The Horror Library
Browse Stories
90 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
The Passing of Marcus O'Brien
Jack London·1901·22 min read Published in 1901 during the height of public fascination with the Yukon Gold Rush, Jack London's "The Passing of Marcus O'Brien" explores frontier justice and the consequences of rigid morality in lawless lands. Judge Marcus O'Brien administers summary punishments in the remote mining camp of Red Cow, where criminals are set adrift on the Yukon River with meager rations—until he himself becomes the victim of a drunken prank that casts him into the wilderness without supplies. The story examines how the judge's own harsh judicial system becomes his undoing in a landscape indifferent to human justice.
Thrawn Janet
Originally published in 1881, "Thrawn Janet" is Robert Louis Stevenson's masterwork of Scottish folk horror, blending supernatural dread with psychological complexity. The story examines the collision between rationalist theology and ancient supernatural evil when a young minister hires a woman whose strange affliction may be something far darker than illness. Readers should expect a richly atmospheric tale told in vernacular Scots dialect, combining community hysteria, demonic possession, and the minister's slow descent into understanding that some forces resist rational explanation.
The Hashish Eater -or- the Apocalypse of Evil
This prose poem by Clark Ashton Smith, likely written in the early 20th century, is a hallucinatory narrative spoken by a hashish eater describing his drug-induced visions. The narrator becomes an omnipotent being commanding cosmic forces and impossible worlds, only to find his godlike dream empire collapsing into a nightmare of pursuing monsters and existential dread. Smith's baroque, ornate style creates a vertigo-inducing journey through impossible geometries, alien worlds, and grotesque manifestations that culminates in a cosmic horror revelation.
Poltarnees, Beholder of Ocean
Lord Dunsany·1910·20 min read Written by Lord Dunsany in the early twentieth century, this lyrical fantasy tale explores the eternal tension between the known and the unknowable. The story of the Inner Lands—three peaceful kingdoms protected from the outside world—examines why successive generations of men are drawn irresistibly to glimpse the Sea beyond the mountain Poltarnees, despite knowing none who have ventured there have returned. Through the doomed love story of Athelvok the hunter and Princess Hilnaric, Dunsany crafts a meditation on beauty, temptation, and the transformative power of forbidden knowledge.
Idle Days on the Yann
Lord Dunsany·1910·29 min read "Idle Days on the Yann" is Lord Dunsany's dreamy fantasy voyage down an exotic river toward the sea, published in his 1905 collection *The King of Elfland's Daughter*. The story follows an unnamed narrator's journey aboard the merchant ship *Bird of the River*, encountering wondrous and unsettling cities, mysterious peoples, and the boundary between dreams and reality. Dunsany's lyrical prose creates an atmosphere of poetic melancholy and otherworldly beauty, blending adventure with introspection about memory, loss, and the fading of imagination.
The Sword of Welleran
Lord Dunsany·1908·25 min read Lord Dunsany's "The Sword of Welleran" is a lyrical fantasy tale set in the city of Merimna, a once-mighty civilization that has grown complacent in its glory, relying on the memory of six ancient heroes—particularly Welleran—to protect it from external threats. Written in Dunsany's distinctive ornate prose style, the story explores themes of lost martial virtue, the power of legend, and what happens when a city must face real danger while defended only by statues and fading memories. Readers should expect a meditation on heroism, sacrifice, and the bittersweet cost of salvation.
Negotium Perambulans
E.F. Benson·1922·27 min read E.F. Benson's 'Negotium Perambulans' is a masterwork of cosmic horror set in the isolated Cornish village of Polearn, where the narrator returns after twenty years to rediscover a place bound by ancient, mysterious forces. Drawing on Benson's gift for blending the mundane with the inexplicable, the story explores how a community isolated for centuries becomes attuned to powers—both benign and malevolent—that operate beyond rational understanding. The reader should expect a slow-building atmosphere of dread culminating in a confrontation with something utterly alien and unknowable.
Mrs. Amworth
E.F. Benson·1922·26 min read E.F. Benson's 'Mrs. Amworth' is a masterwork of restrained gothic horror set in the idyllic English village of Maxley. Originally published in 1925, the story exemplifies Benson's ability to locate cosmic dread within the mundane, using the sudden arrival of a charming widow to unravel a carefully hidden supernatural threat. Readers should expect atmospheric tension, a protagonist drawn reluctantly into occult investigation, and the gradual revelation of a vampire's true nature beneath a veneer of social propriety.
Caterpillars
E.F. Benson·1912·16 min read "Caterpillars" is E.F. Benson's unsettling tale of a guest at an Italian villa who experiences vivid nightmares of grotesque, luminescent caterpillars with crab-like pincers—only to discover a real specimen in the morning. Published in the early 20th century, this story exemplifies Benson's mastery of psychological horror, blending ambiguity between dream and reality with a devastating final revelation. The reader should expect a slow-building sense of dread, matter-of-fact narration that makes the impossible seem plausible, and a conclusion that recontextualizes everything as something far more sinister than mere nightmare.
The Room in the Tower
E.F. Benson·1912·24 min read First published in 1912, E.F. Benson's "The Room in the Tower" is a masterwork of psychological supernatural fiction that blurs the boundary between dream and reality. The narrator recounts fifteen years of recurring nightmares about a sinister house and a mysterious room, only to discover the house actually exists—and the horrors of his dreams begin to manifest in waking life. This story exemplifies Benson's skill at building dread through atmosphere and the unreliable nature of perception.
The Trial for Murder
Charles Dickens·1861·21 min read Originally published in 1865, "The Trial for Murder" is Charles Dickens's exploration of the uncanny and the inexplicable, told as a first-person account by a respectable banker who experiences a series of supernatural visions surrounding a murder trial. The narrator witnesses a ghostly figure—the murdered man—who appears to him before, during, and after serving as jury foreman, wielding an influence over the trial that defies rational explanation. Dickens employs his characteristic attention to atmospheric detail and psychological realism to examine the boundary between objective fact and subjective experience, leaving readers to draw their own conclusions about what truly transpires.
The Birthmark
Published in 1843, "The Birthmark" is Nathaniel Hawthorne's cautionary tale about the dangers of perfectionism and scientific hubris. The story follows Aylmer, a brilliant scientist whose obsession with removing a small birthmark from his wife Georgiana's cheek drives him to attempt an experimental treatment with tragic consequences. Hawthorne explores the tension between the spiritual and material worlds, asking whether human flaws are essential to our humanity or obstacles to be overcome at any cost.
The Minister's Black Veil
Published in 1836, Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Minister's Black Veil" is a masterwork of American Gothic fiction exploring the nature of sin, secrecy, and human judgment. When the respected Reverend Hooper inexplicably begins wearing a black veil that conceals his face, it sets off a chain reaction of fear and speculation throughout his small New England parish. The story examines how a single symbol can transform perception and isolation, while questioning whether we all hide darker truths behind socially acceptable facades.
Young Goodman Brown
Published in 1835, Nathaniel Hawthorne's 'Young Goodman Brown' is a masterwork of American Gothic fiction that explores the hidden darkness beneath Puritan morality. The story follows a young man's night journey into the forest, where he encounters a mysterious stranger and witnesses a diabolical assembly that challenges everything he believes about his community and himself. Readers should expect a tale of ambiguity and psychological torment—one that questions whether the night's events are real or a fevered dream, and either way, leaves the protagonist spiritually destroyed.
The Extraordinary Experiment of Dr. Calgroni
Published in the early 20th century, "The Extraordinary Experiment of Dr. Calgroni" explores the dangers of unchecked scientific ambition through the story of an eccentric surgeon who arrives in a quiet mountain town with a radical theory about prolonging human life. When the doctor purchases a gorilla and begins conducting secret experiments on the village half-wit, he sets in motion a horrifying transformation that unleashes unforeseen consequences. Readers should expect a tale of medical horror that examines the ethical boundaries of science and the monstrous results of playing god with human consciousness.
The Weaving Shadows
In this early 20th-century supernatural tale, detective Chet Burke investigates a disturbing case brought to him by Chet Hayden, a carpenter haunted by inexplicable manifestations in his sister's old farmhouse in the Hudson Highlands. Hayden describes witnessing shadowy, weaving forms that appear nightly in his attic room, accompanied by pools of mysterious blood and a terrifying compulsion. Burke's investigation will uncover a dark secret hidden within the house's very walls, connecting past murders to present supernatural torment.
The Accusing Voice
Meredith Davis·1923·23 min read Written in the early 20th century, "The Accusing Voice" is a psychological thriller that explores the destructive power of guilt and conscience. A jury foreman who helped convict a man for murder is haunted—or driven to madness—by a mysterious, disembodied voice that appears across three separate encounters, each time pushing him toward confession or suicide. As Defoe's mental state deteriorates, the reader is left to question whether the Voice is real or a manifestation of his guilty conscience, culminating in a shocking revelation that upends the entire narrative.
The Place of Madness
Published in the early 20th century, "The Place of Madness" is a psychological horror story that explores the devastating effects of solitary confinement and the power of guilt upon the human mind. When a Prison Commission investigates allegations of brutality, a convict named Martin Ellis testifies about the horrors of the dark cell—a pitch-black isolation chamber. Dr. Blalock, a board member who doubts Ellis's claims, volunteers to experience the cell himself to prove it isn't as terrible as described, with catastrophic consequences for his sanity and his carefully hidden secrets.
The Ghoul and the Corpse
G. A. Wells·1923·24 min read Chris Bonner arrives at a remote trading post in Alaska with an extraordinary and disturbing tale: while prospecting in a desolate valley, he discovers a prehistoric ape-man frozen in a glacier and, against his better judgment, thaws the corpse—only to find it reviving to horrifying life. Published in the weird fiction tradition, this story exemplifies early 20th-century anxieties about evolution, the dangers of scientific curiosity, and the terror of confronting evolutionary history made flesh. Readers should expect a classic frame narrative with an unreliable narrator and an ambiguous ending that leaves the truth deliberately uncertain.
The Ghost Guard
Bryan Irvine·1923·26 min read "The Ghost Guard" is a supernatural revenge tale set in Granite River Prison, where the inflexible guard Asa Shores—disliked by every convict yet beloved by his fellow guards—is murdered by an unknown assailant. Published in the pulp tradition, the story explores themes of duty, justice, and the supernatural when Shores' ghost appears to return from beyond the grave, terrorizing the very convict who may have orchestrated his death. Readers should expect a tense atmospheric narrative that blends prison drama with genuinely eerie supernatural elements, culminating in a darkly ironic fate.
Hark! The Rattle!
A tale of supernatural vengeance set in the sweltering Florida Everglades and the jazz-age nightclubs of New York. When Jerry Hammer encounters the sculptor Tain Dirk at a fashionable rooftop venue, he recognizes in the young man something far more sinister than human—the vengeful soul of a rattlesnake that killed Hammer's companion years before. As the mysterious dancer Bimi Tal takes the stage, the story weaves between past and present, revealing how the boundaries between beast and human blur when dark forces inhabit the living.
The Grave: A Story of Stark Terror
Published in the early 20th century, "The Grave: A Story of Stark Terror" uses the devastated landscape of World War I's Mount Kemmel as the setting for a tale of psychological deterioration and cosmic dread. The story presents a German officer's diary entries chronicling his entombment in a collapsed dugout, combined with an eyewitness account of his horrifying emergence weeks later. Readers should expect a descent into madness rendered through intimate first-person testimony, culminating in a vision of human degradation that blurs the line between the living and the dead.
The Mystery of Black Jean
Julian Kilman·1923·17 min read A frontier tale told by an aging narrator recounting the mysterious disappearance of Black Jean, a French-Canadian giant and bear-wrestler, and the enigmatic schoolteacher who came into his life. Published in the early twentieth century, "The Mystery of Black Jean" exemplifies the weird fiction tradition of strange rural communities and inscrutable strangers, building toward a dark resolution suggested through circumstantial evidence rather than proof. Expect a methodical, atmospheric account of how a remote settlement becomes complicit in an ambiguous crime.
The Red Room
H. G. Wells·1894·18 min read H. G. Wells' "The Red Room" is a masterwork of psychological horror published in 1896 that deconstructs the ghost story tradition by suggesting that fear itself—rather than any supernatural entity—is the true haunting. A skeptical young man accepts a dare to spend the night in a notoriously haunted chamber at Lorraine Castle, only to encounter something far more terrifying than any apparition. The story exemplifies Wells' gift for exploring the rational mind's encounter with the inexplicable and remains one of the most psychologically penetrating tales of its era.