Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Book of Shadows Vol 2 - cover

The Book of Shadows Vol 2

Bram Stoker, John Buchan, H. G. Wells, Robert W. Chambers, Arthur Machen, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, William Fryer Harvey, Mary Webb, Sir Hugh Walpole, William Wymark Jacobs, Masterpiece Everywhere

Publisher: Masterpiece Everywhere

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Discover the world of ghosts and spirits with this collection of classics on ghosts.
The best of the genre's literature.

The Judge's House
by Bram Stoker
     (1847–1912)
The Red Room
by H. G. Wells
     (1866–1946)
A Pleasant Evening
by Robert W. Chambers
     (1865–1933)
The Monkey's Paw
by William Wymark Jacobs
     (1863–1943)
The Shadows on the Wall
by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
     (1852–1930)
Munitions of War
by Arthur Machen
     (1863–1947)
Mr. Tallent's Ghost
by Mary Webb
     (1881–1927)
Fullcircle
by John Buchan
     (1875-1940)
The Clock
by William Fryer Harvey
     (1885–1937)
The Little Ghost
by Sir Hugh Walpole
     (1884–1941)
Available since: 10/01/2021.

Other books that might interest you

  • Frankenstein - cover

    Frankenstein

    Mary Shelley

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    The story of Victor Frankenstein, a Swiss scientist, starts and ends in the frozen wastes of the Arctic. There, he tells Robert Walton, his English rescuer, about his obsessive quest to create life and its disastrous results. He has attempted to make a superhuman and succeeded in producing a terrible monster instead. The being is physically repulsive and Frankenstein, terrified by what he has done, abandons him. Neglected and uncared for, the creature turns to evil. Many of the other characters, from the angelic Elizabeth to the faithful friend Henry Clerval, innocently face their violent dooms because of Frankenstein's quarrel with his creature.
    Show book
  • The Story of Baelbrow - cover

    The Story of Baelbrow

    E. & H. Heron

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A ghost story with a mysterious twist. Flaxman Low is summoned to Baelbrow, the ancestral home of the Swaffam family, to investigate a strange occurance. Although Baelbrow has long been known to be haunted, the family ghost had for centuries restricted itself to occasional rustlings on the stairs or sighs in the pantry. Suddenly the ghost has taken on a much more sinister and corporeal form. It lies in wait for people and attacks them viciously, leaving them unconscious and exhausted.Then one Wednesday, one of the servants is found dead in the corridor, known to be a favourite haunt of the ghost. The cause of death is uncertain, but she is found to be strangely anaemic and has an odd pustule on her neck... traits which are shared with other victims of the evil spectre.Flaxman Low and the young Swaffam decide to set a trap for the ghost.
    Show book
  • Dr Jeckyll & Mr Hyde {Christopher Lee) - cover

    Dr Jeckyll & Mr Hyde...

    Robert Louis Stevenson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is an unusually complex novel. The reader is left guessing as to the true nature of the evil Mr Hyde, and what his hold over the benevolent Dr Jekyll may be, until almost the end.  Then the truth is revealed in retrospect, by letter, and a number of baffling events are finally explained. Acting as a backcloth to the character’s confusion and despair are the foggy, sinister streets of Victorian London.
    Show book
  • Dead Funny: Encore - More Horror Stories by Comedians - cover

    Dead Funny: Encore - More Horror...

    Robin Ince, Johnny Mains

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What happens when mirth turns to murder? When the screams are not from joy, but flesh-ripping pain? Dead Funny: Encore is the second helping of monstrous tales from the brightest lights in UK comedy.
    Award winners Robin Ince and Johnny Mains team up for this second exploration of the relationship between comedy and horror, the dark follow up to 2014's smash hit debut, Dead Funny.
    Featuring stories by: James Acaster, Clare Ferguson Walker, Toby Hadoke, Natalie Haynes, Rufus Hound, Robin Ince, Elis James, Stewart Lee, Josie Long, Alice Lowe, Jason Manford, Alan Moore, Andrew O'Neill, Kiri Pritchard-McLean, John Robertson and Isy Suttie.
    Show book
  • A Time for Silence - cover

    A Time for Silence

    Philippa Carr

    • 0
    • 3
    • 0
    While the world teeters on the brink of World War I, a young woman’s indiscretion leads to a seething viper’s nest of blackmail and murder In 1912, with war looming on the horizon, thirteen-year-old Lucinda Greenham is sent to an exclusive boarding school in Belgium. Her joy in sharing this adventure with her best friend, Annabelinda, is cut short when Annabelinda has a clandestine affair leading to pregnancy. Annabelinda’s family arranges a “rest cure” and when the girl returns to school, she seems to have forgotten the incident. Then, in the wake of Germany’s invasion of Belgium, Lucinda and Annabelinda are forced to flee across Europe and find a welcome savior in the dashing Major Marcus Merrivale. Safely back in England, Lucinda vows to keep her friend’s secret. But someone in the household has uncovered the truth about Annabelinda and the lively baby called Edward. Now Lucinda, who has lost her heart to a decorated soldier, is faced with keeping another secret. As a blackmail plot erupts in murder, and war eradicates a way of life forever, Lucinda discovers that there is a time for love . . . and a time for silence.
    Show book
  • The Deserted House - Curiosity can sometimes get the better of all of us… - cover

    The Deserted House - Curiosity...

    ETA Hoffmann

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Ernst Theodor Wilhelm Hoffman was born on the 24th January 1776, the youngest of three children, in Königsberg, then in Prussia but now part of the Kaliningrad Russian enclave. 
     
    His parents separated when he was two and for many years life was to be provincial and, despite his talents for the creative arts and the classics, much was passing him by. 
     
    At 20 Hoffman obtained employment as a clerk and to the art that now surrounded him.  Two years later he was in Berlin attempting a career as a composer with an operetta called ‘Die Maske’.  His gift for drawing caricatures and sharing them often got him into trouble that was easier to avoid. 
     
    The years of Napoleon ravaging Europe were bad for Hoffman; he moved often and took on works as varied as theatre management and music critic.  In this his talents were now more evident.  His works on Beethoven where highly regarded by the master himself. 
     
    His literary breakthrough came in 1809, with ‘Ritter Gluck’, about a man who believes he has met the composer 20 years after his death.  However the various jobs and the wars continued and plagued any career advancement despite his constant travel for opportunities, often through dangerous territories. 
     
    In the wake of Napoleon’s defeat in 1814, Hoffmann returned to Berlin where his opera ‘Undine’ was performed by the Berlin Theatre.  Life was now more settled and many of his most famous works were written at his time. 
     
    From 1819, Hoffmann was struggling with both legal disputes and ill health.  Alcohol abuse and syphilis were physically weakening him and from 1822 paralysis set in.  His last works were dictated to his wife or to a secretary as all around him society descended into an anti-liberal agenda, stifling dissent with threats of legal action and even treason.  The ailing Hoffman was among them. 
     
    E T A Hoffmann died on the 25th June 1822 in Berlin of syphilis.  He was 46.
    Show book