Category Archives: soft horror

Book Rec, The Woman In White, for International Gothic Reading Month

January 8, 2026

Book Recommendation for International Gothic Reading Month. Today marks Wilkie Collins’ birth date, January 8, 1824. He authored The Woman in White, a landmark Gothic romantic mystery. The story takes place at Limmeridge House. Get ready for secrets, mistaken identities, amnesia, and locked rooms. Come meet Laura and the menacing Sir Percival Glyde. Collins is a master of suspense!

https://www.amazon.com/Woman-White-Wilkie-Collins-ebook/dp/B09RZZMPLY

 

 

Stop by for more book recs coming soon!

READING FICTION BLOG

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Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

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And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

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Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

 

 

4 Comments

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International Gothic Reading Month, January 2026

AWAKEN THE GOTHIC WITHIN!

 

 

The first International Gothic Reading Month (IGRM)  is official. As a Gothic author, I invite you to journey through modern ghostly landscapes, cursed castles, and the dark chills of Gothic romantic mysteries for the month of January 2026 and every January to come.

Gothic Painting by Edwin Deakin, 1886

 

Enter the red door of this castle and celebrate Gothic literature at the start of each new year. International Gothic Reading Month is sponsored by the Society for the Study of the American Gothic (SSAG), a scholarly organization devoted to advancing the study of the American Gothic through research, teaching, and publication.

Are you a reader of Gothic? An author, librarian, bookseller, publisher, editor, blogger, podcaster, teacher, or student of Gothic literature? Please join us during January to enter stories that—in the words of Mary Shelley—”speak to the mysterious fears of our nature, and awaken thrilling horror.”

Illustration of Mary Shelley by Lita Judge in Mary’s Monster.

 

Visit the IGRM website for details, a suggested reading list, promotional flyers, and how to participate in International Gothic Reading Month. Click here:  https://americangothicsociety.com/international-gothic-reading-month/

This Gothic Reading Month event was initiated by the International Gothic Reading Month Committee Members, a group of authors, writers, readers, and Gothic enthusiasts:

Sponsorship: Jeffrey A. Weinstock, President and founder, Society for the Study of the American Gothic. Jeffrey is a professor of English at Central Michigan University, the Los Angeles Review of Books Associate Editor of horror, and founder and editor of the peer-reviewed journal American Gothic Studies. He is co-founder and past chair of the Modern Language Association’s Gothic Studies Forum. An author or editor of 33 books and over 100 essays on the Gothic, American literature, cult film, and pop culture, Jeffrey’s most recent book, The Horror Theory Reader, will be published by the University of Minnesota Press in early 2026.

Alexia Mandla Ainsworth. Alexia is a PhD candidate in English at Stanford University. Her research centers on the “female gothic” genre.  A speaker at numerous conferences on Gothic genre origins in modern films, podcasts, and video games, her most recent publication is on Dracula and the epistolary form and the genre-bending nature of mixed media in Gothic literature.

Barbara Beatie is a lecturer in the English Department at Sonoma State University. A  researcher and poet, her writing has been published in Gothic Nature Journal V,  Beyond Distance, Redemption: Stories Phoenix Out of the Silence and Then, and Sonoma: Stories of a Region and Its People.

Paula Cappa, IGRM Director. Paula is a published novelist and short story author of Gothic and supernatural mysteries: Draakensky, A Supernatural Tale of Magick and Romance (Crystal Lake Publishing),  Sky Wolf, The Dazzling Darkness, Night Sea Journey, and Greylock (Crispin Books) In April of 2026, her novel Wolf Magick, Secret Mysteries of Draakensky will be released by Crystal Lake Publishing.

Ruthann Jagge is professionally published in many successful anthologies for Gothic, dark speculative, fantasy, folklore, mythology, and articles and reviews. She is co-author of the modern Gothic novel Delevan House, a novella, the soon to be released  Southern Gothic novel Coeur Noir-Black Heart, and the sequel Crees Crossing. Ruthann has moderated dynamic panels on folklore at World Con in Glasgow, and is featured in numerous interviews discussing the creative process. 

Carey Millsap-Spears. Carey is published poet and professor of English at Moraine Valley Community College. She is author of Star Trek Discovery and The Female Gothic: Tell Fear No (Lexington Books). Her scholarship also appears in Set Phasers to Teach: Star Trek in Research and Teaching, The Routledge Handbook of Star Trek, Strange Novel Worlds, Space: The Feminist Frontier, Queer Studies and Media and Popular CultureStudies in Popular Culture, Fantastika, and Aeternum: The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies.

Dr. Arline Wilson is the creator of Lamplight Literature, an educational video series and podcast launching in 2026 that illuminates the intersections of Gothic literature, history, and spiritual trauma through rich storytelling. She holds a dual appointment as an English professor and Digital Humanities and Africana Studies Scholar for Special Collections in Morris Library at the University of Delaware. She is co-author of the forthcoming “Colored Convention Movement,” with John Ernest, in Oxford Bibliographies in African American Studies (Oxford University Press).

The Nightmare, 1781, Henry Fuseli.

 

Gothic spirit lives on!

Please leave a comment or like if you are a Gothic fan.

What are you reading for January’s Gothic Reading Month?

 

Follow me for Gothic recommendations

in the coming days of January.

 

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery. Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts: Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

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Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

2 Comments

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A Christmas Tree by Charles Dickens: Gothic and Ghostly

The Gothic and Ghostly Charles Dickens

A Christmas Tree  (1843)

December 11, 2025

When whirls of snow come in December, when we withdraw to the home fires of familial gatherings, or when we make our own solitary festivities with the simple joy of a tiny lit evergreen and a warm slice of pie, I urge you to light one candle and settle in with Charles Dickens for 40 minutes. Follow him into the nostalgia of his deepest thoughts in A Christmas Tree.

This short story—although it reads more like a personal (autobiographical) essay—will harken the reader back into a fairy tale realm of snuff-boxes and tapers, the aroma of roasted chestnuts and pumpkin pie, tiny rosy-cheeked dolls hanging on a green fur banch, toy fiddles and drums, trinkets and fairy lights, and in Dickens’s words . . .

“What we all remember best upon the branches of the Christmas tree of our own young Christmas days, by which we climbed to real life.”

 

 

But hark! This story is not without the recollections of the thick darkness in the evening air, the haunted bedchambers, ghost walks through the woods, and the magic and necromancy that Dickens brilliantly gives us in his work.

His old house was full of great chimneys where wood burned, dogs rested at the hearth, and grim portraits hung distrustfully from the oaken walls. A locked door opens, and a pale young woman glides to the fire, her clothes wet as if emerged from the river.

“Ghosts have little originality and ‘walk’ in a beaten track,” Dickens informs us.  He recounts a haunted door that will not open and the sound of a spinning wheel coming forth. There is a turret-clock that strikes thirteen at the midnight hour when the head of the family is going to die. And outside this old Victorian house, a shadowy black carriage waits in the stable-yard.

Hark, I’ve told too much already. You must read these adventures for yourself. It is the hour of twilight, and you must hurry if you are going to experience the Orphan Boy peeking out of the nailed-up closet that has refused to be opened no matter what.

Dickens’s A Christmas Tree has cheer, delight, and profound gloomy shadows. Peer into your Christmas tree with its dark black spaces between the branches. What do you see there?

 

Read A Christmas Tree at Gutenberg.org. Scroll down to Page 1: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1467/1467-h/1467-h.htm

Listen to the audio here (40 minutes):

 

I have many of Dickens’s works here at Reading Fiction Blog. Please browse the Index above for more of his stories.

Every year at Christmas, I post my own holiday story, Christmas River Ghost. A tale that haunted me for months until I wrote it down at the midnight hour.

Christmas River Ghost by Paula Cappa

Wishing you all a very Merry Christmas full of whimsey and

all the holiday cheer and abundance of the ages.

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also, book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

2 Comments

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Del Toro and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: A Gothic Triumph

 A Gothic Triumph

November 2026

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus is a Gothic triumph and continues to be over 200 years later. Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation of this masterpiece might be considered his best film (I loved it in many ways), but the adaptation is a disappointment because it does not remain faithful to Mary’s story.

For the book purists who have read and re-read the novel (as I have), the film is more of a reinvention or even a modernization of the madly ambitious Victor and his creature. The film might rightly be termed redefined Gothic horror.

I couldn’t help but see stark differences between the book and film.

In the film, the benefactor Henrich Harlander is a new character who has his own selfish agenda with Victor. Okay, I’m good with that intrigue. In the novel, Henry Clerval is Victor’s endearing friend, and I did miss that relationship being deleted from the film. Justine is another character with her own compelling story (murder, trial, and execution) eliminated that I missed.

Mary portrayed Victor’s father as a kindly, intelligent gentleman exhibiting sympathy and family love, not the authoritarian abuser in the film. While this creative liberty added a layer to the film’s backstory tension, I was not fond of making Victor’s father so odious as to be completely opposite of the character Mary had designed.

The most radical change in the film is the subplot of Victor’s younger brother William (a child throughout the novel) and Henrich’s niece  Elizabeth (in the novel, she is Victor’s adopted sister and romantic interest). Del Toro completely fabricates this new storyline into a romance between William, a grown man, with the lust-worthy Elizabeth. William and Elizabeth are engaged and then marry.

Elizabeth has her own questionable intentions. She provokes a seductive triangle between William, Victor, and the creature. And while this action is well nested into the plot, I thought it came off messy and inappropriate, especially because the novel’s Elizabeth is innocent and endearing, devoted to Victor, and marries him. Del Toro’s Elizabeth is completely contrary to Mary’s Elizabeth.

There are a number of other changes, which I won’t identify here so as not to create spoilers. The endings are vastly different. Mary’s story ends in deep darkness, despair, and distance, while the film ties it all up too neatly beneath tarnished sunlight.

Did I enjoy the film? Yes, it’s a cinematic feast of mystery, madness,  passion, and obsession: a panoramic dazzle with lush scenes, magnificent costuming, and vast landscapes in Gothic beauty and desolation.  Yes, there are lots of criticisms of the computer-generated images (the wolves scene for sure), but I’m not offended by cinematic liberties when they are done well. In all of the 2 hours and 29 minutes, I was never bored or distracted watching this juicy spectacle.

I must say, though, read Mary’s novel for sure! Her story is a brilliant weave of intimate perspectives. Her fine prose streams with meaning that only literature can reveal.  You will explore deep psychological themes of arrogance, ambition, isolation, love, death, loss, and destruction. The symbolism in her lyrical narrative is not to be missed.

Mary began the story from a “fever dream” in 1816 and completed the manuscript a year later in 1817.

The first edition of Frankenstein was published anonymously in 1818 because Mary’s publisher said no one would buy a novel written by a woman. The book earned no royalties and didn’t achieve fame until after the second edition.  https://www.amazon.com/Frankenstein-1818-Text-Penguin-Classics/dp/0143131842

 

In 1823, her name appears on the second edition.

 

In the Introduction of the 1831 revised edition, Mary writes about the dream that inspired her to write Frankenstein, while in Geneva.

Night waned. “I saw—with shut eyes, but acute mental vision,—I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world. His success would terrify the artist; he would rush away from his odious handywork, horror-stricken. He would hope that, left to itself, the slight spark of life which he had communicated would fade; that this thing, which had received such imperfect animation, would subside into dead matter; and he might sleep in the belief that the silence of the grave would quench for ever the transient existence of the hideous corpse which he had looked upon as the cradle of life. He sleeps; but he is awakened; he opens his eyes; behold the horrid thing stands at his bedside, opening his curtains, and looking on him with yellow, watery, but speculative eyes.”

The full text is in the public domain at Gutenberg.org https://www.gutenberg.org/files/42324/42324-h/42324-h.htm

I highly recommend Mary’s Monster, Love, Madness, and How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein by Lita Judge. This is her biography in verse. “Darkly evocative . . . Brings life to Mary Shelley’s story the way that Shelley herself breathed life into her novel of a scientist who animates a corpse.” ―Kirkus Reviews.

 

 

I can also personally recommend Mary’s novella, Matilda, which is heart-wrenching as it is extraordinary in art and language. This book, written in 1819, was published posthumously in 1959 because Mary’s father hid it for years. When you read this 100-page story, you’ll know why.

The opening of the story sets the mood of a young woman contemplating suicide.

“It is only four o’clock; but it is winter and the sun has already set: there are no clouds in the clear, frosty sky to reflect its slant beams, but the air itself is tinged with a slight roseate colour which is again reflected on the snow that covers the ground.”

Matilda will haunt you long after you close the book.

 

 

Thank you for stopping by! Please leave a comment. I would very much like to know your thoughts about Frankenstein and Mary Shelley.

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also, book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

2 Comments

Filed under #horror short stories, book bloggers, book recommendations, Book Reviews, classic horror stories, dark literature, demons, fiction, fiction bloggers, gothic, Gothic fiction, Gothic Horror, Gothic-Fantasy Fiction, Gothic-Horror-Fantasy Fiction, haunted mind, historical fiction, horror, horror blogs, horror films, horror renaissance, horror revival, horror short stories, literary horror, literature, Magical Gothic, magickal romantasy, novels, occult, paranormal, Penny Dreadful, psychological horror, quiet horror, Reading Fiction, Reading Fiction Blog, READING FICTION BLOG Paula Cappa, romantic fiction, romantic thrillers, short story blogs, soft horror, speculative fiction, supernatural fiction, supernatural mysteries, supernatural tales, supernatural thrillers, tales of terror, Women In Horror, women writers

Conjuring the “Magickal Gothic”—A Supernatural Genre-Blend for Readers

Conjuring the “Magickal Gothic.”

September 23, 2026

 

Magickal Gothic Fiction

 

How wild is your heart? How far will you let your imagination journey into the unknown realms of magickal powers?

Stories in the Magickal Gothic fiction genre tell readers they are in for a supernatural adventure, a terror that expands the mind and elevates the imagination. When mystery and magick, romance and ghosts, intertwine with the supernatural, there is a terrifying haunting.

An emotional intensity captures the reader. If you’ve not experienced Magickal Gothic fiction, I’m here to define and recommend this new level of Gothic Horror—although horror is the root category, in Magickal Gothic we experience a distinctive phenomenon.

 

Ann Radcliffe, known as the originator of the Female Gothic Movement (The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794), explained that “Terror and horror are so far opposite, that the first expands the soul, and awakens the faculties to a high degree of life; the other [horror] contracts, freezes, and nearly annihilates them.” She explains that “terror is a very high one” and “lies in the uncertainty and obscurity.”

Stephen King reminds us of the three types of terror: I recognize terror as the finest emotion and so I will try to terrorize the reader. But if I find that I cannot terrify, I will try to horrify, and if I find that I cannot horrify, I’ll go for the gross-out. I’m not proud.”  Danse Macabre.

 

King describes this sublime terror as, ‘when the lights go out and you feel something behind you, you hear it, you feel its breath against your ear, but turn around and there’s nothing there.’ But of course something is threatening there, and we instinctively know it.

In storytelling, this terror exists in Magickal Gothic fiction because Gothic, by its very nature, is sublime. For example, in Elizabeth Hand’s Wylding Hall, this story has a deep subtlety to it, with music being the supernatural power of magick, mixed with folklore and psychological uncertainty, ghostly presences, and all wrapped in an atmospheric mystery. This is not the kind of literal horror that contracts and freezes the reader, but it is a serious haunting for the reader.

Defining Magickal Gothic exhibits a range of variations and includes the following. Settings are dark, ancestral estates; a structured magickal or suggested occult power rules this fictional world (spell-craft, magickal artifacts, rituals, curses, art, ancient books, or folklore and history); hidden realms play into the action; ghostly or otherworldly entities drive the theme; characters seek emotional or psychological answers about themselves or a lost one, which drive the plot.

Romantic intrigue or sexual tensions are a classic element that raises the stakes. Language, of course, is a defining feature, the prose acting as an instrument of the intense dread, beauty, and mystery—descriptive narrative breaks open the fictional dream for the reader.

What books lurk in these magickal Gothic shadows? To name a few of these genre-blending, or genre-bending, novels . . .

The Discovery of Witches, Deborah Harkness: witches, demons, magickal manuscripts, vampires, blood magick.

Mexican Gothic, Silvia Moreno-Garcia: haunted house, ghosts, science, evil, magickal arts, cultural feminist themes.

Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke: magickians, ghosts, literary secrets, historical powers.

The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafon: ghosts, cursed books, magickal powers.

Wylding Hall, Elizabeth Hand: occult music, folklore, ghostly presences, magickal blends of spell-craft.

The Death of Jane Lawrence, Caitlin Starling: alchemical magick, spell-craft, magicians, feminist themes, ghosts, love story, body horror.

The Peculiar Garden of Harriet Hunt, Chelsea Iversen: London estate, magickal garden, ambiguous ghostly presenses, psychological and feminist themes, love story.

Affinity, Sarah Waters: Victorian England, unruly ghosts, magick, spiritualism, romance.

The Year of the Witching, Alexis Henderson:  Dark forest setting, ghostly shadows, ancient witch magick.

Everything Is Magick

Readers love the fictional dream of fantastical realms, magick, and ghostly worlds beyond. As you explore the various genres (and many overlap into cross-genres), whether it be Urban or Rural Gothic, Southern or Suburban Gothic, Paranormal Gothic, Historical Gothic, Dark Romantic Gothic, Cosmic or Eco Gothic, Folk or Crime/Mystery Gothic, Sci-fi or Techno Gothic, Fantasy Gothic, there is a new and excited readership for Magickal Gothic among these diversities.

Gothic writers will continue to terrify readers with their high creativity. These stories will enlighten and grow our understanding of fear, oppression, endurance, and morality.

Is Gothic a mirror or a mask? Let’s find out if the ghost in the mirror is you or trying to become you.

Coming soon . . .  An International Gothic Reading Month! Watch this blog for when and where this event will be made public. We are on a mission to encourage and proliferate Gothic readers and writers, authors and publishers, and Gothic books displayed in shops and libraries. Why? Because Gothic communicates that the mysteries of our spirituality possess wisdom, beauty, and redemption.

 

I sign off with my own Magickal Gothic adventure.

 

Please share your thoughts about Magickal Gothic. Comment if you have a title to add or author you admire who writes in this genre. Are you an author of Magickal Gothic? I invite authors to post your titles and links in the comments. Please join me in promoting Magickal Gothic literature!

Gothic shadows are whispering. What are yours saying?

Darkness can possess its own shining.

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

6 Comments

Filed under book bloggers, book recommendations, Book Reviews, dark fantasy, dark fantasy fiction, dark literature, fiction, fiction bloggers, Genre-Bending, Genre-Blending, ghost stories, ghost story blogs, Gothic fiction, Gothic Horror, Gothic-Fantasy Fiction, Gothic-Horror-Fantasy Fiction, haunted mind, historical fiction, historical ghost stories, horromantasy, horror, horror blogs, horror short stories, literary horror, literary short stories, Magic, Magical Gothic, magical realism, magical romance, Magical stories, magick, Magickal Gothic, magickal realms, magickal romance, magickal romantasy, novels, occult, paranormal, quiet horror, READING FICTION BLOG Paula Cappa, romantic thrillers, short story blogs, soft horror, Stephen King, supernatural fiction, supernatural music, supernatural mysteries, supernatural thrillers, tales of terror, vampires, weird tales, werewolves, witches, witchraft, wolf stories, Women In Horror, women writers

Literary Birthdate, Stephen King, September 21, FREE READS

Literary Birthdate, September 21,  Stephen King

To be a King fan or not to be a King fan. For me, The Shining is King’s best work. Many of his short stories and novellas are also on my list. I feature King’s work here regularly on Reading Fiction Blog. Click below for free stories to celebrate King’s birthdate today.

The Breathing Method by Stephen King, a Quiet Horror Tale. Includes an audio, a fine dramatic reading. Perfect for a Sunday afternoon. Don’t miss it:

The Quiet Horror of Stephen King

 

Harvey’s Dream, published in The New Yorker.  A suspenseful 14-minute audio and a link to read the short story.

One of the Girls Was Dead

 

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

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Ghost Stories by M.R. James, If You Love FREE Dramatic Readings!

Greetings,

I’m on an M.R. James kick this week of September.  Do you love vintage fiction? The old masters are so compelling, especially this time of year. The beauty of old literature brings the readings into another realm. Come with me into the creative talents of M.R. James.

Listening to the talented Robert Powell read James’ ghost stories by firelight from his very British library is a delicious dive into high drama. Please enjoy these little escapes into the ghostly mind of M.R. James. Robert Powell is a distinguished English actor renowned for his compelling performances across film and television.

The Ash Tree by M.R. James

 

 

More Ghost Stories With Robert Powell

Episodes: The Mezzotint; The Ash-tree; Wailing Well; Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad; The Rose Garden 

You  must listen to The Mezzotint, the first story told by Powell. Robert Powell was the inspiration for my character Sir Duncan in my novel Draakensky. Powell is a dramatist of the highest quality and brings to the story of The Mezzotint an extraordinary quality. This is a story about a haunted painting that comes to life and tells its own story. I dare you not to be entranced.

If you like, you can read the short story here at GutenburgCanada.

https://gutenbergcanada.ca/ebooks/jamesmr-mezzotint/jamesmr-mezzotint-00-h.html

 

The Gothic Library has a post this week on M.R. James and his most famous  stories. Read it here:

https://www.thegothiclibrary.com/classics-ghost-stories-of-an-antiquary-by-m-r-james/

Julia is the Gothic Librarian. She is a bibliophile and lover of literature. The only thing in her life that rivals her passion for books is her proclivity for the dark and macabre. A proud member of the gothic subculture for many years now, Julia’s journey into the dark side of literature began in the fifth grade when she picked up her very first vampire novel. This initial foray propelled her both into the modern paranormal romance genre and into classic Gothic literature. Since then she has spent her time exploring all types of literature that touch on topics beyond the veil.

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

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Mary Shelley, Birth Date August 30 Tribute

Greetings to all Mary Shelley fans today on August 30, her birth date!

(August 30, 1797 — February 1, 1851)

Mary Shelley is remembered for saying that it is “the secrets of heaven and earth that I desire to learn.”  We honor her talents and literary achievements today (and for penning the horror classic Frankenstein) on her birth date by reading her stories and sharing why we appreciate this courageous writer and woman.

She is known as the mother of Frankenstein, the mother of monsters, and the queen of Gothic. What a legacy she had left us! You will find many of her writings here at Reading Fiction Blog listed below, free to read at the links.

Mary’s husband was Percy Bysshe Shelley, and her children were Willaim Shelley, Clara Everina,  and Percy Florence.

Mary’s most notable quote:

“Invention, it must be humbly admitted, does not consist in creating out of void, but out of chaos.”

Read her stories here. The *starred* ones are my favorites, and I highly recommend Mathilda to experience the true soul of Mary Shelley.

*Shelley, Mary On Ghosts, October 15, 2013 (scroll down)

Shelley, Mary The Invisible Girl, October 15, 2013

Shelley, Mary  Anniversary of Her Death Tribute, February 1, 2018

*Shelley, Mary,  The Dream,  August 28, 2018

*Shelley, Mary, Mathilda, August 29, 2023

 

For your convenience, I have a free audio of Mathilda. Beautifully written, a haunting tale of love, loss, betrayal, and the human psyche. This novella expresses the deepest part of  Mary Shelley, her despair and redemption.

 

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week. Also book recommendations, writing tips, creative and literary notes.

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

1 Comment

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The Supernatural Life of Ghost Trees

Friday’s Supernatural Tales,  August 1, 2025

What if a tree, or a field of trees, or a thickly packed forest had supernatural powers?

I have an owl living in my backwoods. He or she hoots like a soprano; I love to listen to its rhythmic songs. My desire to meet this enticing creature, or even catch a glimpse of this raptor, has occupied my mind for months. One day, while on one of my solitary walks into my back acre, I found this impression on a cedar.

 

Look closely and keep looking for a few seconds. Let the image come  fully into your eyes and be charged with the tree’s presence. Can you see the imprint of an owl? Pointy head. Two eyes. Blurry nose. Feathers stream down the body.

I could call this a magickal impression of the owl who sings to me. Or I might say this is a bit of witchcraft coming forth. If you look above the owl impression on the tree, you will find a witch’s triangle, a muted face within, and the body draped in gray bark. Tree witch? Ah-ha, another haunting!

I named this tree owl Camaroon, after the magickal owl in my novel Draakensky. I am likely not the only writer of supernatural mysteries who has had supernatural encounters like this. And there’s probably a new short story here for me to explore about a witch haunting an owl. Or an owl haunting a tree? Or an owl haunting me.

The gift here is that I can engage this tree owl at any time and soak up its wisdom and beauty. And the witch, well, witch trees are not uncommon, but I didn’t expect one to be so close to home. More to come on how this develops in subsequent posts.

Meantime,  as promised in my Bedford Oak post last week about the beauty and danger of hauntings, here is a short story  about the supernatural powers of trees by the master author Algernon Blackwood, Ancient Lights.

Our narrator is on a solitary walk in the woods when he takes a shortcut to his destination, a little red house.  He encounters spooky obstacles  along the way that challenge his reality, influence his perceptions, and acquaint him with the threatening force of the ghostly powers of nature. I loved it!

This is a typically English horror story (dark fantasy as well), first published in 1905.

You can read this timeless tale here at American Literature.

https://americanliterature.com/author/algernon-blackwood/short-story/ancient-lights/

Listen to the audio, a thrilling listening adventure (16 minutes).

Algernon Blackwood is known as one of the most popular ghost story writers of his era. He is most famous for The Willows, which you can find here at Reading Fiction Blog:

The Willows, a Chilling Tale for Halloween

Algernon’s fiction is visionary. Most of his work is free online and you can find more of his stories here at Reading Fiction blog in the INDEX above. Here is a favorite quote by him:

“My imagination requires a judicious rein; I’m afraid to let it loose, for it carries me sometimes into appalling places beyond the stars and beneath the world.”

 

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for free stories, audios, and occasionally an Author of the Week.  Also book recommendations and writing tips!

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

 

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

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The Haunting in The Old Bedford Oak

The Haunting in The Bedford Oak

July 24, 2025

 

Charlotte Knight is walking this path to the famous oak tree in Bedford, New York. This giant white oak is not far from Draakensky Windmill Estate. The tree is massive and drenched in sunlight, and has lived for over 500 years.

The spread of its branches is 130 feet, and its girth is more than 30 feet. This great-branching tree wears a mesmerizing face scattered across the sky.

 

Charlotte walks light-footed here. Shifting shadows linger behind her shoulders. She turns, “Who’s there?”

No one is visible. Perhaps a bird throwing shade. Or just the wind easing by—or waiting. As she gazes up at the tree, she sees chambers. The spaces glow like windows in a temple.

 

Come closer.

 

She follows the instruction waving into her mind and steps closer. The air is quiet as a feather now. Except for the looming hums from that darkened pink blaze striking between the leaves.

“What is that?” She rephrases, “Who is that?”

Come closer and look deeper.

At the center, she sees the image of a black figure, gnarled and tangled. Eyes meet. In that darkness, Charlotte finds a soft deceitful smile.

Charlotte cannot resist the urge to touch the tree as if she could hug a brave old father. The beauty and the danger are irresistible. With her hands on the trunk, she sniffs the fragrance. Woody. Brash. Bittersweet.

 

“What mysteries do you have for me?”

Look deeply, place yourself inside my green leafy cottage.  I have secrets to tell.

“Tell me a secret first,” she tempts the old oak and listens for the answer. This is what Charlotte hears.

“Lovely, but this is only your oak leaves spilling over themselves. What secret do you have to tell?

A bold, silent throng emerges.

Knowing a tree’s power resides in trust, she gazes upon the oak leaves.

 

A wispy flock of clouds passes overhead with the empty minutes speeding by. Her light-footed steps retreat down the path.  She drives out of Hook Road into Bedford Village, the oak’s mesmerizing face scattering across the sky.  She does not hear the voice following her into The Grackle Bar and Grill.

 There is a murder about to happen.

 

Charlotte Knight

There are great mysteries in trees. In Celtic folklore, the oak tree possesses a cosmic link, a kind of spinning axis, that connects Earth and sky to the Otherworld realms. When Charlotte walks into the Grackle Bar and Grill in Bedford, she meets Marc Sexton, impossibly sexy, and endowed with breath-catching eyes of blue—a man who possesses mysterious Celtic enchantments.

Marc Sexton

“Good afternoon.” The bartender strolled toward her, a hell of a cute guy with blond wavy hair and eyes slashed brilliant blue. “Welcome. Having a good day?”

“At the moment, yes,” she said eagerly.

He smiled—pow! Instant seduction. His burgundy cable-knit sweater threw cheerful hues. “My first time here,” she gave him a gleam back.

“I see you’re not a regular at The Grackle Bar. What can I get you?”

She read the cocktail menu descriptions on the wall. “What’s The Grackle? ‘Burnt whips and gales and stormy hail’? Sounds dangerous.”

“You’ll love it. Our signature cocktail. Cold coffee, Sexton Irish Whiskey, kick of cayenne, spices, two stabs of bacon.”

“Bacon?” she said, resisting the urge to lick her lips. “Sounds perfect.”

“You got it.” He put his hand out for a shake. “Marc Sexton.”

“Charlotte Knight.” His grip penetrated warm and calming.

He reached for a stemmed goblet. “You passing through Bedford on your way to—?”

“I’m here for a few months. I saw that Bedford Oak on Old Bedford Road. Some kind of god, that tree. Ravishing.”

“That oak is our prize citizen. A resident sage.  Some trees have shackled power. Not The Bedford Oak. He’s a true warrior.”

“Really? Forests are a big attraction for me. I’m hoping to spend time in nature and walk the wild woods here.”

He tossed crushed ice into a goblet and free-poured from a black bottle with a skeleton in a top hat on the label. “You want to escape into the forests, hike with some wild man, and muse with Mother Earth?”

She wanted to purr at that. “I don’t know. Are there wild men in Bedford?”

“A few of us around,” he whispered, then splashed coffee and a shake of spices into the glass. “I’m owner and barkeep. I live in a renovated barn in Bedford woods, chock-full of owls and wild geese.” His voice came in smooth notes from deep in his chest.

With a twist of his hand, Marc waved a blowgun to smoke a cinnamon stick under a glass bell; he topped off the drink with two bacon sticks flaring out into dark wings. Smoke swirled as he placed the drink down.

“The Grackle. For the lovely lady looking for a wild man.”

 

 

The gates to Draakensky Windmill Estate are open.

Watch this blog for more flash fiction excerpts, stories about the beauty and the danger of hauntings.

 

 More on The Bedford Oak in Bedford, New York here: https://www.bedfordhistoricalsociety.org/bedford-oak

READING FICTION BLOG

Comments are welcome! Feel free to click “LIKE.”

Please join me in my reading nook.

I invite you to browse the INDEX OF AUTHORS’ TALES above for free short stories or novellas. This is a compendium of nearly 400 stories by some 170 famous contemporary and classic storytellers of mystery, Gothic, suspense, supernatural, ghost stories, crime, sci-fi, romance, horror and quiet-horror, fantasy, and mainstream fiction.

Follow Reading Fiction Blog via email for once-a-month posts: A free short story (or novella) by master authors or an Author Profile of the Week.

Also book recommendations and writing tips!

Follow me on  Facebook,  and Instagram. 

BlueSky.Social    Goodreads

And on my Amazon Author Page.

LinkTree

 

Other Reading Websites to Visit

Shepherd is putting the magic back in book discovery.

Wander through 12,000 book lists by experts:

Shepherd.com

 

The Gothic Wanderer

Kirkus Mystery & Thrillers Reviews

Books & Such   

NewYorkerFictionOnline

For Authors/Writers:  The Writer Unboxed

Literature Blog Directory

Blog Collection

Blog Top Sites

Thank you for supporting Reading Fiction Blog

No permission is given for the use of this material from this blog, on any and all pages, for AI training purposes.

© 2012 Paula Cappa, Reading Fiction Blog

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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