Washington Irving (1783–1859) is a classic author whose works are in the public domain.

Irving's headless horseman tale is not supernatural horror but psychological—a masterpiece of atmosphere and doubt about what's real that influenced every ghost story that followed. The novella's genius lies in leaving readers genuinely uncertain about the nature of the threat.

Irving resurrects the fading traditions of Old Christmas through sketches of English manor houses, community celebrations, and folklore that feel increasingly nostalgic even as he writes them. His essays preserve a vision of Christmas built on warmth, storytelling, and genuine community that childhood readers will recognize as both foreign and deeply familiar.

Irving's tale of a man who sleeps through an entire revolution remains a sharp meditation on time's passage and social change, wrapped in the deceptive simplicity of a folktale that cuts deeper than it appears.

A classic work of Fantasy by Washington Irving.