The Horror Library
Browse Stories
222 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
Mother Holle
This classic German fairy tale, collected by the Brothers Grimm, tells of a hardworking stepdaughter who falls down a well and enters a magical realm ruled by Mother Holle. The story contrasts virtue rewarded with laziness punished, exploring themes of labor, character, and supernatural justice that resonated deeply with 19th-century audiences. Readers should expect a timeless moral tale with fantastical elements, charming talking objects, and a satisfying if somewhat harsh denouement.
The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage
This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of three companions—a mouse, a bird, and a sausage—who live contentedly together, each performing assigned household duties. When the bird becomes dissatisfied and convinces the others to swap roles, a series of catastrophic consequences unfolds that destroys their happy home. Published as part of the Brothers Grimm's influential collection of German folktales, this darkly comedic story functions as a cautionary tale about the dangers of discontent and disrupting established order.
The Riddle
This Grimm fairy tale combines adventure, magical danger, and intellectual contest into a single narrative arc. A King's son encounters a witch whose poison inadvertently becomes the instrument of justice, then must solve an impossible riddle to win the hand of a proud princess. The story rewards cleverness and virtue while punishing wickedness, embodying the moral lessons characteristic of Grimm's collected tales.
Cinderella
This is the Grimm Brothers' version of the classic Cinderella tale, a German folk narrative that emphasizes magic, justice, and moral virtue. Unlike later sanitized versions, the Grimms' text includes darker elements—mutilation, supernatural punishment, and the active agency of magical birds—reflecting the oral storytelling traditions of early 19th-century Europe. Readers should expect a fairy tale concerned with reward for goodness and punishment for cruelty, featuring enchanted objects and a decisive, somewhat brutal resolution.
The Fisherman and His Wife
This classic German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm tells of a poor fisherman who catches an enchanted flounder and grants his wife's escalating wishes for wealth and power. Originally published in the early 19th century as part of the Kinder- und Hausmärchen collection, the story remains a timeless exploration of human ambition and the dangers of unchecked greed. Readers should expect a deceptively simple narrative that builds toward an increasingly dark and ominous tone as the wife's desires grow ever more grandiose and unnatural.
The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean
This classic German fairy tale from the Brothers Grimm collection personifies three humble objects—a straw, a coal, and a bean—who escape death in a poor woman's kitchen and embark on a journey together. The story serves as a cautionary fable about the consequences of recklessness and the value of prudence, while offering a whimsical explanation for a natural detail of the bean. Readers should expect a brief, charming moral tale in the Grimm tradition, rich with anthropomorphism and folkloric wisdom.
The White Snake
This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of a servant who accidentally consumes a magical white snake and gains the ability to understand the language of animals. When falsely accused of theft, he uses his new gift to prove his innocence and is rewarded with freedom to travel. Through a series of acts of kindness toward creatures in distress—fish, ants, and ravens—he unknowingly secures allies who will later aid him in winning a princess's hand through seemingly impossible tasks. The story celebrates compassion, courage, and the hidden rewards of virtue.
The Three Snake-Leaves
This Grimm fairy tale tells of a poor youth who rises through valor to marry a king's daughter, only to face a grim bargain: mutual burial if either spouse dies first. When the princess succumbs to illness, a miraculous encounter with magical snake-leaves allows him to restore her to life—only to discover that resurrection has transformed her heart toward treachery. The tale explores themes of love, loyalty, and justice through a test of devotion that ultimately reveals character and demands retribution.
Hansel and Grethel
This classic German fairy tale, collected by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, tells the story of two children abandoned in a forest by their impoverished parents and their encounter with a cannibalistic witch. A timeless narrative exploring themes of poverty, abandonment, and survival, the tale has captivated readers for generations with its dark atmosphere and the resourcefulness of its young protagonists. Readers should expect a richly atmospheric folk narrative with both Gothic horror and moments of childhood resilience.
The Three Spinners
This classic Grimm fairy tale subverts expectations by rewarding laziness through magical intervention and supernatural aid. Originally collected in the early 19th century as part of the Brothers Grimm's celebrated folklore compilation, the story presents a darkly comedic portrait of three otherworldly women whose physical deformities are revealed to be the literal consequences of their labor. Readers should expect a morality tale that cleverly undermines its own apparent lesson about industriousness.
The Three Little Men in the Wood
This classic Grimm fairy tale contrasts the fates of two stepdaughters through encounters with magical forest dwellers. Written by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm as part of their collection of German folk narratives, the story exemplifies the moral instruction typical of 19th-century children's literature, rewarding kindness and punishing cruelty through supernatural intervention. Readers should expect a straightforward narrative arc with clear cause-and-effect between character actions and magical consequences.
Rapunzel
This is the Grimm Brothers' classic fairy tale of Rapunzel, collected in the early 19th century from German oral tradition. The story follows a young girl locked away in a tower by an enchantress, her secret romance with a prince, and the magical and tragic events that unfold. Readers should expect a timeless tale of imprisonment, forbidden love, and redemption, with the characteristic dark elements and supernatural elements typical of Grimm's collection.
Little Brother and Little Sister
This classic German fairy tale, collected by the Brothers Grimm, tells of two children who flee their cruel stepmother into the forest, where a witch's curse transforms the brother into a roebuck. The story weaves together themes of sibling loyalty, redemption, and justice as the transformed brother is eventually discovered by a king whose bride becomes the queen. Readers should expect a richly layered narrative with magical transformations, tests of character, and the ultimate triumph of goodness over wickedness.
The Twelve Brothers
This classic fairy tale from the Brothers Grimm collection tells of twelve brothers who must flee their kingdom when their newborn sister arrives, having sworn vengeance against all maidens. Years later, their sister discovers their plight and seeks them out, only to accidentally transform them into ravens through a moment of innocent joy. Her selfless quest to break the curse—enduring seven years of enforced silence at the cost of her own life—ultimately saves her brothers and reveals the true nature of her heart. Readers should expect a richly layered story of family bonds, sacrifice, and redemption told in the Grimms' characteristic folkloric style.
The Wonderful Musician
This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of a musician who wanders through the forest seeking companionship, only to cruelly trap each animal that responds to his music—a wolf, fox, and hare—by deceiving them with promises to teach them to play. When the animals escape and seek revenge, a humble woodcutter drawn by the musician's playing intervenes to protect him. The story explores themes of deception, consequences, and the rewards of genuine human connection over manipulation.
The Good Bargain
This classic Grimm fairy tale follows a clever peasant whose naive dealings with animals and authority figures lead to unexpected consequences and rewards. Written as part of the Grimm brothers' foundational collection of German folklore, the story exemplifies the trickster narrative tradition where wit and persistence overcome both animal stubbornness and royal authority. Readers should expect a humorous, picaresque adventure filled with wordplay, absurdist logic, and moral ambiguity.
Faithful John
This classic Grimm fairy tale explores the power of unwavering loyalty through the story of Faithful John, a devoted servant who must protect his young king from a dangerous enchantment. When the king becomes obsessed with a portrait of the Princess of the Golden Dwelling, Faithful John is forced to choose between his promise to the dying king and his duty to save his master's life. A tale of sacrifice, devotion, and redemption that has captivated readers since its collection in the early 19th century.
The Wolf and the Seven Little Kids
This classic German folktale by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm tells the story of a mother goat who warns her seven children to beware of a cunning wolf while she forages in the forest. When the wolf arrives at their home, he must overcome their defenses through deception and disguise. A timeless tale of maternal love, childhood vulnerability, and justice, this story has endured for centuries as a cautionary narrative about the dangers of trusting appearances and the rewards of clever resourcefulness.
Our Lady’s Child
This classic Grimm fairy tale tells of a poor woodcutter's daughter raised by the Virgin Mary in heaven, who disobeys a divine command with tragic consequences. When she opens the forbidden thirteenth door of heaven, her transgression and subsequent lies result in her exile to a wild forest for years. The story traces her journey from punishment to redemption, exploring themes of obedience, repentance, and divine mercy through a medieval Christian lens.
Cat and Mouse in Partnership
This Grimm fairy tale is a moral fable about betrayal and the consequences of greed, likely collected in early 19th-century Germany as part of the brothers' effort to preserve traditional folk narratives. The story presents a seemingly innocent partnership between a cat and mouse that masks the cat's predatory nature and cunning deception. Readers should expect a darkly ironic conclusion that subverts the initial premise of friendship and cooperation.
The Frog-King, or Iron Henry
This is Jacob Grimm's classic fairy tale about a princess who makes a bargain with a frog to recover her golden ball, only to discover that her reluctant companion is actually a bewitched prince. Written as part of the Brothers Grimm's canonical collection of German folk tales, this story exemplifies the transformative power of promises kept and the redemptive nature of compassion. Readers should expect a whimsical yet morally instructive narrative where consequences follow broken oaths, and where magic and the supernatural serve to teach virtue.
August Heat
W. F. Harvey·1910·8 min read Written in 1910, W. F. Harvey's "August Heat" is a masterwork of psychological suspense that explores the terrifying intersection of coincidence and inevitability. On an oppressively hot August day in London, artist James Clarence Withencroft sketches a criminal in the dock, then encounters the man's exact likeness—a monumental mason named Atkinson—who has inexplicably inscribed Withencroft's name and today's date on a gravestone. The story builds dread through ordinary conversation and inexplicable circumstance, leaving the reader to grapple with questions of fate, premonition, and the thin boundary between coincidence and doom.
Atlantis
Clark Ashton Smith's 'Atlantis' is a lyric poem evoking the legendary sunken civilization through vivid, melancholic imagery. Written in Smith's characteristically ornate and decadent style, the poem captures the haunting beauty of a drowned world preserved beneath the ocean's weight. Readers should expect richly archaic language, supernatural atmosphere, and an exploration of lost grandeur—hallmarks of Smith's weird fiction aesthetic.
The Mahout
Published in the early 20th century, "The Mahout" is Clark Ashton Smith's meticulously plotted tale of vengeance set in colonial India. When a British newspaper editor witnesses a mysterious mahout training an elephant in the jungle, he unknowingly observes the final preparations for an elaborate and patient revenge spanning over a decade. The story explores themes of concealment, caste sacrifice, and the terrible price of justice pursued in silence.