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.
The Fungi from Yuggoth
H. P. Lovecraft·1943·18 min read This cycle of thirty-six interconnected poems, published in 1943, represents Lovecraft's most sustained exploration of cosmic dread through verse. Written near the end of his life, the collection weaves together recurring motifs from his fiction—forbidden books, Elder Gods, the city of Innsmouth, and dreams that breach reality—into a unified meditation on humanity's insignificance and the terror of forbidden knowledge. Readers should expect an immersive, hallucinatory journey through alien dimensions and corrupted dreamscapes rather than conventional narrative.
The Silver Key
H. P. Lovecraft·1929·22 min read Published in 1926, "The Silver Key" is H. P. Lovecraft's meditation on the loss of imagination and wonder in adulthood, told through the journey of Randolph Carter, a man who has surrendered his childhood gift for dreaming to the demands of rational, "adult" reality. When a mysterious silver key—an heirloom passed down through his family—appears to him in dreams, Carter embarks on a strange pilgrimage to recover the gateway to the fantastical realms of his youth, with ambiguous but enchanting consequences. The story blends philosophical introspection with cosmic wonder, exploring themes of nostalgia, the cost of rationalism, and the redemptive power of imagination.
The Festival
H. P. Lovecraft·1925·16 min read Published in 1925, 'The Festival' is H. P. Lovecraft's exploration of ancestral dread and forbidden rites, following a man summoned to his family's ancient New England town to participate in a centuries-old winter ceremony. The story masterfully weaves New England colonial history, scholarly references to demonology, and cosmic horror as the narrator descends from the familiar world into subterranean darkness and incomprehensible revelation. Expect atmospheric tension that builds steadily from mundane Yuletide arrival to genuinely disturbing discovery, with Lovecraft's characteristic unreliable perspective on sanity and reality.
Cool Air
H. P. Lovecraft·1928·15 min read Written in 1926, "Cool Air" is H. P. Lovecraft's exploration of obsession, decay, and the terrible price of defying mortality. The narrator recalls his encounter with Dr. Muñoz, a brilliant but reclusive physician living in a squalid New York boarding house, whose desperate battle against death through unorthodox scientific methods leads to increasingly grotesque consequences. The story examines the narrator's inexplicable fear of cold air and what he witnessed in the doctor's artificially frigid sanctuary.
Pickman’s Model
H. P. Lovecraft·1927·24 min read Published in 1927, "Pickman's Model" is H. P. Lovecraft's masterwork of artistic horror, exploring the thin boundary between genius and monstrosity through the narrator's relationship with the brilliant painter Richard Upton Pickman. When the narrator discovers the true source of Pickman's unnaturally lifelike and disturbing artwork, he is forced to confront the existence of forces that defy rational explanation and human decency. The story combines Lovecraft's signature themes of forbidden knowledge and cosmic dread with a tightly constructed mystery that culminates in a revelation of genuine terror.
The Temple
H. P. Lovecraft·1925·24 min read Written in 1925 and published in *The Vagrant*, "The Temple" is Lovecraft's exploration of cosmic horror beneath the waves. Presented as a manuscript discovered in a bottle, the story follows a German U-boat commander who encounters strange phenomena while trapped on the ocean floor, ultimately discovering the ruins of an impossibly ancient civilization. The narrative examines how proximity to forbidden knowledge and alien grandeur can erode human rationality and will, even in the most disciplined mind.