"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Spooktober: that’s a wrap

As October draws to a close, so too does our month-long journey through haunted halls, spectral visions, and uneasy hearts. This Spooktober, we’ve celebrated a remarkable group of writers: Charlotte Riddell, Marjorie Bowen, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, Elizabeth Gaskell, Anna Katharine Green, and Ellen Wood.

What united them, beyond the span of decades and the variety of their voices, was a gift for transforming the ordinary into the uncanny. They knew how to make the setting itself pulse with dread: an abandoned house, a lonely bedroom, or even a familiar parlour could become the stage for something terrifying. Their ghosts rarely confined themselves to castles or ruins; instead, they slipped into the domestic spaces their readers knew so well, unsettling the very idea of “home.”

These stories worked not only because of their atmospheres, but also because of the emotional truths they carried. Rather than relying solely on apparitions, each author explored the inner lives of her characters: loneliness, guilt, repression, and the pressure of social expectation. The supernatural was never just spectacle: it was a mirror held up to human fear and desire.

In doing so, these women made their mark on a genre often dominated by men, claiming their place as architects of Gothic and supernatural fiction. Their tales remind us that a ghost story is never only about ghosts; it is about what lingers — the traces of lost lives, silenced voices, and hidden crimes — and how the past refuses to let the present rest.

As we close this year’s Spooktober, we honour these authors not just as creators of chilling tales, but as pioneers who gave the Gothic imagination a distinctly female voice, one that still resonates in the shiver down the spine today.

That being said, what are you doing this Halloween?

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