Author:
Ambrose Bierce

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Learn moreThe Middle Toe of the Right Foot
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Learn moreIn The Middle Toe of the Right Foot, Ambrose Bierce weaves a chilling and unsettling tale where the ordinary becomes terrifyingly abnormal. The story explores the curious intersection of fate and superstition, as a simple injury leads to an unnerving series of events. With his signature blend of dark humor and gothic sensibility, Bierce crafts a narrative that challenges the reader's understanding of reality, turning the most mundane of circumstances into a source of dread.
Through his mastery of suspense, Bierce creates an atmosphere where the lines between rational thought and irrational fear blur. The middle toe of the right foot, seemingly a trivial detail, becomes a symbol of psychological unease, embodying the fragility of the human mind and its susceptibility to the irrational.
Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce (1842–circa 1914) was born in Ohio in 1842, the tenth of thirteen children in a poor but educated family. He left home in his teens, studied at a military academy, and went on to serve with distinction in the Union Army during the Civil War. His battlefield experience would deeply influence his writing for the rest of his life. After the war, Bierce became a journalist and began publishing fiction. His stories often explore death, illusion, madness, and the cruelty of fate—obsessions rooted in his wartime past. An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge remains his best-known tale: a powerful blend of suspense and psychological depth. Stories like Chickamauga, The Death of Halpin Frayser, and The Middle Toe of the Right Foot showcase his gift for eerie atmosphere and sharp moral insight. As a columnist for The San Francisco Examiner, Bierce was notorious for his sarcasm and fearless commentary. His Devil's Dictionary offered cynical definitions of common words, exposing the absurdities of politics, religion, and society. In 1913, Bierce traveled to Mexico during the revolution and disappeared without a trace. His fate remains one of literature's great unsolved mysteries. Ambrose Bierce was a sharp-tongued realist, a dark visionary, and a writer who defied convention. His work continues to unsettle and fascinate—proof that shadows cast by the past can still fall across the present.
Audiobook details
Narrator:
Mark Bowen
ISBN:
4069828331105
Length:
25 minutes
Language:
English
Publisher:
Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing
Publication date:
April 14, 2025
Edition:
Unabridged