Horror Novels

Subgenres of Horror


This is the collection you read with the lights on. Gothic estates hiding generational sins, folk curses that bleed into the modern world, and psychological horror that makes you question every narrator.

"The Raven's Quill" and "The Blackglass Manor" anchor the gothic end. Decaying estates, forbidden knowledge, and the sense that the house itself remembers things the owners have tried to forget.

"The Ash and Amber Inheritance" takes the supernatural route: a haunting that isn't random but targeted, personal, and tied to something the protagonist would rather not uncover. The folk horror entries go older and stranger, tapping into traditions and rituals that have teeth.

What connects every story here is patience. These aren't narratives that rush to the monster. They build atmosphere first. They make you trust the narrator, and then they make you doubt them.

The collection spans psychological horror, supernatural dread, gothic isolation, and folk terror. The constant is craft. Every story understands that the scariest thing isn't what you see. It's the chapter where you realize you were wrong about what you were looking at.