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The Horror Library

Psychological

2 stories

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.

In the Quarter

Robert W. Chambers·1894·3h 50m read

Published in 1888, Robert W. Chambers' 'In the Quarter' captures the vibrant bohemian life of young art students in Paris during a period of political turbulence. The narrative follows Reginald Gethryn, an American painter anxiously awaiting the Salon's acceptance of his work, whose life takes an unexpected turn when he encounters a mysterious young woman during a violent street riot. Blending romance, political intrigue, and the artistic struggles of expatriate life, the story introduces themes that would later define Chambers' supernatural fiction.