The Breathing Method by Stephen King
Quiet Horror Tale, February 19, 2025
Quiet horror is defined as highly atmospheric, pervasive supernatural tension and deep suspense—and one of the defining elements is ‘personal horror’ that is psychologically based. In this subgenre, there is no graphic violence or shock tactics, and not a single jump scare. Many readers consider this subgenre to be literary horror.
In quiet horror, we go deep into the characters’ experiences to explore their psychological fears, desires, obsessions, and guilt. The stories often have a philosophical bend. Quiet horror lingers in shadows that are woven and hidden into the plot. Quiet horror creates a sense of dread that the danger breathing behind you will suffocate you or drive you into utter madness.
Essentially, quiet horror is the grande and elusive Mysterious in its highest form.
The most famous quiet horror authors are Henry James, Algernon Blackwood, Shirley Jackson, Robert Aickman, and Charles L. Grant who actually invented the term with his Shadows anthologies. Also M.R. James, Arthur Machen, Daphne du Maurier, Ramsey Campbell, and Susan Hill to name a few more.
Today, I bring you an unusual quiet horror story by the master writer of traditional horror, known for his blockbuster horror tales, Stephen King’s The Breathing Method, A Winter’s Tale.
The story is a story within a story. As a novella, this is a haunting slow-burn on a snowy Thursday night in New York City. We are going to a gentlemen’s club to hear a tale. You will meet a woman named Sandra, who is expecting a child. The writing grows in suspense as if you are traveling through passages you cannot escape until you get to the shocking ending that only King could create. He certainly delivers a hit. Maybe there is such a thing as a triumph over death? What do you think?
I recommend this audio version because this telling of the tale is like the olden days of a parent reading aloud and has compelling dramatic effects. Click to listen here:
The book is available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Different-Seasons-Stephen-King-ebook/dp/B018ER7L3Y
The quiet horror genre also includes Gothic horror and Gothic thrillers (defined as a loose literary aesthetic of fear and haunting). Gothic horror carries romantic drama that fuses the plot with themes of the experiences of death, ancestral guilt, or revenge.
Gothic fiction is seeing a revival now. If you are a quiet horror fan or a Gothic fan, please post your favorite titles and authors in the comments below.
Wouldn’t you love to see an International Gothic Literature Reading Month? I love Gothic in any form. I read it, write it, and study it. I invite you to comment below.
If you are interested in more about quiet horror, here at Reading Fiction Blog, I have other posts.
I leave you with this quotation from one of the most famous Gothic quiet horror novels of all time, Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë.
“Be with me always — take any form — drive me mad! only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you!”
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