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The Horror Library

Arctic & Polar

7 stories

Polaris

H. P. Lovecraft·1920·7 min read

Written in 1918, "Polaris" exemplifies Lovecraft's masterful exploration of the fragile boundary between dream and waking reality. The narrator finds himself caught between two worlds: his mundane existence in a house near a swamp, and vivid visions of the ancient city of Olathoe on a mysterious polar plateau, drawn to both by the hypnotic gaze of the Pole Star. As the story unfolds, the question of which world is real becomes increasingly unstable and terrifying.

Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus

Mary Shelley·1818·5h 27m read

Mary Shelley's *Frankenstein* (1818) is a foundational work of science fiction and Gothic literature, written when the author was only eighteen years old. The novel frames the story through letters from Arctic explorer Robert Walton to his sister, who rescues a mysterious, dying stranger—Victor Frankenstein—on the frozen sea. As Victor recovers, he recounts his harrowing tale of scientific ambition, obsession, and the terrible consequences of playing God. Readers should expect a deeply philosophical exploration of creation, responsibility, and the dangers of unchecked intellectual pride, wrapped in atmospheric Arctic settings and psychological horror.

The Ghoul and the Corpse

G. A. Wells·1923·24 min read

Chris Bonner arrives at a remote trading post in Alaska with an extraordinary and disturbing tale: while prospecting in a desolate valley, he discovers a prehistoric ape-man frozen in a glacier and, against his better judgment, thaws the corpse—only to find it reviving to horrifying life. Published in the weird fiction tradition, this story exemplifies early 20th-century anxieties about evolution, the dangers of scientific curiosity, and the terror of confronting evolutionary history made flesh. Readers should expect a classic frame narrative with an unreliable narrator and an ambiguous ending that leaves the truth deliberately uncertain.

To Build a Fire

Jack London·1908·31 min read

Jack London's 'To Build a Fire' depicts a man's desperate struggle against the extreme cold of the Yukon wilderness during the Klondike Gold Rush era. First published in 1908, the story exemplifies London's naturalistic style and explores humanity's vulnerability against indifferent natural forces. Readers should expect a tense, methodical account of survival instinct pitted against the protagonist's lack of imagination and experience.

The Passing of Marcus O'Brien

Jack London·1901·22 min read

Published in 1901 during the height of public fascination with the Yukon Gold Rush, Jack London's "The Passing of Marcus O'Brien" explores frontier justice and the consequences of rigid morality in lawless lands. Judge Marcus O'Brien administers summary punishments in the remote mining camp of Red Cow, where criminals are set adrift on the Yukon River with meager rations—until he himself becomes the victim of a drunken prank that casts him into the wilderness without supplies. The story examines how the judge's own harsh judicial system becomes his undoing in a landscape indifferent to human justice.

At the Mountains of Madness

H. P. Lovecraft·1936·2h 56m read

Published in 1936, H. P. Lovecraft's novella recounts the testimony of a geologist who led the Miskatonic University Expedition to Antarctica in 1930–1931. The narrator, compelled to break his silence despite scientific skepticism, reveals why he opposes further Antarctic exploration and the disturbance of ancient ice-covered mountains. Through detailed expedition reports, wireless transmissions, and geological discoveries of impossible age and origin, the narrative builds toward a revelation that challenges everything known about life on Earth—and what may still lurk beneath the frozen continent.

Ms. Found in a Bottle

Edgar Allan Poe·1833·18 min read

First published in 1833, this quintessential Poe tale follows a rational, skeptical narrator whose oceanic voyage takes a turn toward the inexplicable when a catastrophic storm transports him to a derelict ship crewed by impossibly ancient beings. The story exemplifies Poe's mastery of cosmic dread and unreliable narration, as the narrator struggles to reconcile his scientific worldview with the supernatural phenomena engulfing him. Readers should expect an escalating sense of existential horror tinged with beautiful, baroque prose.