Mark McNease Mysteries Podcast #75: A House in the Woods 2: The Devil's Due (Chapters 7-9)
Mark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Release Date: 08/13/2025
Mark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Welcome to Fearsome Fiction, the podcast that brings you mysteries, thrillers, rare gems, and a weekly True Crime Tuesday. Today we conclude our journey through one of the greatest locked-room mysteries ever written, with chapters 14 through 29. Published in 1907, Gaston Leroux's The Mystery of the Yellow Room set the standard for a genre that would captivate readers for generations. A young woman is found brutally attacked inside a room locked from the inside. No one could have entered. No one could have escaped. And yet someone did both. Following the investigation is the brilliant young...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Marshall James: Chapters Twenty-Five Through Twenty-Seven Chapter Twenty-Five finds Marshall waking up in Leland's apartment the morning after a drug-fueled night he remembers all too clearly. Filled with regret, he dresses, slips out, and returns to Trent Stoffer's Upper East Side apartment — where he finds the place ransacked and Trent dead, bound and tortured in his bedroom. Knowing the police will eventually trace him to the scene, Marshall grabs a hidden computer disk from his suitcase and disappears into the New York morning — just as Carlton the doorman picks up the phone. Chapter...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
True Crime Tuesdays - A Fearsome Fiction Podcast Feature: The Black Dahlia Welcome to True Crime Tuesdays. I'll be sharing a true crime story every Tuesday on Mark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast. Narration is provided by my own Wondervox. Fasten your headphones for one of the most famous unsolved murders in the annals of American crime - or is it American madness? They found her on the morning of January 15th, 1947. A woman walking with her daughter through a vacant lot in the Leimert Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. She thought at first that what she was seeing was a discarded department...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Welcome to Fearsome Fiction, the podcast that brings you mysteries, thrillers, rare gems, and a weekly True Crime Tuesday. Today we continue our journey through one of the greatest locked-room mysteries ever written. Published in 1907, Gaston Leroux's The Mystery of the Yellow Room set the standard for a genre that would captivate readers for generations. A young woman is found brutally attacked inside a room locked from the inside. No one could have entered. No one could have escaped. And yet someone did both. Following the investigation is the brilliant young journalist and amateur detective...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
I'll be sharing one story at a time in audio version from my collection '5 of a Kind: Short Fiction.' “The Gospel According to God”, narrated by my own Wondervox, is the first story the collection. Spanning human history from primordial silence to a chance encounter on a Central Park bench, the story traces what happens when people mistake the infinite for a brick and the boundless for a rulebook — including Eric, a pre-literate mystic who discovers the divine lives inside every person and is killed for saying so. Threading through the ancient scenes is Melissa, a young theater...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Today we continue our serialized audio journey through one of the great classics of detective fiction: The Mystery of the Yellow Room, by Gaston Leroux — presented here in the Vivid Press Edition. First published in 1907, this novel gave the world one of its most enduring puzzles: a woman attacked in a room locked from the inside, with no possible means of escape for her assailant. No hidden doors. No passable windows. No explanation — until a brilliant young reporter named Joseph Rouletabille decides to find one. If you've never read it, you're in for something special. If you have,...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Welcome back to Fearsome Fiction, and to Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller. When we last left Marshall, he was finding his footing in a New York City that was as thrilling as it was foreign — a city that moved faster than he did, that asked more of him than he expected, and that seemed to be keeping secrets at every turn. In tonight's chapters, those secrets begin to take on weight. Trent hands Marshall a small yellow envelope — a floppy disk he calls "insurance" — and refuses to say more. It's the kind of thing a man hands off only when he's afraid of what...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Gaston Leroux published The Mystery of the Yellow Room in 1907, and it's been quietly influencing mystery writers ever since. In this episode we dig into chapters 1 through 6 — the impossible crime at the Château du Glandier, the locked room that shouldn't have an answer, and the arrival of the irrepressible young journalist Joseph Rouletabille, who is eighteen years old and already the smartest person in the room. This is the book that shaped Agatha Christie, John Dickson Carr, and the entire locked-room mystery tradition. It holds up beautifully, and it's a lot of fun. Get your copy...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Welcome back to Mark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast, with Night Flight to Murder Town - A Marshall James Thriller, chapters nineteen through twenty-one. It's 1992, and Marshall James is forty blocks into his first real walk through New York City — down through Chelsea, where hope is spilling out onto the sidewalk in front of every coffee bar. He's thirty-three, starting over, and beginning to believe that might actually be possible. That belief gets complicated fast. A tour of Muscles Gym leads to a dinner invitation from Leland Jenner that Marshall knows he shouldn't accept — and...
info_outlineMark McNease's Fearsome Fiction Podcast: Mysteries, Thrillers, Rare Finds and More
Welcome to Mark McNease’s Fearsome Fiction Podcast and another three chapters of Night Flight to Murder Town: A Marshall James Thriller. Marshall James arrives in New York and gets his first look at Muscles, the gym where he'll be working, courtesy of Trent. He’s told the previous manager had to go away and has not been seen since. The new one, Leland, can't quite hide his interest in Marshall. And Trent makes it clear, without raising his voice, that everyone in the room knows exactly where the lines are. New York is a city that demands a verdict, and Marshall's is immediate. He loves it,...
info_outlineToday’s episode continues ‘A House in the Woods 2: The Devil’s Due.’ This story was inspired by an old house along the road where we live. It’s since been torn down—too many ghosts hanging around, possibly—but every time we walked by it when it was empty I kept imagining something evil behind the old faded door. It helped that we live in the woods, providing a read-made title. We called it the spooky house. It soon became the center of two books: A House in the Woods, and A House in Woods 2.
A House in the Woods 2 picks up where A House in the Woods left off. Laurel Calloway is still in the mysterious town of Strickland, New Jersey, where nothing is as it appears to be. Two years have gone by, and they’ve been good to the Calloways. Laurel and her husband Jeremy have a new house, and a new family with baby Isabel about to celebrate her first birthday. Everything seems perfect, until Laurel begins to have dreams. Bad dreams. Something tells her these dreams could really be memories. But of what? Of whom, and of when?
Did she really run over a woman in the road at night? Had they once had a dog? Why are these things trying so hard to surface, swimming slowly up from her subconscious? The more she begins to tell the people around her about these dreams, the more convinced she is that they're part of it, and that these nightmares aren't really dreams at all. Page after page, the pace escalates as Laurel begins to learn the truth and plot her escape. But will she succeed? The Devil is in the details.