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When a young man seeks the perfect place to study for his universitymathematics exams, he finds an isolated house that seems ideal—too ideal. The locals whisper about the Judge's House and about the cruel magistrate who once lived there. But he is a man of science, dismissive of superstition. He believes in mathematical theorems, not ghost stories. As rats scurry through the ancient walls and something enormous watches from the shadows, he'll discover that some equations have solutions that rational minds aren't prepared to accept. From the master of Gothic horror, Bram Stoker, comes a tale where academic arrogance meets supernatural justice, and where the tools of execution become instruments of an older, darker judgment.
Bram Stoker, born in Dublin in 1847, is best remembered as the creator of Count Dracula, but his mastery of Gothic horror extended far beyond vampires. Before achieving literary fame, Stoker worked as a theater manager for the renowned actor Henry Irving, a career that gave him deep insight into dramatic tension and atmospheric storytelling. "The Judge's House," published in 1891, showcases Stoker's ability to build psychological terror through the gradual revelation of supernatural forces. Unlike his more famous vampire tales, this story explores themes of academic hubris and moral justice, wrapped in the claustrophobic atmosphere of an isolated house where past sins refuse to stay buried. Stoker died in 1912, leaving behind a legacy of horror fiction that continues to influence writers and filmmakers today, proving that the best ghost stories are those that make us question what we think we know about the world around us.
We are expanding our universe of short story podcasts on our new podcast channel, Short StoryVerses. Listen to some of Don's new, original short stories on the "New Tales Told" podcast. Look it up on your favorite podcast player.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Short Storyverses4.8
285285 ratings
When a young man seeks the perfect place to study for his universitymathematics exams, he finds an isolated house that seems ideal—too ideal. The locals whisper about the Judge's House and about the cruel magistrate who once lived there. But he is a man of science, dismissive of superstition. He believes in mathematical theorems, not ghost stories. As rats scurry through the ancient walls and something enormous watches from the shadows, he'll discover that some equations have solutions that rational minds aren't prepared to accept. From the master of Gothic horror, Bram Stoker, comes a tale where academic arrogance meets supernatural justice, and where the tools of execution become instruments of an older, darker judgment.
Bram Stoker, born in Dublin in 1847, is best remembered as the creator of Count Dracula, but his mastery of Gothic horror extended far beyond vampires. Before achieving literary fame, Stoker worked as a theater manager for the renowned actor Henry Irving, a career that gave him deep insight into dramatic tension and atmospheric storytelling. "The Judge's House," published in 1891, showcases Stoker's ability to build psychological terror through the gradual revelation of supernatural forces. Unlike his more famous vampire tales, this story explores themes of academic hubris and moral justice, wrapped in the claustrophobic atmosphere of an isolated house where past sins refuse to stay buried. Stoker died in 1912, leaving behind a legacy of horror fiction that continues to influence writers and filmmakers today, proving that the best ghost stories are those that make us question what we think we know about the world around us.
We are expanding our universe of short story podcasts on our new podcast channel, Short StoryVerses. Listen to some of Don's new, original short stories on the "New Tales Told" podcast. Look it up on your favorite podcast player.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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