It Could Happen Here

CZM Book Club: Two Tales of Classic Horror, by Saki and Bierce

7 snips
Oct 19, 2025
Explore the nuanced relationship between horror and storytelling as classic ghost tales are brought to life. Discover the mischief in Saki's 'The Open Window' and its satire on Victorian society through a clever twist. Ambrose Bierce's eerie narrative, 'An Inhabitant of Carcosa,' reveals chilling truths about life and death in a deserted city. Delve into the influence of Carcosa on modern horror, tracing its legacy through literary giants to contemporary works. The discussions highlight the spectrum where Gothic meets cosmic horror, providing a rich backdrop for both tales.
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INSIGHT

Satire Hides A Horror Twist

  • Saki's "The Open Window" satirizes Victorian manners while delivering a playful supernatural twist.
  • Margaret highlights the story's mockery of belief in hysterical women and the ease of manipulating male credulity.
INSIGHT

Agency Subverts Gothic Tropes

  • The story frames female agency as mischievous power against social expectations.
  • Margaret argues the tale foreshadows horror's shift toward psychological focus on sanity and narration.
ANECDOTE

Bierce's Life Mirrors His Fiction

  • Margaret recounts Ambrose Bierce's background as a Union soldier and satirist who later disappeared in Mexico.
  • She connects his real-life disappearance to themes of vanished bodies in his fiction.
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