L'hôtel hanté by Wilkie Collins

(8 User reviews)   1678
By Carol Thompson Posted on Jan 21, 2026
In Category - Success Stories
Collins, Wilkie, 1824-1889 Collins, Wilkie, 1824-1889
French
Hey, have you ever checked into a hotel room and felt like you weren't alone? That's the deliciously creepy starting point for Wilkie Collins' 'L'hôtel hanté'. Forget modern jump scares—this is a classic Victorian ghost story that gets under your skin. The setup is brilliant: a skeptical man accepts a bet to spend the night in a notoriously haunted hotel room. He’s convinced he can prove there’s nothing there. But as the clock ticks toward midnight, every little sound in the old building starts to feel... intentional. Is it his imagination running wild, or is something truly waiting for him in the dark? Collins masterfully builds the tension so slowly you almost don't notice you’ve stopped breathing. It’s a short, sharp shot of Gothic atmosphere that proves sometimes the oldest stories are the most frightening. Perfect for a stormy night when you want a taste of the supernatural without a huge commitment.
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Wilkie Collins, a master of Victorian suspense, gives us a compact and potent ghost story in 'L'hôtel hanté'. It’s a tale that proves you don’t need hundreds of pages to create a lasting chill.

The Story

The plot is beautifully simple. Our narrator is a man of reason who laughs at ghost stories. When friends tell him about a specific room in a Parisian hotel that is said to be haunted—a room where multiple guests have fled in terror—he scoffs. He’s so confident that he makes a bet: he will stay in that very room overnight to prove there’s nothing to fear. Armed with only his logic and a bit of bravado, he settles in. At first, it’s just an ordinary, slightly shabby room. But as night deepens, the atmosphere changes. He hears things—strange, unplaceable sounds that the rational part of his mind tries to explain away. A dragging step? Just the old building settling. A sigh? The wind in the chimney. But the sounds don’t stop; they seem to respond to his presence, growing closer and more distinct. The real horror isn’t in a sudden apparition, but in the slow, relentless dismantling of his certainty, leaving him alone with a growing, undeniable dread.

Why You Should Read It

What I love about this story is its psychological grip. Collins isn’t just writing about a ghost; he’s writing about the fear of fear itself. We’re right there in the narrator’s head as his scientific confidence crumbles. The ‘haunting’ is almost entirely auditory, which somehow makes it worse. Your mind is forced to picture what’s making those sounds, and that imagination is far scarier than any description Collins could have written. It’s a masterclass in suggestion. The setting—a grand but faded hotel—is perfect. It’s a public space that becomes intensely private and threatening, a place where you’re supposed to feel safe but suddenly feel utterly exposed.

Final Verdict

This is a must-read for anyone who enjoys classic Gothic atmosphere or a brilliantly crafted, slow-burn scare. It’s ideal if you love authors like M.R. James or Shirley Jackson, where the terror is in the unsettling mood and the fragility of the human mind. It’s also a fantastic introduction to Wilkie Collins if you’re intimidated by his longer novels like 'The Woman in White'. You can read it in one sitting, but the eerie feeling it creates will linger for much longer. Just maybe don’t read it right before a solo hotel stay.



🔓 Public Domain Content

This historical work is free of copyright protections. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.

Donald Hernandez
2 years ago

Comprehensive and well-researched.

Joshua Johnson
5 months ago

I have to admit, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Exceeded all my expectations.

Susan Anderson
1 year ago

This book was worth my time since the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. A true masterpiece.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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