Robert Louis Stevenson creates Horror in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" through the use of suspense, mystery, and psychological exploration. By gradually revealing the dark nature of Mr. Hyde and the sinister events surrounding him, Stevenson builds tension and unease in the reader, culminating in a chilling exploration of human nature and duality. The horror in the novel is also heightened by the moral implications of Dr. Jekyll's experiments and the consequences of allowing one's darker impulses to run unchecked.
Robert Louis Stevenson
No. It's horror with some science fiction elements.
Mary Reilly is a retelling of Robert Louis Stevenson's 'The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' from the perspective of a housemaid. Both stories explore themes of duality, morality, and the darker aspects of human nature through the character of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Well I assume by making the evil Mr.Hyde twisted and wizened to induce horror although that's just my idea.
Edgar Allan Poe, one of the founders of modern horror writing, has also influenced Stephen King's writing. It is in human nature to delve into the morbid realms of life, and both Edgar Allan Poe and Stephen King do this in their writings. These two men appear to have an oddly similar morose obsession with death, terror, horror, and murder; many of Poe's and King's characters come to an untimely demise. In looking at both Poe's and King's works, one can see how Poe may have influenced King's writing.
The genre to the book is considered to be a gothic based genre containing traces from Dracula but Stevenson uses a twist to the genre when using a city based scene in London instead of the average castle setting for gothic genres. But can still be argued as a more Gothic Genre than any other genre of books.
Olalla - short story - was created in 1885.
Kenneth Robert Page has written: 'The moment of horror'
astonishment
The Haunting.
The cast of AWOL to Horror - 1998 includes: Shaun Robert Smith as The Soldier
A Nightmare on Elm Street.