Literature


Mandy Haga Mandy Haga

What Was It?

While I was lying still as a corpse, hoping that by a perfect physical inaction I should hasten mental repose, an awful incident occurred. A Something dropped, as it seemed, from the ceiling, plumb upon my chest, and the next instant I felt two bony hands encircling my throat, endeavoring to choke me.

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Fiction Mandy Haga Fiction Mandy Haga

One Autumn Night

In a sodden corner of the city’s edge, Gorky stages a night not of salvation, but of fleeting human warmth—where two outcasts share a crust of bread, a sliver of comfort, and the unbearable weight of knowing how little separates pity from grace. The story never pleads for sympathy, yet leaves its mark like rain soaking through a thin coat: slowly, deeply, and with a chill that lingers long after morning.

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Fiction Mandy Haga Fiction Mandy Haga

The Walls Are Falling

A cold revolutionary finds himself, in his final hours, not embittered but transfigured—liberated from fear, weariness, and contempt as death draws near. In one of Andreyv’s most luminous psychological portraits, walls dissolve, time loosens, and the soul expands toward a terrible and tender clarity, where even the doomed become radiant with love.

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Mandy Haga Mandy Haga

The Tell Tale Heart

True! Nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am. But why will you say that I am mad? The disease had sharpened my senses—not destroyed—not dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How, then, am I mad? Hearken! And observe how healthily—how calmly I can tell you the whole story.

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Mandy Haga Mandy Haga

At the Farmhouse

He had been warned, by hint and suggestion, that it was ill for a man to mate with a girl of that dark and ill-famed family, or for a woman to wed a boy in whose veins ran the blood of Jonas Trenair, who learned on one All-Hallows’ Eve a darker gospel than he had ever preached before.

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Fiction Mandy Haga Fiction Mandy Haga

A New England Nun

Louisa Ellis has spent fourteen quiet years tending to her home, her habits, and her solitude, an order so finely calibrated that even the clink of a suitor's teacup feels like a trespass. Wilkins crafts a story as crisp and deliberate as Louisa’s routines, where renunciation is not sacrifice but a subtle, radical act of self-preservation.

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Horror Mandy Haga Horror Mandy Haga

The Red Room

They seemed to belong to another age, an age when things spiritual were indeed to be feared, an age when omens and witches were credible, and ghosts beyond denying. Their very existence, thought I, is spectral; the cut of their clothing, the ornaments and conveniences in the room about them even are ghostly—the thoughts of vanished men, which still haunt rather than participate in the world of to-day.

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