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The Horror Library

Buried Alive

3 stories

The Premature Burial

Edgar Allan Poe·1844·24 min read

Published in 1844, Poe's essay-story explores the psychological and physical horror of premature burial through a blend of medical case studies and personal narrative. The work examines how the boundary between life and death remains uncertain, and how this uncertainty can destroy the mind. Readers should expect a sophisticated meditation on mortality that shifts from clinical accounts to visceral first-person terror, culminating in an ironic twist that reveals how imagination and fear can be as torturous as the horrors they conjure.

The Grave: A Story of Stark Terror

Orville R. Emerson·1923·17 min read

Published in the early 20th century, "The Grave: A Story of Stark Terror" uses the devastated landscape of World War I's Mount Kemmel as the setting for a tale of psychological deterioration and cosmic dread. The story presents a German officer's diary entries chronicling his entombment in a collapsed dugout, combined with an eyewitness account of his horrifying emergence weeks later. Readers should expect a descent into madness rendered through intimate first-person testimony, culminating in a vision of human degradation that blurs the line between the living and the dead.

The Scarlet Night

William Sandford·1923·8 min read

A man discovers his wife's infatuation with the town's disreputable doctor and refuses her request for a divorce. After being drugged and buried alive in a horrifying plot, he experiences a nightmarish resurrection—only to awaken in a hospital accused of murdering both his wife and the doctor. Published in the early 20th century, this tale of ambiguous reality explores themes of betrayal, psychological torment, and the unreliability of perception, leaving readers uncertain whether the protagonist experienced genuine horror or descended into murderous madness.