RandolphCarter

joined 2 years ago
 

A short story for every year from 1880 to 1960. See the difference in language and focus over time. Gothic tales and war stories become romances and science fiction.

1960 – August — A quiet, introspective portrait of memory, routine, and emotional distance in an ordinary life. Science Fiction

1959 – The Landlady — A cheerful boarding house conceals a chilling and lethal secret. Thriller

1958 – The Feeling of Power — In a computerized future, a forgotten human skill becomes dangerously powerful. Science Fiction

1957 – The Fly — A grieving man projects his cruelty onto a trapped insect. Science Fiction

1956 – The Last Question — Humanity repeatedly asks a supercomputer about the fate of the universe. Science Fiction

1955 – The Star — A triumphant scientific discovery carries an unbearable moral cost. Science Fiction

1954 – The Cold Equations — A man must decide between the life of a young woman and the life of an entire planet. Science Fiction

1953 – The Hanging Stranger — A man notices a corpse that no one else seems willing to see. Science Fiction

1952 – The Birds — A farmer finds the birds attacking him and his family. Thriller

1951 – The Pedestrian — A solitary walker becomes a criminal in a conformist future society. Science Fiction

1950 – The Veldt — A virtual nursery reveals the deadly consequences of technological indulgence. Science Fiction

1949 – The Lottery — A small town’s tradition culminates in ritualized violence. Dystopian

1948 – Asleep in Armageddon — A man awakens alone on Earth after humanity’s apparent extinction. Science Fiction

1947 – Zero Hour — Children unknowingly assist an alien invasion adults dismiss as play. Science Fiction

1946 – Beware of the Dog — A wounded pilot discovers he may be in the wrong war—and the wrong time. Mystery

1945 – The Aleph — A single point in space contains all places and all moments simultaneously. Science Fiction

1944 – The Story-Teller — After an Aunt fails to engage three children with stories of good little children living happily, a stranger volunteers his own story with a twist. Comedy

1941 – The Thing in the Moonlight — A seaside walk slips into cosmic dread and unease. Horror.

1940 – Freedom’s a Hard-Bought Thing — Resistance demands sacrifice under the pressures of occupation. Drama.

1939 – Into Egypt — A soldier marches a group of people out of his country. Drama.

1938 – Azathoth — Fragmentary visions hint at a blind, indifferent cosmic god. Horror.

1937 – By the Waters of Babylon — A forbidden journey reveals the ruins of a lost technological world. Fantasy.

1936 – The Blood of the Martyrs — A man is dragged in front of a dictator and asked to lie on behalf of his country. Drama

1935 – Rogues in the House — Political intrigue and swordplay collide in a violent power struggle. Fantasy.

1934 – The Plutonian Drug — A man uses a drug that allows him to see time in two-dimensions and is able to see his own fate wtihout realising. Science Fiction.

1933 – A Clean Well Lighted Place — Loneliness and despair surface in a late-night café. Drama.

1932 – The Tailor of Gloucester — A poor tailor is given the chance to make a coat for the Mayor of Gloucester, but he is down to his last skein of cherry-coloured twist. Childrens.

1931 – Elaine's Tomb — Two lecturers go on an expedition to examine bodies found in Egypt that have been perfectly preserved for thousands of years. Science Fiction.

1930 – A Portrait — A poem on an unstable romantic life. A fleeting moment exposes youthful vanity and insecurity. Drama.

1929 – The Disintegration Machine — A journalist and a scientist investigate a man who has claimed to invent a machine that can disintegrate and subsequently reintegrate anything put in its view. Science Fiction.

1928 – The Law Beaters — Two men discuss the law while drinking, and compare their past nefarious escapades. Mystery.

1927 – Hills Like White Elephants — A couple’s restrained dialogue masks a life-changing decision. Drama.

1926 – The Parasitic Hand — A severed hand appears to act with a will of its own. Science Fiction.

1925 – The Pearl of Love — A fable on a man that builds an enormous monument to his deceased princess. Fantasy.

1924 – The Sensible Thing — George O’Kelly wants the hand of the beautiful Jonquil Cary, but has become insecure about his unstable career path and the boys she surrounds herself with. Drama.

1923 – The Adventure of the Cheap Flat — An attractive apartment conceals a criminal scheme. Mystery.

1922 – The Curious Case of Benjamin Button — A man lives his life aging backward. Comedy.

1921 – A Haunted House — A ghostly presence reflects enduring love. Horror.

1920 – The Bookshop — A man spots a quaint bookshop that seems out of place amongst the cheap and convenient shops nearby which people rush in and out of. Drama.

1919 – A Country Doctor — A country doctor is desparate for a horse to make it to a dying patient when a pair of horses and a groom appear in his house out of nowhere. Drama.

1918 – The Black Bull of Norroway — A humble young girl claims she would be happy to marry even the ‘Black Bull of Norroway’. Soon after a bull turns up at her house asking for her hand. Childrens.

1917 – The Detective Detector — A criminal makes the preposterous claim of being able to track down a New York detective. Comedy.

1916 – Cain — A Russian captain of a punitive expedition is visited in the night by a man he has sentenced to death without cause. War.

1915 – A Sea of Troubles — Mr Meggs’s decides to end his life and divide his money up to several of his friends, but his act of charity insults one of them. Comedy.

1914 – Confessions of a Humorist — A clerk earns popularity as the towns humourist after a successful speech and a string of clever quips. Comedy.

1913 – The Feast of Nemesis — After Mrs. Thackenbury complains of the difficulties of gift giving holidays, her nephew Clovis postures the idea of a holiday of the reversed kind. Where you give to people you loathe, negative gifts. Comedy.

1912 – How the Whale Got His Throat — A playful myth explaining a whale’s anatomy. Childrens.

1911 – The Deferred Appointment — A photographer is closing up shop when a local bookseller turns up out of the blue to sit down for a portrait without saying a word. Horror.

1910 – The Gateway of the Monster — Science brushes against something monstrously unknown. Fantasy.

1909 – A Piece of Steak — An aging boxer confronts hunger and decline. Drama.

1908 – The Fortress Unvanquisable, Save for Sacnoth — Intelligence triumphs over brute force in fantasy warfare. Fantasy.

1907 – Pictures — A vagrant travels from place to place comparing the quiet calm of some places with the brutality of others and with the joy of others yet. Drama.

1906 – Hunting the Deceitful Turkey — A comic frontier pursuit spirals into chaos. Comedy.

1905 – Anathema — A deacon who loves reading fiction as well as church literature finds himself ordered by the church to denounce the author of one of his favourite novels. Drama.

1904 – Eveline — The young Eveline contemplates breaking her promise and running away from home. Drama.

1903 – Work, Death and Sickness — God introduces struggle to mankind in an attempt to force them to live in peace. Drama.

1902 – A Self-Made Man — Stephen Crane gives his guaranteed method to get rich in the form of a story. A man struggling to find work comes across a man in desperate need of someone trustworthy to read a letter for him. Comedy.

1901 – The Loaded Dog — A slapstick mishap escalates into disaster. Comedy.

1900 – The Darling — A woman shapes her identity around the men she loves. Drama.

1899 – A Reflection — The narrator contemplates the ability of those more fortunate to stay in line with the procession of life. Drama.

1898 – The Man in a Case — A schoolteacher tells of a colleague he once had who lived his life as if ‘in a case’. Drama.

1897 – The Eyes of the Panther — A woman tells a story to explain why she can’t marry a man. Horror.

1896 – A Black Affair — After a ship crew’s favourite cat is under threat of being thrown overboard by the skipper, the cook hatches a plan. Comedy.

1895 – The Inmost Light — A man introduces to his old friend a mystery of a missing woman with a potentially supernatural explanation. Fantasy.

1894 – The Doer of Good — Moral righteousness masks hypocrisy and harm. Drama.

1893 – Miss Harriet — A lifetime of unreturned love ends in quiet tragedy. Drama.

1892 – The Yellow Wallpaper — Enforced domestic confinement drives a woman into madness. Gothic.

1891 – Luck — A man tells of an officer that keeps failing his way upwards. Comedy.

1890 – An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge — A condemned man imagines escape in his final moments. War.

1889 – A Bottomless Grave — After a father dies, not because he was poisoned by the mother, a family buries him in the garden, not because anything suspicious happened... Comedy.

1887 – The Kiss — A soldier accidentally kisses a woman at a house and can't move on. Drama.

1886 – A Tale of Negative Gravity — A scientific man invents a machine to store up a force opposite to gravity. Comedy.

1885 – Three Questions — A king asks all his subjects three questions: What is most important, who to listen to, and when to begin? Drama.

1884 – My Uncle Jules — A heroic family myth dissolves into disappointment. Drama.

1883 – A Vendetta — A mother enacts ruthless revenge for her son. Drama.

1882 – The Transferred Ghost — While waiting to ask a young woman for her hand, a man meets a ghost who is interested in his plans. Fantasy.

1881 – What Men Live By — Compassion, not wealth, sustains humanity. Drama.

1880 – Dead Woman’s Secret — A hidden truth is revealed from beyond the grave. Drama.

 

Short stories are a great way to ease back into reading and rebuild your stamina and focus. Here are some extra short ones that got me reading again.

[–] RandolphCarter@lemmy.world 2 points 7 months ago

I've only had one complaint for a short story that turned out to still be copyrighted, otherwise it has been smooth sailing.

 

I have 182 fantasy short stories from the public domain on my website all sorted by title, author, length and publish date.

Links to my favourite fantasy authors on the website

Clark Ashton Smith
H. P. Lovecraft
H. G. Wells
Stephen Vincent Benet
Robert E. Howard
Hans Christitan Andersen
Lord Dunsany

Links to my favourite fantasy short stories on the website

A Dream of Armageddon
The Last Incantation
The Golden Fleece

Enjoy!

 

This is an online library of Edgar Allen Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, Arthur Conan Doyle, Jack London, Anton Chekhov, Guy de Maupassant, Raymond Bradbury and other classic short story authors. Cookie-free, login-free, and with only tiny affiliate links at the bottom of pages to keep it running.

[–] RandolphCarter@lemmy.world 3 points 2 years ago

That's where I got half the stories :)

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