The Wendigo

The Wendigo: Short story by Algernon BlackwoodIn this story by Algernon Blackwood, a hunting party encounters a Wendigo, a malevolent being said by Algonquian folklore to haunt the wilds of Eastern Canada. While most stories associate the Wendigo with cannibalism, Blackwood’s version, though no less frightening, is a moss-eater. The creature’s presence is foreshadowed early and tension builds until one of their guides is taken and returned as a misshapen shadow of himself. He is taken again, and reappears with a mouth full of moss bereft of mind, memory and soul. Themes include friendship, isolation, superstition, the “Call of the Wild”, primal fear, hysteria, the supernatural.

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