The Horror Library
Browse Stories
6 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
Crime and Punishment
Fyodor Dostoyevsky·1866·14h 42m read Crime and Punishment, serialized in 1866, is Dostoyevsky's masterwork exploring the psychological unraveling of Raskolnikov, a poor St. Petersburg student consumed by a dangerous philosophical theory. The novel examines whether extraordinary individuals are justified in committing immoral acts for a greater good, set against the suffocating poverty and moral decay of 19th-century Russia. Readers should expect a penetrating psychological study of guilt, redemption, and the human conscience.
Moby Dick; Or, The Whale
Herman Melville·1851·15h 8m read Herman Melville's Moby-Dick (1851) is a sprawling epic of obsession and adventure that follows Ishmael, a restless sailor who embarks on a whaling voyage aboard the Pequod. Published during the height of American whaling industry, the novel blends maritime realism with philosophical inquiry and psychological depth. Readers should expect a rich narrative voice, detailed technical passages about whaling, and an increasingly ominous tone as the story progresses toward its fateful encounter with the white whale.
The Red Laugh
Leonid Andreyev·1905·1h 43m read Leonid Andreyev's 'The Red Laugh' is a fragmentary narrative depicting the psychological and physical devastation of warfare through the eyes of a military officer. Written in 1904 during the Russo-Japanese War, this novella uses surreal, impressionistic prose to convey the dehumanizing horror of combat—not as heroic action, but as descent into collective madness. The reader should expect a disorienting, hallucinatory account that blurs reality and sanity, with recurring imagery of an ominous 'red laugh' that comes to symbolize the absurdity and obscenity of violence itself.
The Upper Berth
F. Marion Crawford's 'The Upper Berth' is a Victorian-era ghost story told as an after-dinner account by a seasoned traveler recounting his encounter with unexplainable supernatural phenomena aboard the Atlantic steamer Kamtschatka. Originally serialized in the 1880s, this masterpiece of atmospheric horror explores themes of skepticism overcome by inexplicable experience through the narrator's reluctant witnessing of maritime mystery. Readers should expect a slow-burn supernatural tale rich in period detail, psychological unease, and the gradual erosion of rational skepticism.
The Trial
Franz Kafka·1915·6h 4m read Kafka's *The Trial* (1925) recounts the bizarre arrest and prosecution of Josef K., a bank official who is informed one morning that he is under arrest—though no charges are ever clearly stated. Written in the aftermath of World War I and reflecting Kafka's anxieties about authority, law, and identity, this novel presents a nightmarish vision of a labyrinthine legal system that operates according to inscrutable rules. Readers should expect a slow-building sense of dread, absurdist dialogue, and a protagonist increasingly trapped by forces he cannot understand or influence.
Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka·1915·1h 36m read Kafka's 1915 novella follows Gregor Samsa, a traveling salesman who awakens one morning transformed into a giant insect. This foundational work of modernist literature explores the alienation of industrial capitalism, family obligation, and the horror of losing one's humanity and social identity overnight. Readers should expect a deeply unsettling psychological journey that grows more tragic as Gregor's family struggles to cope with his monstrous condition.