The Horror Library
Browse Stories
42 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
The Lady of the Shroud
Bram Stoker·1909·9h 12m read Bram Stoker's final novel, published posthumously in 1909, unfolds through letters and diary entries concerning the will of Roger Melton and the mysterious fate of his estranged nephew Rupert Sent Leger. Beginning with the meticulous genealogical record of Ernest Roger Halbard Melton, the narrative introduces a wealthy trader with connections across the Eastern world and his turbulent relationship with a proud but generous young man. Readers should expect an atmospheric tale of secrets, family honor, and supernatural intrigue rooted in Stoker's characteristic exploration of identity and hidden truths.
Widdershins
Oliver Onions·1911·5h 42m read "The Beckoning Fair One" is Oliver Onions' masterwork of psychological horror, published in 1911 as part of his collection *Widdershins*. The story follows Paul Oleron, a struggling author who rents a single floor of a decaying old London townhouse, hoping to finally complete his novel *Romilly Bishop*. What begins as a charming domestic arrangement gradually spirals into something far more sinister as Oleron becomes increasingly isolated and consumed by an unseen presence within the house. Onions crafts a haunting exploration of obsession, artistic ambition, and the blurred boundaries between reality and delusion.
The Hound of the Baskervilles
The Hound of the Baskervilles, serialized in The Strand Magazine from 1901-1902, is Arthur Conan Doyle's most celebrated Sherlock Holmes novel. When the mysterious Dr. Mortimer brings Holmes an ancient manuscript detailing a family curse—a supernatural hound that has plagued the Baskerville line for centuries—a new death under impossible circumstances forces the detective to confront a mystery that challenges both reason and science. Readers should expect a masterful blend of Gothic atmosphere, methodical detective work, and genuine supernatural dread.
The Jolly Corner
Henry James·1908·1h 2m read Henry James's "The Jolly Corner" (1908) explores the psychological torment of Spencer Brydon, a wealthy American who returns to New York after thirty-three years abroad to confront the life he might have lived. Drawn obsessively to his ancestral home—the "jolly corner"—Brydon begins a strange nocturnal vigil, searching for the ghostly manifestation of his alternative self: the ruthless businessman and robber baron he could have become. This novella is a masterwork of psychological suspense and ambiguity, examining themes of regret, identity, and the unknowable paths not taken.
Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad
M. R. James·1904·35 min read Written in 1904, M.R. James's "Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You, My Lad" is a cornerstone of English supernatural fiction and exemplifies the author's mastery of the ghost story genre. When a skeptical Cambridge professor discovers an ancient whistle at the ruins of a Templar preceptory on the Norfolk coast, his rational worldview begins to unravel as inexplicable nocturnal disturbances escalate. Readers should expect a slowly building sense of dread, atmospheric coastal settings, and a creature of ambiguous but terrifying nature that defies the protagonist's scientific materialism.
Count Magnus
M. R. James·1904·24 min read Written in the late 19th century, "Count Magnus" is M. R. James's masterwork of understated supernatural dread, presenting itself as an editor's compilation of travel notes and journals left by a Mr. Wraxall. The story follows an antiquarian's fatal curiosity as he researches a powerful Swedish nobleman while lodging near an ancient manor house, only to discover disturbing legends and mysterious texts hinting at dark practices. What begins as scholarly fascination becomes a descent into inexplicable terror that pursues Wraxall across Europe and to his mysterious death.
The Mezzotint
M. R. James·1904·20 min read M. R. James's "The Mezzotint" is a masterwork of antiquarian horror, written in the early 20th century as part of his celebrated collection of ghost stories. The tale follows Mr. Williams, a curator of topographical prints, who acquires an unremarkable mezzotint engraving of a manor house—only to discover that the image begins to change before his eyes, revealing a mysterious figure that appears to be enacting a terrible crime. James's restrained, scholarly approach to the supernatural creates an atmosphere of creeping dread, where the investigation of the print's origins becomes an exploration of a centuries-old tragedy.
Lost Hearts
M. R. James·1904·17 min read The Woman at Seven Brothers
Originally published in the 1920s, Wilbur Daniel Steele's 'The Woman at Seven Brothers' is a psychological ghost story set on a remote lighthouse off the New England coast. A young lighthouse assistant's arrival at Seven Brothers disrupts the isolated lives of the aging keeper Fedderson and his enigmatic wife Anna, whose supernatural nature becomes increasingly apparent as the narrator's obsession with her deepens. Told as a confession by a man institutionalized for madness, the story weaves maritime dread with psychological ambiguity, leaving uncertain whether the woman is truly otherworldly or merely the projection of the narrator's fractured mind.
The Shadows on the Wall
First published in 1903, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's "The Shadows on the Wall" is a masterpiece of psychological suspense that explores guilt, family secrets, and the supernatural. When Edward Glynn dies suddenly under mysterious circumstances—following a bitter quarrel with his brother Henry—a strange shadow begins appearing nightly on the study wall, bearing an unsettling resemblance to the deceased. As the shadow persists and deepens into something darker still, the family spirals into terror and unspoken dread. Freeman crafts a story of mounting horror that operates as much in the minds of the three sisters as in the material world, leaving readers to contemplate what is seen versus what is suspected.
The Empty House
Published in 1906, Algernon Blackwood's 'The Empty House' is a masterwork of atmospheric supernatural fiction that examines how malevolent histories can permeate physical spaces. The story follows young Shorthouse and his aunt—an enthusiast of psychical research—as they spend a night in a notoriously haunted house in a provincial English square to investigate the violent murder that allegedly took place there decades earlier. Readers should expect a slow-building sense of dread punctuated by increasingly terrifying supernatural manifestations.
The Burial of the Rats
Bram Stoker·1914·44 min read Published in 1845, Bram Stoker's 'The Burial of the Rats' is a suspenseful tale of urban exploration gone terribly wrong. Set in 1850s Paris, the story follows an English gentleman whose systematic exploration of the city's least-known districts—specifically the waste-heaps around Montrouge—leads him into a deadly trap set by a band of desperate criminals disguised as poor rag-pickers. Stoker masterfully transforms the mundane facts of Parisian social life into the framework for a visceral thriller that tests the narrator's courage, resourcefulness, and devotion to his absent beloved.
The Squaw
Bram Stoker·1914·23 min read Published in 1911, Bram Stoker's 'The Squaw' is a tale of retribution set in the medieval Torture Tower of Nuremberg. An American tourist's casual cruelty toward a mother cat sets in motion a chain of supernatural vengeance that culminates in the tower's most infamous instrument of torture. The story explores themes of karmic justice and the hidden malevolence that can manifest from seemingly innocent acts, delivered through Stoker's masterful atmospheric prose.
The Judge’s House
Bram Stoker·1914·34 min read Written by Bram Stoker and published in 1914, "The Judge's House" tells of Malcolm Malcolmson, a mathematics student who rents an isolated, long-abandoned house in a small English town to study undisturbed. The house, known locally as the Judge's House for its associations with a merciless historical judge, harbors disturbing secrets that challenge Malcolmson's rational skepticism. Readers should expect a slow-building atmosphere of dread, the collision between scientific reasoning and supernatural terror, and a protagonist whose isolation becomes increasingly sinister.
Dracula’s Guest
Bram Stoker·1914·22 min read Written as a prequel to Bram Stoker's novel Dracula and published posthumously in 1914, this atmospheric tale follows an English traveler's harrowing encounter in the Bavarian countryside on Walpurgis Night. Ignoring the warnings of his coachman Johann, the protagonist ventures into a desolate valley and discovers an abandoned graveyard dominated by the marble tomb of the Countess Dolingen. What unfolds is a supernatural ordeal involving mysterious forces, a wolf of impossible nature, and the revelation that he has been under the protection of Count Dracula himself—a detail that transforms his survival from mere coincidence into something far more sinister and purposeful.
The Picture in the House
H. P. Lovecraft·1921·15 min read Written in 1920, "The Picture in the House" exemplifies H. P. Lovecraft's mastery of atmospheric horror rooted in rural New England decay. The story follows a genealogist seeking shelter from a storm in a desolate farmhouse, where he encounters an aged, peculiar inhabitant with an unhealthy obsession with a grotesque illustration in an ancient book. What begins as curiosity about the stranger's past deepens into creeping dread as the true nature of the old man's preoccupations—and the secrets the house harbors—become horrifyingly apparent.
The Tomb
H. P. Lovecraft·1922·19 min read "The Rats in the Walls" explores the blurred boundary between madness and supernatural reality through the account of Jervas Dudley, a reclusive dreamer confined to an asylum following a catastrophic night in a family tomb. Written by H.P. Lovecraft, this quintessential weird fiction tale examines how sensitive individuals perceive realities hidden from ordinary consciousness—and the terrible price of such perception. Readers should expect an unreliable narrator whose experiences challenge fundamental assumptions about sanity, identity, and the nature of the supernatural.
The Alchemist
H. P. Lovecraft·1916·16 min read Written in 1908, this Gothic tale of family curse and dark alchemy represents Lovecraft's exploration of inherited doom and the corrupting pursuit of forbidden knowledge. The story follows Antoine, the last comte of an ancient French house, as he uncovers the centuries-old curse that has claimed every male heir at the age of thirty-two—a vengeful hex born from his ancestor's murder of an alchemist. As Antoine approaches his own thirty-second birthday, he descends into the castle's forgotten depths and confronts the horrifying truth behind the generations of premature deaths.