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A Wireless Message is a brief, uncanny tale about a man who receives an impossible warning in the dead of night—one that seems to pass through neither voice nor wire, but something far more mysterious. What begins as a mundane moment on a quiet country road turns suddenly intimate and chilling, as the narrator confronts a message meant only for him, delivered by someone who could not possibly be there. Bierce builds the tension with his trademark simplicity: no theatrics, no tricks, just a quiet encounter that unsettles the rational mind and lingers long after the telling.
Ambrose Bierce (1842–circa 1914) carved out one of the sharpest, most unsettling voices in American literature. A Civil War veteran turned journalist, he carried the battlefield’s brutality into his fiction—distilling it into stories marked by dark wit, psychological unease, and a quiet, relentless tension. His tales often blend the ordinary with the uncanny, questioning the line between reality and nightmare while exposing the fragility of human certainty. Though best known for An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and The Devil’s Dictionary, Bierce’s body of work remains a cornerstone of classic American horror and mystery: lean, atmospheric, and unflinchingly direct.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Short StoryversesA Wireless Message is a brief, uncanny tale about a man who receives an impossible warning in the dead of night—one that seems to pass through neither voice nor wire, but something far more mysterious. What begins as a mundane moment on a quiet country road turns suddenly intimate and chilling, as the narrator confronts a message meant only for him, delivered by someone who could not possibly be there. Bierce builds the tension with his trademark simplicity: no theatrics, no tricks, just a quiet encounter that unsettles the rational mind and lingers long after the telling.
Ambrose Bierce (1842–circa 1914) carved out one of the sharpest, most unsettling voices in American literature. A Civil War veteran turned journalist, he carried the battlefield’s brutality into his fiction—distilling it into stories marked by dark wit, psychological unease, and a quiet, relentless tension. His tales often blend the ordinary with the uncanny, questioning the line between reality and nightmare while exposing the fragility of human certainty. Though best known for An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and The Devil’s Dictionary, Bierce’s body of work remains a cornerstone of classic American horror and mystery: lean, atmospheric, and unflinchingly direct.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.