The Horror Library
Browse Stories
91 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
The Book of Wonder
Lord Dunsany·1912·1h 32m read The Book of Wonder is a collection of fantastical short stories by Lord Dunsany, originally published in 1912, showcasing his distinctive blend of fairy tale conventions and darkly ironic twists. These tales transport readers to imaginary lands filled with gods, demons, thieves, and cursed artifacts, where ambition and transgression inevitably lead to doom. Readers should expect lyrical prose, an ornate and archaic style, morally complex protagonists, and endings that subvert traditional expectations with a touch of grim humor.
The Gods of Pegana
Lord Dunsany·1905·1h 7m read Lord Dunsany's 'The Gods of Pegana' (1905) is a mythological collection that establishes an elaborate pantheon of gods and their relationship to creation, destiny, and mortality. Written as a series of poetic vignettes and divine sayings, the work reimagines cosmology through the lens of Weird Fiction, presenting a universe where reality is maintained by the eternal drumming of Skarl and overseen by the sleeping MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI. Readers should expect a tone of philosophical mystery and dark majesty, with themes exploring the insignificance of humanity before cosmic forces and the unknowable intentions of divine beings.
Ebony and Crystal: Poems in Verse and Prose
Ebony and Crystal is a 1922 collection of poems and prose verses by Clark Ashton Smith, showcasing the author's mastery of ornate, decadent language and exotic imagery. Written during Smith's most prolific period, these works blend romanticism with darker undercurrents, exploring themes of lost civilizations, impossible worlds, and the melancholy of unfulfilled desire. Readers should expect lyrical beauty interwoven with unsettling visions, as Smith creates elaborate landscapes drawn from memory, dream, and forbidden knowledge.
The Human Chord
Written by British master of supernatural fiction Algernon Blackwood, 'The Human Chord' explores the dangerous intersection of mystical power and human vulnerability through the story of Robert Spinrobin, a young man drawn into the mysterious household of an extraordinary retired clergyman. When Spinrobin accepts a peculiar position as secretary to the enigmatic Mr. Skale—a man conducting secret experiments in sound—he discovers himself caught in a web of supernatural forces that manipulate the very fabric of human connection and identity. The novella exemplifies Blackwood's fascination with occult philosophy and the hidden currents that flow beneath ordinary reality.
The Damned
Written by Algernon Blackwood in the early 20th century, "The Damned" exemplifies the author's mastery of subtle psychological horror and supernatural dread. The narrator accepts an invitation to stay at The Towers, a grand but oppressive country mansion owned by his sister's friend Mrs. Franklyn, widow of a severe, domineering banker. What begins as a respite from London life gradually reveals itself as something far more sinister, as both the narrator and his sister experience mounting unease they cannot fully articulate or explain.
The Promise of Air
Written by Algernon Blackwood, a master of the supernatural and weird fiction, "The Promise of Air" follows Joseph Wimble, an ordinary young man consumed by an extraordinary passion for birds and the freedom of flight. When he meets Joan, a farmer's daughter who seems to embody the grace and mystery of his aerial yearnings, he believes he has found his soulmate—only to discover that their shared transcendence cannot survive the weight of earthly reality. This philosophical and dreamlike tale explores the tragedy of aspiration meeting mundane life.
The Centaur
"The Centaur" is Algernon Blackwood's mysterious tale of Terence O'Malley, a wandering Irish correspondent who encounters two strangers aboard a Mediterranean steamer—a father and son whose physical presence seems to defy ordinary perception. Written in Blackwood's characteristic style, the story explores themes of hidden nature, spiritual kinship, and the boundaries between human and animal consciousness. Readers should expect an introspective, atmospheric narrative that privileges intuition and mystical experience over rational explanation, culminating in an encounter that challenges the protagonist's understanding of identity and transformation.
The Education of Uncle Paul
Paul Rivers, a solitary wood cruiser who has spent twenty years in the Canadian wilderness, returns to England at age forty-five to claim an inheritance and reconnect with his estranged sister. Haunted by his inability to express his deep spiritual yearnings and aesthetic sensibilities, he arrives carrying an elaborate emotional disguise—a carefully constructed mask of gruff middle age meant to hide his childlike, dreaming nature. What unfolds is an exploration of a man struggling between his authentic self and the persona he believes the world demands, as he faces the unsettling prospect of encountering children who may penetrate his defenses and expose the undeveloped aspects of his soul.
The Extra Day
A Dreamer’s Tales
Lord Dunsany·1910·2h 39m read A Dreamer's Tales is a collection of allegorical and fantastical stories by Lord Dunsany, written in the early 20th century and reflecting the author's unique blend of mythology, whimsy, and melancholy. These tales inhabit strange, otherworldly lands where ordinary objects possess souls, ancient cities harbor secrets, and the boundary between the material and spiritual realms grows perilously thin. Readers should expect lyrical prose, dreamlike logic, and stories that prioritize atmosphere and philosophical meditation over conventional plot.
The King of Elfland's Daughter
Lord Dunsany·1924·5h 2m read Lord Dunsany's 1924 fantasy novel follows Alveric, son of the Lord of Erl, as he undertakes a perilous quest to marry the King of Elfland's daughter, Lirazel, in fulfillment of his people's desire for a magical ruler. With the aid of a magical sword forged from otherworldly materials by a witch, Alveric crosses the twilight boundary into Elfland to claim his bride. This lyrical tale explores the collision between the timeless realm of faery and the mortal world, examining the consequences of love and ambition across magical boundaries.
Heart of Darkness
Joseph Conrad·1899·2h 45m read Joseph Conrad's *Heart of Darkness* (1899) is a novella that emerged from the author's experiences in the Congo and stands as a landmark of modernist literature. Through the frame narrative of Marlow recounting his journey to fellow seamen aboard the Thames, the novel explores themes of imperialism, moral corruption, and the darkness lurking within civilization itself. Readers should expect a richly atmospheric, psychologically complex meditation on colonialism and human nature, told through Marlow's mesmerizing but digressive storytelling.
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 Wonderful Wizard of Oz
L. Frank Baum·1900·2h 51m read L. Frank Baum's 1900 classic follows Dorothy, a Kansas farm girl swept away by a cyclone to the magical Land of Oz. Stranded in a strange world and desperate to return home, she embarks on a journey to the Emerald City to seek the help of the Great Wizard Oz, gathering companions along the way. This foundational fantasy adventure blends wonder with darker undertones of displacement and the yearning for home.
Through the Looking-Glass
Lewis Carroll·1871·2h 8m read Published in 1871 as the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking-Glass extends Lewis Carroll's exploration of logic, language, and imagination into a chess-themed mirror world. Carroll crafted this novel to delight child readers while embedding sophisticated wordplay and philosophical puzzles that reward closer analysis. Readers should expect whimsical encounters with talking flowers, peculiar insects, and memorable characters like Humpty Dumpty and the Red Queen, all set within a surreal landscape governed by its own backwards logic.
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.
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 Library Window
Margaret Oliphant·1896·1h 21m read "The Library Window" is Margaret Oliphant's subtle supernatural tale of a young woman spending a summer with her elderly aunt in the Scottish town of St. Rule's. She becomes fascinated by a mysterious window in the College Library opposite their home—one that the townspeople cannot agree even exists—and discovers she possesses an unusual ability to perceive what others cannot. As her perception of the window's interior deepens, she begins to see signs of a mysterious occupant, drawing her into an increasingly absorbing and inexplicable mystery.
The Portrait
Margaret Oliphant·1881·1h 13m read Written by Margaret Oliphant in the Victorian era, "The Portrait" explores the sudden reappearance of a mysterious painting in a country estate—a full-length portrait of a young woman that disrupts the ordered, austere life of a reclusive father and his returned son. The story blends domestic realism with uncanny suggestions as family secrets emerge alongside supernatural implications, inviting readers to question whether the portrait is merely a work of art or something far more unsettling.
The Open Door
Margaret Oliphant·1881·1h 20m read Amour Dure
"Amour Dure" follows the obsessive research of Professor Spiridion Trepka, a Polish historian working in the Italian town of Urbania in 1885. Through his diary entries, Trepka becomes increasingly consumed by the historical figure of Medea da Carpi, a beautiful Renaissance duchess infamous for captivating men to their deaths. As Trepka delves deeper into archives and local legends, the boundary between scholarly investigation and dangerous fascination begins to blur, suggesting that some historical figures may exert a strange power that transcends time itself.
A Phantom Lover
Vernon Lee·1886·1h 28m read Vernon Lee's "A Phantom Lover" is a psychological ghost story that explores obsession, identity, and the supernatural through the eyes of a portrait painter commissioned to capture the enigmatic Mrs. Alice Oke of Okehurst. Set in a perfectly preserved seventeenth-century English manor, the novella draws on Gothic atmosphere and family legend as the artist becomes increasingly absorbed in his subject—a woman who bears an uncanny resemblance to an ancestor involved in a centuries-old murder. Lee masterfully blends the realistic world of Victorian England with growing psychological unease, as the boundary between artistic obsession and supernatural influence becomes disturbingly unclear.
A Matter of Interest
Originally published in 1896, Robert W. Chambers's 'A Matter of Interest' presents itself as a firsthand account of an extraordinary scientific discovery on Long Island, though dismissed as fiction by contemporary journals. The narrator, a writer, encounters Professor Holroyd and his daughter Daisy conducting a mysterious research project in a remote coastal location, only to find himself recruited into their investigation of something neither fossil nor simply natural. Expect a tale that blurs the boundary between scientific inquiry and the inexplicable, with growing atmospheric dread as the truth of the expedition slowly unfolds.
Lilith
George MacDonald·1895·6h 47m read George MacDonald's "Lilith" is a philosophical fantasy novel first published in 1895, blending Gothic supernatural elements with dreamlike exploration of identity and morality. After discovering a mysterious mirror in his ancestral home's garret, the protagonist is drawn into a strange otherworldly realm guided by Mr. Raven, a spectral librarian who may be far more—or far less—than human. Readers should expect a meditative, symbolic narrative that prioritizes philosophical inquiry and spiritual transformation over conventional plot, as MacDonald explores themes of selfhood, redemption, and the nature of existence itself.