The Horror Library
Browse Stories
7 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
The Beast With Five Fingers
W. F. Harvey·1928·44 min read W. F. Harvey's "The Beast with Five Fingers" is a masterpiece of early twentieth-century weird fiction, first published in 1928. The story traces a grotesque supernatural inheritance: after the death of blind scholar Adrian Borlsover, his severed right hand—possessed of apparent sentience and autonomy—arrives at his nephew Eustace's estate, where it begins a campaign of evasion and violence. Blending body horror with psychological unease, Harvey explores themes of inheritance, control, and the violation of natural order through meticulous prose and escalating dread.
The Haunter of the Dark
H. P. Lovecraft·1936·40 min read First published in 1936, 'The Haunter of the Dark' represents H. P. Lovecraft's culmination of the Cthulhu Mythos, weaving together cosmic dread with New England gothic atmosphere. The story follows writer Robert Blake, who becomes obsessed with a mysterious abandoned church on Federal Hill in Providence, only to discover that his investigation has awakened something ancient and unknowable. Lovecraft masterfully builds tension through diary entries, newspaper accounts, and archaeological detail, exploring themes of forbidden knowledge and humanity's insignificance in the face of cosmic forces.
The Thing on the Doorstep
H. P. Lovecraft·1937·46 min read "The Thing on the Doorstep" (1933) is H. P. Lovecraft's exploration of body-snatching and cosmic horror set in his fictional New England town of Arkham. The narrator, Daniel Upton, recounts his relationship with his friend Edward Derby and the catastrophic marriage to the sinister Asenath Waite, whose occult mastery enables her to exchange consciousnesses with her husband. As Edward's sanity deteriorates and Asenath gains control of his body for longer periods, Upton must confront the horrifying reality of supernatural forces far beyond conventional understanding.
The Horror at Red Hook
H. P. Lovecraft·1927·36 min read Published in 1925, "The Horror at Red Hook" represents H.P. Lovecraft's venture into urban cosmic horror, exploring the dark underbelly of 1920s Brooklyn through the experiences of police detective Thomas Malone. The story weaves together occult scholarship, immigrant communities, and ancient evil to suggest that modern cities harbor supernatural horrors lurking beneath their mundane surfaces. Readers should expect a slow-building atmosphere of dread, obscure mystical references, and the author's characteristic blend of psychological deterioration and glimpses into incomprehensible cosmic forces.
The Shunned House
H. P. Lovecraft·1937·47 min read Written in 1924, "The Shunned House" is H.P. Lovecraft's investigation into the sinister history of a Providence, Rhode Island dwelling where occupants died in suspicious numbers across generations. The narrator and his elderly uncle, a physician and antiquarian, uncover a dark genealogy connecting the house to French Huguenot settlers with occult associations, uncovering hints of vampirism and forces beyond conventional understanding. Expect a richly documented gothic mystery that blends historical detail with creeping dread, culminating in a harrowing nocturnal vigil.
The Colour out of Space
H. P. Lovecraft·1927·54 min read Published in 1927, "The Colour out of Space" is H. P. Lovecraft's masterwork of cosmic horror, exploring humanity's helplessness against incomprehensible forces from beyond. The story follows a surveyor investigating the ruins of abandoned farms in rural Massachusetts, where he learns from old Ammi Pierce the horrifying truth about a meteorite that fell decades earlier and brought with it an alien contamination of unknowable properties. Expect an escalating descent into atmospheric dread, scientific mystery, and the gradual destruction of a family through exposure to something utterly beyond human understanding.
The Call of Cthulhu
H. P. Lovecraft·1928·52 min read Published in 1928, H.P. Lovecraft's "The Call of Cthulhu" is a foundational work of cosmic horror that synthesizes the author's evolving mythos into a cohesive narrative. Presented as a historical document assembled from the papers of a deceased academic, the story traces the discovery of a global cult devoted to an ancient, slumbering entity—and the disturbing realization that human civilization is but a brief interlude in a universe populated by vast, incomprehensible forces. Lovecraft crafts an atmosphere of creeping dread as seemingly disparate clues converge into a terrifying pattern that threatens the reader's fundamental understanding of reality.