The Horror Library
Browse Stories
55 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
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.
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
Victor Hugo·1831·13h 9m read Victor Hugo's *The Hunchback of Notre-Dame* opens in Paris on January 6, 1482, during the festive Epiphany celebrations and Feast of Fools. This Gothic masterpiece, published in 1831, was written to draw attention to the neglected medieval architecture of Paris and to explore themes of social injustice, beauty, and acceptance. Readers should expect a rich tapestry of medieval Parisian life, intricate plotting, and Hugo's characteristic blend of romance, drama, and social commentary.
A Christmas Carol
Charles Dickens·1843·2h 4m read Charles Dickens's *A Christmas Carol* (1843) is a novella that emerged from the author's social concerns about poverty and morality in Victorian England. The story follows Ebenezer Scrooge, a miserly businessman, as he encounters supernatural visitations on Christmas Eve that challenge his worldview and offer him a chance at redemption. Readers should expect a tale blending Gothic atmosphere with profound moral instruction, where ghosts serve as instruments of spiritual awakening rather than mere horror.
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde·1890·5h 42m read Oscar Wilde's 1890 novel follows the beautiful young Dorian Gray, whose portrait ages while he remains eternally youthful—a consequence of his wish for eternal beauty and his descent into hedonistic excess. Through the corrupting influence of the cynical Lord Henry Wotton, Dorian pursues a life of sensual gratification while the painting bears the moral burden of his sins. This philosophical work explores the price of vanity, the dangers of unchecked desire, and the impossibility of separating aesthetic beauty from moral degradation.
The Night Land
William Hope Hodgson's 'The Night Land' is a sweeping philosophical romance and science fiction epic, written in the early 20th century as an exploration of love, loss, and humanity's distant future. The narrative begins in Hodgson's contemporary world with the tragic love story of the narrator and the beautiful Mirdath, whose death propels him into vivid visions of Earth's far future, where he explores a dying world and searches for reunion with his beloved across time itself. Readers should expect a unique blend of archaic, poetic prose, intimate romance, and increasingly strange and wondrous visions of a mysterious far future.
The Jewel of Seven Stars
Bram Stoker·1903·6h 29m read Published in 1897, Bram Stoker's *The Jewel of Seven Stars* is a supernatural mystery centered on the sudden, violent attack on a wealthy Egyptologist, Abel Trelawny, and the cryptic instructions he leaves for his daughter Margaret. The novel weaves together elements of Egyptology, arcane ritual, and psychological suspense as Margaret seeks help from Malcolm Ross, a barrister and family acquaintance, to uncover the truth behind her father's mysterious affliction. Readers should expect an intricate Victorian mystery with gothic undertones and the suggestion of dark forces operating just beyond rational explanation.
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 House of the Vampire
Published in 1907, George Sylvester Viereck's 'The House of the Vampire' presents a psychological horror novel centered on the enigmatic Reginald Clarke, a brilliant writer and intellectual whose charismatic presence mysteriously drains the creative vitality and life force from those around him. The novella explores themes of artistic parasitism and psychological domination through the eyes of Ernest Fielding, a young poet who becomes entangled in Clarke's household. Written during a period of growing interest in decadent literature and psychoanalytic theory, this work reimagines the vampire myth as a subtle, intellectual predation rather than supernatural horror, making it a precursor to modern psychological thrillers.
The Lost Stradivarius
Written in the late 19th century, 'The Lost Stradivarius' is a masterwork of supernatural fiction that unfolds through the epistolary narrative of Miss Sophia Maltravers. The story centers on her brother John's mysterious encounters with an unseen presence in his Oxford rooms, which manifests whenever a particular suite of seventeenth-century Italian music is played. What begins as unexplained acoustic phenomena evolves into a haunting exploration of love, music, and the thin veil between the living and the dead, as John becomes convinced that a spirit has been drawn to his chamber night after night.
Varney the Vampire; Or, the Feast of Blood
Varney the Vampire, serialized in the 1840s as a penny dreadful, is one of the earliest and most influential vampire narratives in English literature. This sensational tale follows the nocturnal visitation of a mysterious, bloodthirsty creature upon a young woman named Flora Bannerworth during a violent storm. The story combines Gothic atmosphere with proto-horror elements, exploring themes of invasion, violation, and the terror of the inexplicable, while raising questions about the nature of the supernatural threat that haunts the Bannerworth household.
The House on the Borderland
Published in 1901, William Hope Hodgson's *The House on the Borderland* is a pioneering work of weird fiction that blends cosmic horror with metaphysical speculation. The narrative begins when two English tourists discover an ancient, ruined manuscript in the Irish wilderness, which recounts the otherworldly experiences of an isolated old man living in a house of mysterious origin. Readers should expect a profoundly strange journey through alternate dimensions and encounters with ancient, alien entities that challenge the boundaries of reality and sanity.
The Phantom of the Opera
Gaston Leroux·1910·5h 43m read Gaston Leroux's serialized novel, first published in 1909-1910, introduces the legendary Phantom of the Opera—a mysterious supernatural figure haunting the Paris Opera House. Set against the backdrop of a gala performance marking the retirement of the opera's previous managers, the story weaves together the disappearance of a scene-shifter, the miraculous rise of an unknown singer, and the strange presence of an invisible inhabitant who claims Box Five as his own. Readers should expect a masterful blend of Gothic atmosphere, romantic intrigue, and puzzle-box plotting that transformed the opera ghost from urban legend into literary immortality.
The Mysteries of Udolpho
The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) is Ann Radcliffe's masterpiece of Gothic fiction, widely regarded as a defining work of the genre. Set in 16th-century France and Italy, the novel follows Emily St. Aubert, a sensitive young woman whose peaceful life is disrupted by mysterious events and family secrets. Readers should expect an intricate blend of suspenseful plotting, psychological exploration, and the gradual unveiling of dark family mysteries within richly atmospheric settings.
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 strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Robert Louis Stevenson's seminal novella, first published in 1886, explores the duality of human nature through the story of Dr. Jekyll, a respectable London physician, and the mysterious Mr. Hyde. Written during the Victorian era's anxieties about scientific progress and moral restraint, the work has become a foundational text of psychological horror. Readers should expect a gripping tale of moral corruption, scientific transgression, and the terrifying consequences of unleashing one's darker impulses.
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.
The Turn of the Screw
Henry James·1898·3h 5m read Henry James's novella, serialized in 1898, remains one of the most psychologically complex and debated ghost stories in English literature. A young governess arrives at an English country estate to care for two beautiful children, only to become convinced that malevolent supernatural presences—ghosts of former staff members—are haunting the house and corrupting her charges. The narrative is presented through multiple frames: a group of people reading an account during the Christmas season, the account itself derived from the governess's own written testimony, which she conveyed years earlier to the narrator. Readers are left to wrestle with the central question of whether the apparitions are real or products of the governess's increasingly unstable imagination.
The Monk
Matthew Lewis·1796·9h 54m read The Monk, published in 1796, is Matthew Lewis's sensational Gothic novel that scandalized and captivated Regency-era readers with its lurid blend of religious corruption, demonic temptation, and psychological torment. The narrative opens in Madrid with the introduction of the virtuous young Antonia and the seemingly saintly Abbot Ambrosio, whose sermons entrance the city—a setup that belies the darkness to follow. Readers should expect a tale of seduction, supernatural transgression, and the catastrophic unraveling of an apparently perfect man.
The Castle of Otranto
Horace Walpole·1764·2h 31m read First published in 1764, Horace Walpole's 'The Castle of Otranto' is widely considered the foundational work of the Gothic novel genre. The story concerns Prince Manfred of Otranto, whose son Conrad is mysteriously crushed by an enormous helmet on his wedding day—a supernatural event that sets in motion a cascade of dark secrets, impossible omens, and moral transgressions. Written as a response to what Walpole saw as the constraints of contemporary fiction, this groundbreaking work blends medieval romance with psychological terror and the uncanny.