
A modestly arranged set of eerie tales invites listeners into a world where the uncanny slips through the cracks of ordinary life. The editor’s brief note stresses a plain, almost forensic style that lets the strange events speak for themselves, without the flourish of conventional storytelling. This restrained approach heightens the sense that each account is drawn from genuine reports rather than fanciful invention.
The opening story plunges us into a mist‑shrouded Iowa night, where a cheerful Baptist minister encounters a silent, spectral figure on a lonely bridge. His polite invitation is met with a chilling, wordless gesture that hints at a hidden horror, prompting the horse to bolt in terror. When the minister returns with companions, they discover a grim scene that confirms the presence of something far beyond the natural, leaving the mystery lingering long after the tale’s first act.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (97K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1842–1913
Best known for razor-sharp wit and unsettling short fiction, this American writer turned his Civil War experience into some of the darkest, most memorable stories in 19th-century literature. His life ended in one of literature’s great mysteries after he vanished in Mexico in 1913.
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