This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
Murder, mystery, and madness converge in Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland, one of the earliest and most haunting American gothic novels. First published in 1798, this unsettling tale blends supernatural intrigue with psychological terror, cementing Brown's place as a pioneer of American literature.
The story follows Clara Wieland and her brother, Theodore, whose family is marked by tragedy and obsession. Strange voices echo in the night, urging Theodore toward terrible deeds. As reason falters and superstition rises, the siblings become entangled in a web of deception, fanaticism, and inexplicable horrors. The line between divine command and human delusion blurs, leading to a shocking conclusion that questions the very nature of truth and sanity.
Brown weaves gothic suspense with distinctly American anxieties—religious fanaticism, the fragility of reason, and the dangers of unchecked passion. The novel's atmosphere of dread and ambiguity makes it both a gripping thriller and a profound exploration of the human mind under pressure.
Chilling, thought-provoking, and deeply influential, Wieland remains a cornerstone of gothic fiction, a story that continues to unsettle readers with its portrait of belief gone horribly astray.