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 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 Invisible Man
H. G. Wells·1897·3h 31m read H.G. Wells's seminal science fiction novel follows a mysterious stranger who arrives in the English village of Iping heavily bandaged and goggled, claiming to be an experimental investigator. Published in 1897, this groundbreaking work explores themes of scientific ambition unchecked by morality and the social isolation of the extraordinary. Readers should expect a gradually escalating mystery punctuated by growing alarm among villagers as the stranger's true nature becomes impossible to ignore.
The Island of Doctor Moreau
H. G. Wells·1896·3h 7m read H.G. Wells's 1896 novel follows Edward Prendick, a castaway rescued by the enigmatic Dr. Moreau and brought to a remote, unnamed island. As Prendick recovers from his ordeal at sea, he discovers that Moreau's isolated compound harbors a dark secret—the doctor is conducting bizarre biological experiments on animals, creating grotesque human-like creatures through vivisection and forced evolution. What begins as gratitude for rescue transforms into creeping horror as Prendick realizes the true nature of the island's inhabitants and the scientist's unholy ambitions.
The Mysterious Portrait
Nikolai Gogol·1835·1h 23m read Written in 1835, Gogol's "The Mysterious Portrait" is a masterwork of Russian Romantic horror that explores the corrupting influence of sudden wealth and ambition. When a struggling young artist purchases a haunting portrait at a junk shop, he experiences a series of terrifying supernatural visions that culminate in the discovery of hidden gold—a windfall that sets him on a path of moral and artistic decline. Readers should expect a complex narrative blending psychological terror, dark satire of Petersburg society, and profound moral questioning about artistic integrity and human greed.
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.
Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus
Mary Shelley·1818·5h 27m read Mary Shelley's *Frankenstein* (1818) is a foundational work of science fiction and Gothic literature, written when the author was only eighteen years old. The novel frames the story through letters from Arctic explorer Robert Walton to his sister, who rescues a mysterious, dying stranger—Victor Frankenstein—on the frozen sea. As Victor recovers, he recounts his harrowing tale of scientific ambition, obsession, and the terrible consequences of playing God. Readers should expect a deeply philosophical exploration of creation, responsibility, and the dangers of unchecked intellectual pride, wrapped in atmospheric Arctic settings and psychological horror.
The Familiar
Sheridan Le Fanu·1872·1h 1m read Written by Sheridan Le Fanu in the mid-19th century, "The Familiar" is a masterwork of psychological terror that probes the thin boundary between supernatural persecution and mental deterioration. Captain Barton, a rationalist and former naval officer, returns to Dublin only to be haunted by mysterious footsteps, cryptic letters, and a small, menacing figure—all apparently connected to a dark secret from his past. The story exemplifies Le Fanu's genius for creating mounting dread through ambiguity, leaving readers uncertain whether Barton is genuinely cursed or descending into madness.
The Man Whom the Trees Loved
Published in 1912, Algernon Blackwood's 'The Man Whom the Trees Loved' is a masterwork of supernatural atmosphere exploring the blurred boundary between human consciousness and the natural world. The story centers on an elderly gentleman, David Bittacy, whose lifelong communion with trees deepens when he meets an enigmatic artist who shares his unusual sensibility. As their friendship develops amid the mysterious New Forest, Bittacy's wife observes troubling changes in her husband—changes that suggest his bond with the forest may be drawing him across an invisible threshold. Readers should expect a slow-building sense of dread wrapped in beautiful, lyrical prose.
The Wendigo
Published in 1910, Algernon Blackwood's "The Wendigo" stands as one of the finest examples of cosmic horror set in the Canadian wilderness. The novella follows Dr. Cathcart, his nephew Simpson, and their guides on a hunting expedition in the desolate forests north of Rat Portage, where an encounter with an ancient, unknowable evil tests the limits of sanity and survival. Readers should expect atmospheric dread, the encroaching terror of vast and indifferent nature, and the psychological unraveling of men confronted by something beyond rational explanation.
The White People
Arthur Machen·1904·1h 17m read Arthur Machen's 'The White People' (1904) is a foundational work of weird fiction that frames an esoteric manuscript as evidence of genuine supernatural transgression. Through a philosophical prologue establishing sin as a transcendent violation of natural law, the narrative introduces a mysterious green journal written by a young girl describing her encounters with otherworldly beings and forbidden knowledge. The story explores the thin boundary between innocence and corruption, presenting ancient rites and alien languages that corrupt the protagonist's perception of reality itself.
The Great God Pan
Arthur Machen·1894·1h 35m read Arthur Machen's "The Great God Pan" (1894) is a landmark work of weird fiction that explores the catastrophic consequences of piercing the veil between the material and spiritual worlds. Through interlocking narratives—a surgeon's audacious experiment, a collector's macabre memoirs, and accounts of a mysterious woman's corrupting influence—the novella traces how contact with transcendent knowledge destroys those who encounter it. Readers should expect a deliberately fragmented, epistolary structure that builds dread through implication rather than explicit horror, with the true nature of the titular deity left tantalizingly ambiguous.
The Shadow Out of Time
Published in 1936, "The Shadow Out of Time" represents H. P. Lovecraft's ambitious synthesis of cosmic horror with time-spanning mystery and forbidden archaeology. The novella follows Professor Nathaniel Wingate Peaslee's investigation into his own inexplicable five-year amnesia in 1908–1913, during which another consciousness seemingly inhabited his body, and the horrifying dreams that plague him afterward. Readers should expect a masterwork of Lovecraftian atmosphere—combining meticulous scholarly documentation with escalating dread—as Peaslee uncovers evidence that his missing years may have involved projection into an alien race's distant past.
The Whisperer in Darkness
H. P. Lovecraft·1931·1h 54m read Written in 1930, "The Whisperer in Darkness" represents H. P. Lovecraft's mature synthesis of cosmic horror and folklore investigation. The story follows an academic's correspondence with a reclusive Vermont farmer who claims evidence of alien entities mining metals beneath the hills—beings connected to the forgotten legends of New England and the forbidden knowledge of the Necronomicon. Lovecraft masterfully blends epistolary narrative, scholarly inquiry, and mounting dread as rational skepticism gradually gives way to terrifying certainty.
The Dunwich Horror
H. P. Lovecraft·1929·1h 16m read Published in 1929, 'The Dunwich Horror' is H. P. Lovecraft's masterwork of cosmic dread, set in the decaying Massachusetts hamlet of Dunwich where a degenerate family harbors an unspeakable secret. The story traces the mysterious birth and rapid, unnatural development of Wilbur Whateley, whose parentage and purpose become increasingly clear through mounting supernatural phenomena and forbidden research. Readers should expect a deeply atmospheric exploration of folk horror, ancient cosmic forces, and the corruption of human flesh by entities beyond human comprehension.
The Dreams in the Witch House
H. P. Lovecraft·1933·1h 4m read First published in 1933, "The Dreams in the Witch House" represents H. P. Lovecraft's fusion of mathematical horror with colonial New England folklore. The story follows Walter Gilman, a brilliant mathematics student who rents a room in Arkham's infamous Witch House—where the seventeenth-century witch Keziah Mason vanished after practicing forbidden geometries. As Gilman studies non-Euclidean calculus and correlates it with ancient magical texts, he finds himself pulled into waking nightmares and interdimensional spaces, haunted by the witch's familiar, Brown Jenkin, and Keziah's lingering presence. The narrative explores the terrifying possibility that mathematical knowledge and occult power converge at the boundaries of human sanity and physical reality.
The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath
H. P. Lovecraft·1943·3h 5m read H. P. Lovecraft's 'The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath' is an epic novella published in 1943 that synthesizes many of the author's earlier dream-cycle stories into a grand culmination. Randolph Carter, a recurring protagonist in Lovecraft's work, embarks on an audacious quest through the dreamlands to locate the mysterious castle of the Great Ones atop unknown Kadath and reclaim visions of a marvellous sunset city. This sprawling narrative weaves together cosmic horror, eldritch geography, and encounters with strange beings—from the industrious zoogs to sinister interdimensional merchants—as Carter confronts the terrible truth about the nature of the gods and reality itself. Readers should expect baroque, digressive prose filled with invented place-names and a pervasive sense of cosmic dread.
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
H. P. Lovecraft·1941·3h 42m read Published in 1927, H.P. Lovecraft's "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward" is a novella that blends genealogical mystery with cosmic horror, exploring a young man's dangerous obsession with his colonial ancestor. Written during Lovecraft's most productive period, the story exemplifies his technique of revealing forbidden knowledge through accumulated documentary evidence and first-person testimony. Readers should expect a carefully constructed narrative of psychological and physical transformation, grounded in the real geography of Providence, Rhode Island, where the author lived.