¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
The Festival - cover

The Festival

H. P. Lovecraft

Editorial: Open Road Media

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

Christmas with the family takes a dark turn in this chilling short story by the acclaimed author of “The Call of Cthulhu”.Beckoned by his family, a man travels to a snowy, seaside Massachusetts town to observe an ancient festival. His family has long celebrated it since the days when it was forbidden. But when he arrives, he notices something is off about this community . . . little details that just don’t add up. What the man witnesses at his family’s house does little to comfort him. Soon he is drawn into a world unlike any he has known, and its sights will haunt him for the rest of his life . . .
Disponible desde: 04/10/2022.
Longitud de impresión: 24 páginas.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • The Reality Bride's Baby - A Christian Contemporary Romance Short Story - cover

    The Reality Bride's Baby - A...

    Lorana Hoopes

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Can a reality TV marriage have a happily ever after? 
    Tyler and Laney met under unusual circumstances on a reality dating show, but their love was true. Now, that the fame is gone and it's after their celebrity wedding, will their love stay strong? 
    This short story follows The Cowboy's Reality Bride. While it can be read stand alone, the characters will be more dear to your heart if you read how they met first.
    Ver libro
  • Storming the Castle: An Original Short Story - cover

    Storming the Castle: An Original...

    Eloisa James

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    Featuring the handsome and mysterious Wick from A Kiss At Midnight. What Miss Phillipa Damson needs is a good, old fashioned knight in shining armor. What she has is a fiancé she never wanted and a compelling urge to run away. But if she manages to escape, will she find her happily ever after?
    Ver libro
  • The Room in the Tower - cover

    The Room in the Tower

    E.F. Benson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edward Frederic Benson (1867-1940) was an English novelist, biographer, memoirist, archaeologist and short story writer, best known for his spine-tingling and beautifully written ghost stories. The Room in the Tower is the most famous of these. It describes a horrific recurrent dream of nameless dread, occurring over a period of 15 years, in which the dreamer arrives at a peculiar house inhabited by a sinister silent family, where he takes tea on the lawn and is then shown to the room in the tower where something dreadful, malicious, and evil lurks... though he does not know what. Until one day, he finds himself at the house of his dream, just as tea is being served on the lawn.
    Ver libro
  • Short Stories Collection - The Raven The Fall of the House of Usher Annabel Lee The Pit and the Pendulum - cover

    Short Stories Collection - The...

    Edgar Allan Poe, Oregan Publishing

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Oregan Publishing presents: Short Stories Collection. The works included are: "The Raven", "The Fall of the House of Usher", "Annabel Lee", and "The Pit and the Pendulum".
    Ver libro
  • Female Short Story The - A Chronological History - Volume 7 - May Sinclair to Mary Austin - cover

    Female Short Story The - A...

    Baroness Orczy, Netta Syrett,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A wise man once said ‘The safest place for a child is in the arms of his mother’s voice’.  This is a perfect place to start our anthology of female short stories. 
     
    Some of our earliest memories are of our mothers telling us bedtime stories. This is not to demote the value of fathers but more to promote the often-overshadowed talents of the gentler sex. 
     
    Perhaps ‘gentler’ is a word that we should re-evaluate. In the course of literary history it is men who dominated by opportunity and with their stranglehold on the resources, both financial and technological, who brought their words to a wider audience.  Men often placed women on a pedestal from where their talented words would not threaten their own.   
     
    In these stories we begin with the original disrupter and renegade author Aphra Behn.  A peek at her c.v. shows an astounding capacity and leaves us wondering at just how she did all that. 
     
    In those less modern days to be a woman, even ennobled, was to be seen as second class.  You literally were chattel and had almost no rights in marriage.  As Charlotte Smith famously said your role as wife was little more than ‘legal prostitute’.  From such a despicable place these authors have used their talents and ideas and helped redress that situation.   
     
    Slowly at first.  Privately printed, often anonymously or under the cloak of a male pseudonym their words spread.  Their stories admired and, usually, their role still obscured from rightful acknowledgement. 
     
    Aided by more advanced technology, the 1700’s began to see a steady stream of female writers until by the 1900’s mass market publishing saw short stories by female authors from all the strata of society being avidly read by everyone.  Their names are a rollcall of talent and ‘can do’ spirit and society is richer for their works.   
     
    In literature at least women are now acknowledged as equals, true behind the scenes little has changed but if (and to mis-quote Jane Austen) there is one universal truth, it is that ideas change society.  These women’s most certainly did and will continue to do so as they easily write across genres, from horror and ghost stories to tender tales of love and making your way in society’s often grueling rut.  They will not be silenced, their ideas and passion move emotions, thoughts and perhaps more importantly our ingrained view of what every individual human being is capable of.    
     
    It is because of their desire to speak out, their desire to add their talents to the bias around them that we perhaps live in more enlightened, almost equal, times.   
     
    Within these stories you will also find very occasional examples of historical prejudice.  A few words here and there which in today’s world some may find inappropriate or even offensive.  It is not our intention to make anyone uncomfortable but to show that the world in order to change must reconcile itself to the actual truth rather than put it out of sight.  Context is everything, both to understand and to illuminate the path forward.  The author’s words are set, our reaction to them encourages our change. 
     
    01 - The Female Short Story. A Chronological History - An Introduction - Volume 7 
    02 - The Coach by Violet Hunt 
    03 - Suggestion by Mrs Ernest Leverson 
    04 - Another Freak by Mary Angela Dickens 
    08 - Red Tape by Mary Sinclair 
    06 - An Idyl of London by Beatrice Harraden 
    07 - The Love Germ by Constance Cotterell 
    08 - The Black Crusader by Alicia Ramsay 
    09 - The Lame Priest by Susan Morrow writing as S Carleton 
    10 - A Pen and Ink Effect by Frances E Huntley 
    11 - Far Above Rubies by Netta Syrett 
    12 - My Honoured Master by Catherine Anne Dawson Scott 
    13 - A Knot of Ribbon by Laurence Alma-Tadema 
    14 - The Mysterious Death on
    Ver libro
  • Harper's Young People Vol 01 Issue 04 Nov 25 1879 - cover

    Harper's Young People Vol 01...

    Various Various

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Harper's Young People upon its first publication in 1879 was an illustrated weekly publication containing delightful serialized stories, short stories, fiction and nonfiction, anecdotes, jokes, artwork, and more for children. This fourth issue of the series was published on November 25, 1879. Published by Harper & Brothers, known for their other publications Harper's Bazaar and Harper's Magazine.  Summary by Jill Engle.
    Ver libro