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Five Spooky Fiction Podcasts That Go Bump in the Night

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Five Spooky Fiction Podcasts That Go Bump in the Night

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Five Spooky Fiction Podcasts That Go Bump in the Night

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Published on March 13, 2020

Photo: Christina Orlando
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Skull wearing headphones
Photo: Christina Orlando

Halloween may be eight months away, but we’re declaring Friday the 13th honorary spooky season! It’s time to plug your headphones in to haunted houses, creepy townspeople, and terrifying alien invasions. The music fades in, a soft piano, but maybe just slightly out of tune. The wind blows by your ear. The footsteps of a tall, mysterious figure draw closer and closer. A twig snaps somewhere off in the distance. And suddenly, there are chills racing up your spine.

Ready to get lost? Here are a few great places to start.

 

Unwell

Going home is always strange, small towns always have their mysteries. So when Lillian Harper comes home after her mother is injured, she already feels out of place. And the old boarding house her mother owns isn’t haunted, not really, the ghost tour is just for tourists. Obviously. But the town is weird. And there is a voice in the windchimes. And no one is really sure how that window in the attic got broken. Along with PhD candidate Abbie, who is researching urban planning and small town decay, Lily is thrown into a weird, inexplicable mystery. Unwell is an expertly produced show with an inclusive cast, a story that is both creepy and charming, and some banjo tracks that really slap. Love me a banjo, love me a small town with a Meat Raffle. Yeah, you heard me. I said Meat Raffle.

 

Janus Descending

I know I probably don’t have to say more than “horror in space” to get y’all to listen to Janus Descending, but I’m going to give you a little more anymore. The story begins with Chel and Peter, two xenoarcheologists aboard The Adamantine, on a mission to a mysterious planet where they plan to excavate a lost civilization. And then there is an illness. And then there are eyes everywhere, watching them. And then everything starts to change. The story of Janus Descending unfolds non-linearly, so we get little snippets of past and future that slowly get put together. But it’s this storytelling tactic that makes the suspense so effective – as a listener, you’re not sure where you are or when you are, or who to trust. The worldbuilding here is spectacular, with plenty of detail to allow you to close your eyes and let your imagination get lost. Really, Janus Descending has it all.

 

The Black Tapes

Do you believe in ghosts? Of course you do. Whether you like to admit it or not, you are open to the possibility. The Black Tapes is a fictional docuseries that follows paranormal investigations. Think Ghost Hunters meets something like The Keepers or Serial. Host Alex Reagan (voiced by Lori Henry) interviews various paranormal scientists and researchers about their work, including the elusive Dr. Strand, a paranormal researcher who does not believe in ghosts, and is constantly negative about the work of his colleagues. Stand has promised a million dollars to anyone who can provide evidence of the paranormal, to any case he can’t debunk. So far, the money hasn’t been rewarded to anyone. But Dr. Strand, a creepy, brilliantly written antagonist figure, has a few unsolved cases…and that’s when things start getting weird. It’s engaging from the very start, and the levels of realism (to the point that they don’t even list the voice actors on their website) really draw the listener in. If you love psychological thrills, this one is for you.

 

Palimpsest

Memory is a tricky thing. Trauma plays with the mind in ways we can’t always explain or expect. And sometimes, things come back to haunt us. Anneliese has moved into a new apartment after the loss of her sister, Claire, and a breakup. Pretty soon after making the move, Anneliese starts to hear strange noises: a child playing in the yard, scratching and dragging in the hallway. She starts feeling things that aren’t there, seeing things in the mirror. And the neighbors…well. You never know about the neighbors. The story develops slowly, so slowly that you might not notice anything happening at all. But little details slip through and build until you start to feel like something’s just not right. Palimpsest is perfect for those who like their horror with a little Shirley Jackson vibe. Season two brings an entirely new story, but with the same themes of memory, psychology, and things moving in the corner of your eye.

 

Point Mystic

There are strange things happening in the woods. There are communities of people and not all is as it seems. The continuation of a popular radio show, Point Mystic is an anthology podcast which ranges from the uncanny to the downright horrific. The stories tangle reality and fiction, featuring fictitious news snippets and interviews. The real success of Point Mystic is it’s focus on the rural setting (the town of Point Mystic), and narrative storytelling, which is perfect for fans of Lore – in fact, this podcast feels very much like a fictionalized version of Lore, even down to the proclamation that it speaks about “the stories behind the myth”. The first season contains a few stories, including the four part White Rabbit serial, a gloriously spooky story about strange structures in the woods wherein the creator of the podcast and his family are characters, along with a story from Joe Hill. Season two features a story by popular YA author, Maggie Stiefvater.

 

Originally published in October 2019.

About the Author

Christina Orlando

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Christina Orlando is the Senior Books Editor for Reactor. Find them on Twitter at @cxorlando and Instagram at @thechristinaorlando
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James S.
5 years ago

I’d be remiss if i didn’t also recommend the Mask of Inanna, http://www.themaskofinanna.com/

It’s been ten years, but it’s still a worthy listen.

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corinne
5 years ago

I loved black tapes, but still can’t recommend it because of how disastrously it ended =( 

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5 years ago

Noted! ;)

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5 years ago

My taste leans toward true anecdotal ghost stories like “Real Ghost Stories Online” and “The Paranormal Scholar.”  Fictional horror darker than dark fantasy isn’t for me.  If you really want to be creeped out, try the TV show, “The Dead Files.”  From that show, I’ve learned about things in this world I wish I didn’t know about.  

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Kimi
5 years ago

The box reminds me a lot of the black tapes, it’s actually spooked me a bit more

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Ophid
5 years ago

Let’s not forget Alice Isn’t Dead!

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5 years ago

The Magnus Archives deserves some serious love.

http://rustyquill.com/the-magnus-archives/

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Philippa Chapman
5 years ago

No love for the Night Vale?

http://www.welcometonightvale.com/

Spooky = check

Bump in the night = kinda

Weird = check

 

All hail the cloud!

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Anne
5 years ago

The Magnus Archives is definitely worth a mentioning. Self contained scary short stories that add up to a bigger, scarier, picture. So far, 4 seasons are avaiable with the fifth and final season coming April, 1th. So a perfect time to binge.

jere7my
5 years ago

@2: As of January, they’re now describing the last released episode of the Black Tapes as a “mid-season finale,” which suggests more episodes are incoming.

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Nick Pipitone
5 years ago

I’m currently listening to TANIS and liking it so far. Rabbits (made by the same studio) was also pretty awesome. They’re not particularly supernatural, but there were a few times during the Rabbits season where it got pretty weird!

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5 years ago

I tried Janus Descending, but while I get what they were attempting, for me it just didn’t work.  The “found footage” style works adequately but they lean way too heavily into it.  They needed to work more strongly into the narrative, and maybe excise some of the fractured aspects.  Also characters were pretty terrible, and not in a “so bad I kinda like them” but more in the super annoying. 

Wasn’t long before I was rooting for the bad thing to kill them faster rather than slower, but even that wasn’t happening fast enough due to the found footage aspect, so… I just dropped it.

Unwell though is quite good, kind of a “slice of weird life” genre.  Season two has been working in more revelations so that’s good.  It takes a little while for the spooky to get rolling, but it’s satisfying before that.

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Paula
5 years ago

I would suggest Archive 81, Darkest Night, and Deadly Manners. The Black Tapes was one of my favorite podcasts for a long time- but the disastrous ending (or what they are now saying is a mid-season finale?) makes it really hard to recommend. Here’s hoping they can save it.

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5 years ago

‘Old Gods of Appalachia’ is an excellent Mythos-based podcast about what happens in a Kentucky mine when the miners dig too deep and wake what lives under the mountain.

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harmonyfb
5 years ago

The best new horror fiction podcast I’ve found is “The Old Gods of Appalachia“. Creepery, shivery, spooky Southern US folklore horror.

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5 years ago

Agree with everyone else re: the black tapes. Such a disappointing finale. That podcast was creepy AF until the ending.

 

I am enjoying The Bright Sessions / AM Archives. Not about ghosts, but a creepy shadow organization trying to take advantage of “atypicals”. 

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5 years ago

I chime in heartily with 7 and 10 in recommending The Magnus Archives. It’s a fascinating exercise in storytelling and worldbuilding. It starts off seeming to be a completely episodic anthology series. But then a name is repeated here, and you go “wait don’t I remember that person from episode three?” Then a place is mentioned there and you go “hold on wasn’t that where episode seven happened” and pretty soon you’re going full conspiracy wall with pins and yarn as the show starts tying everything together in a wider narrative and a vast cosmology. All that, and characters that you start to genuinely give a damn about. Despite your better judgement, frankly, because this IS a horror series and everyone you love probably WILL get horribly murdered or eaten or something. But you just can’t HELP it and you just want them to be OKAY and they WON’T be and I WON’T BE EITHER and… *sobs* 

And I also agree with folks about the ending of The Black Tapes. Bleah. 

Does Limetown count as horror? Contemporary science fiction horror? I know I found several scenes scary as hell in the slow sickening stomach dropping out way. A faux documentary (at least initially) about an investigative journalist looking into a town where every single resident disappeared. Some of the stories of the people interviewed, as the tale of what really happened in Limetown and afterwards unfolded, were delightfully nightmarish. 

 

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5 years ago

I don’t see a recommendation for The White Vault, which is full of wonderful nocturnal bumpiness.  I didn’t find the most recent season (the third) to be quite as menacing, claustrophobic, and brilliant as the first two seasons, but the season finale did give me hope they’re going to tie everything together nicely.

Seasons 1 & 2: a team is sent up to a remote Arctic research station in Norway that’s mysteriously gone dark.  They don’t find the researchers.  They do find what the researchers found.  Which isn’t pleasant.  And now they’re trapped in a blizzard with it.

Season 3: an archeological team visits a remote cave system in the Andes, looking for artifacts.  The artifacts find them.

Give it a listen.  Is good.