The Dunwich Horror


Read by Mark Nelson

(4.5 stars; 1022 reviews)

In a rundown farmhouse near isolated, rural Dunwich, a bizarre family conjures and nurtures an evil entity from another realm, with the purpose of destroying the world and delivering it to ancient gods to rule, and only an aged university librarian can stop them. The Dunwich Horror was first published in 1929 in Weird Tales. (Summary by Mark Nelson) (1 hr 55 min)

Chapters

Part 1, Chapters 1 - 4 37:27 Read by Mark Nelson
Part 2, Chapters 5 - 7 36:14 Read by Mark Nelson
Part 3, Chapters 8 - 10 41:49 Read by Mark Nelson

Reviews

the reader sounds exactly like the reader off mass effect 123


(3.5 stars)

terrific!


(5 stars)

a terrificly creepy story and really well read! there are some blatant racist words in there but if you listen to it (which you should) if you like these stories then you should remember that when it was written they probably didn't know what racism was! the voices he does in this are fantastic and I could picture them really well. hope I can find more with him reading. And if you like his voice try Mike Bennett too!

Fascinatinf story and great reading


(5 stars)

Love the level of performance here. Classy and subtle but still exciting and with lots of accents to differentiate people. The story is interesting and exciting and has lots of info to keep me going in my HPL investigations.

Delightful


(5 stars)

One of the most quirky stories I ever heard, and seems to be a possible remote inspiration for the Harry Potter books. Interesting weaving of old pagan rites that summon other worldly dimensional beings. I wonder if there is some connection to Aleister Crowley's ritual sex magick that gave imagination to H.P. Lovecraft's writings.

fun apocalyptic terror


(4.5 stars)

fantasy? horror? science fiction? psychological thriller? it's a weird tale representative of the metaphysical speculations of the early 20th Century mixed with Jungian tropes of Psyche and Symbol. it is also read very well. I am getting hooked by the mythos.

What more do you want?


(5 stars)

Deliciously creepy and suspicious of backwoods folk. Atmospheric and sparingly drawn. You'll not soon forget this 1920's tale. Also an excellent and generous narration style. Thank you for our hard work!

Great short horror story


(5 stars)

Lovecraft fashion through and through. A great little tale of mystery and mysticism with imagery that chills and makes one feel as if walking in the shaking books of the story's charcters.

The Dunwich Horror


(5 stars)

The ending gets me every time I've read this. "It looked more like the father than he did" makes you really think about the whole mess that the book built up to.