d'Arthur,' written in the 15th century and drawing on earlier Arthurian legends. It chronicles the miraculous conception of Arthur through Merlin's enchantment, his hidden upbringing, and his eventual rise to kingship through the sword in the stone. Readers should expect a medieval romance blending history, magic, and chivalric adventure, with complex politics and magical intervention shaping the destiny of Britain's greatest king.
Children’s Legends
Maid Maleen
A classic German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, "Maid Maleen" tells of a young woman imprisoned in a tower for seven years by her father for refusing to marry anyone but her true love. After escaping, she enters service at the court of her betrothed prince, only to become entangled in a deception involving an ugly bride. This timeless story explores themes of constancy, true identity, and the triumph of genuine love over superficial appearance and tyrannical authority.