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The Horror Library

Suspense

5 stories

The Wyvern Mystery

Sheridan Le Fanu·1869·9h 5m read

The Wyvern Mystery, serialized in the 1860s by Irish master Sheridan Le Fanu, follows the enigmatic Alice Maybell, a beautiful orphan raised by the austere Squire Fairfield of Wyvern Manor. When Alice secretly visits a remote cottage and receives a cryptic letter, her carefully composed life begins to unravel amid village gossip, strange encounters, and mounting dread. Le Fanu weaves a tale of hidden connections, thwarted love, and dark family secrets that will test Alice's fortitude and the reader's patience for gradual, atmospheric revelation.

Treasure Island

Robert Louis Stevenson·1883·4h 56m read

Robert Louis Stevenson's *Treasure Island* (1881-1882), serialized in a boys' magazine before publication, became a foundational adventure novel that established many conventions of the genre. Narrated by Jim Hawkins, a young innkeeper's son, the story begins with the arrival of a mysterious seaman at his father's establishment and escalates into a tale of pirates, buried treasure, and moral conflict. Readers should expect a fast-paced narrative filled with vivid characters, nautical atmosphere, and the tension between innocence and the darker realities of greed and violence.

The Extraordinary Adventures of Arsène Lupin, Gentleman-burglar

Maurice Leblanc·1907·3h 54m read

Maurice Leblanc's 'The Extraordinary Adventures of Arsène Lupin, Gentleman-Burglar' introduces the titular master thief in two interconnected tales of wit and cunning. First serialized in the early 1900s, these stories established the gentleman-burglar archetype and Lupin's enduring rivalry with detective Ganimard. The reader should expect clever heists, mistaken identities, and a charming criminal protagonist who operates according to his own code of honor.

The Cock and Anchor

Sheridan Le Fanu·1845·11h 3m read

Written by Irish author Sheridan Le Fanu in the 19th century, "The Cock and Anchor" is a historical Gothic narrative set in early 1800s Dublin during a period of political upheaval and exile. The novel centers on young Edmund O'Connor, who arrives at a storied inn bearing his late father's ring, only to encounter a mysterious stranger with ties to his family's past and to clandestine political activity. Readers should expect atmospheric period detail, romantic entanglement, and the gradual unfolding of secrets tied to Irish Jacobite politics and personal honor.

The Room in the Dragon Volant

Sheridan Le Fanu·1872·3h 14m read

Originally published in 1872 as part of Le Fanu's collection 'In a Glass Darkly,' this novella exemplifies the Irish master's gift for weaving mystery and psychological tension into tales of romantic intrigue with sinister undertones. The story follows a young Englishman's dangerous infatuation with a mysterious countess encountered on the road to Paris in 1815, drawing him into a web of deception and supernatural horror. Le Fanu masterfully delays revelation while building dread through atmospherics, unreliable perception, and the gradual disclosure that nothing—and no one—in this tale is quite what they initially appear.