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The Fog Horn/Monsters(2010)

Season 22 Episode 16 Published 10 hours ago
Description

The Fog Horn — Ray Bradbury, a monster is in love with the sound of a lighthouse. Monsters (2010) – Borders, otherness, creeping vastness.


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Season 22 bonus episodes 90-112

 

Title and Author

Brief description

90

“The Empty House” — Algernon Blackwood

A classic haunted-house story: two curious visitors enter a long-abandoned house and slowly realize the old violence inside it has not gone away.

91

“The Judge’s House” — Bram Stoker

A student rents a gloomy old house once owned by a cruel judge, then finds the place still ruled by rats, dread, and a hanging shadow.

92a

“Laura” — Saki / H. H. Munro

A sharp, darkly funny reincarnation story about a mischievous woman who may return after death in a very inconvenient form.

92b

“Man-Size in Marble” — E. Nesbit

A newly married couple dismisses a local legend about marble knight effigies that walk at night; this proves unwise.

93

“Phantasmagoria” — Lewis Carroll

A comic ghost poem, more playful than frightening, about ghostly rules, manners, and the absurd bureaucracy of haunting.

94

“Schalken the Painter” — Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

A Gothic tale of art, money, and damnation, centered on a young painter, a lost love, and a sinister suitor who may not be alive.

95A

“The Shadows on the Wall” — Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

After a family death, strange shadows appear on the wall, turning grief, guilt, and suspicion into a supernatural judgment.

95B

“Tales of Treasure” — Anonymous

A very short treasure-haunting piece; more of a compact eerie anecdote than a full plotted ghost story.

96

“The Trial for Murder” — Charles Dickens

A murder victim’s ghost appears around the trial of the accused killer, pushing the living world toward justice.

97A

“Uncle Abraham’s Romance” — E. Nesbit

A gentle, melancholy ghost-romance about an old man, a beautiful portrait, and a love story touched by death.

97B

“The Beast in the Cave” — H. P. Lovecraft

An early Lovecraft story: a man lost in a cave hears something coming through the dark, and the final reveal is grim and human.

98

“The Ebony Frame” — E. Nesbit

A haunted-portrait romance in which a woman in an old picture seems able to step out of the frame, but at a terrible cost.

99

“The Red Room” — H. G. Wells

A skeptic spends the night in a supposedly haunted room and discovers that the true ghost may be fear itself.

100

“The Bell in the Fog” — Gertrude Atherton

A Henry James-flavored Gothic story about an inherited English estate, old portraits, reincarnation, and family tragedy.

101

“The Ghost Club” — John Kendrick Bangs

A comic supernatural story about crime, ghosts, and absurd afterlife logic; lighter and more satirical than scary.

102A

“A Ghost Story” — Mark Twain

Twain turns the haunted-room setup into a comic ghost story, playing with superstition and mistaken identity.

102B

“A Psychical Prank” — John Kendrick Bangs

Corrected from “Physical Prank.” A humorous Bangs

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