VMPL
New Delhi [India], December 16: Horror does not always begin with monsters. Sometimes it begins with a whisper–an unexplainable feeling, a memory you thought you buried, a fear you pretend doesn’t exist. In Whispers, That Turn Into Screams, author Ankit Shetty masterfully crafts ten spine-chilling short stories that take readers on a descent into the darkest corners of the human mind. These tales may start as soft murmurs of unease, but slowly, deliberately, they turn into screams you cannot ignore.
This is not a novel, but a collection of standalone short stories, each exploring a different flavour of fear–psychological, supernatural, emotional, and disturbingly real. What binds all ten stories is Shetty’s ability to nudge readers into a false sense of comfort, only to pull the floor out from beneath them with shocking twists rooted deeply in the characters’ psyche.
Drawing inspiration from eerie childhood memories, unexplained rural tales, and the complexities of modern mental health, the book presents horror not as distant fiction but as something uncomfortably close to home. Every story feels like it could happen to someone you know. Maybe even to you.
The opening story sets the tone with an atmosphere of paranoia, blurred reality, and the fragile line between imagination and madness. In it, a woman’s ordinary day unravels into a nightmarish experience that challenges the very nature of reality. As the narrative builds, Shetty cleverly traps both character and reader in a confusing maze of hallucination, fear, and vulnerability. Without revealing the twist, the story reminds us that the mind–both fragile and powerful–can be the scariest place to be trapped in.
Another story follows a young couple enjoying what seems like a perfect date–coffee, laughter, carnival games, shared dreams. Everything feels safe and familiar until they encounter a mysterious medium who claims to communicate with the dead. What starts as a harmless visit to a fortune-teller slowly takes a terrifying psychological turn, raising unsettling questions about memory, guilt, and truth. The story shows how sometimes the past isn’t as dead as we think, and how unresolved pain can return with a vengeance when least expected.
Family, too, becomes a breeding ground for terror in Shetty’s universe. In one of the collection’s most emotionally complex tales, a couple returns to India after years abroad, hiding a secret that could shatter family relationships. What begins as a simple homecoming evolves into a clash of buried insecurities, jealousy, grief, and possessiveness. When old wounds resurface inside a house filled with traditions, memories, and generational tensions, the psychological horror becomes all too real. The story blends interpersonal conflict with an undercurrent of dread, proving that sometimes the ghosts we fear are the people around us–and the people within us.
Across the ten stories, Shetty explores a range of unsettling themes. There are disturbing messages from the departed, encounters with supernatural entities, childhood terrors revisited, and obsessions that slowly consume ordinary individuals. Some tales explore superstition, some dive into trauma, while others focus on human relationships unraveling under pressure. But regardless of the setting–whether a quiet home, a rural village, an empty office after dark, or a lonely car on a highway–each narrative shares an intimate emotional core.
Shetty’s writing thrives on atmosphere. He paints homes, markets, fields, and city corners with vivid detail, creating familiar spaces that slowly turn hostile. The horror creeps in quietly, almost invisibly, until it suddenly becomes overwhelming. Instead of relying on gore or shock value, Shetty uses suspense, psychology, and human vulnerability to build fear layer by layer. His characters feel real, flawed, and emotionally raw–making their terror feel personal.
Another powerful element in the book is the way it challenges perception. Many characters experience moments where they cannot trust their senses, memories, or thoughts. The stories push readers to question what is real and what is imagined, echoing Shetty’s inspiration from his own childhood experiences of fear, superstition, and unexplained events. This psychological ambiguity is what makes the collection stand out: the unknown is frightening, but the uncertain is terrifying.
What’s most remarkable is the emotional depth hidden within the horror. Beneath the screams lie stories of love, sacrifice, unresolved grief, mental struggles, generational bonds, and the desperate human need for closure. Shetty understands that horror becomes more powerful when grounded in emotion. The supernatural elements, when they appear, feel like extensions of human pain, not separate from it.
Whispers, That Turn Into Screams isn’t just a book meant to scare; it is a book meant to unsettle and linger. It makes the reader reflect on relationships, personal fears, and the invisible battles people carry every day. Even after closing the book, some stories stay with you–not because of the monsters, but because of what they reveal about us.
For fans of psychological thrillers and horror short stories, this collection is a refreshing yet chilling addition. It offers cinematic storytelling, unexpected twists, and deeply atmospheric narratives. Whether you read it one story at a time or devour all ten in a single sitting, you will find yourself pulled into Shetty’s haunting world–one whisper at a time.
Be warned: once you begin, the whispers will follow you long after the book is finished.
Buy now: https://www.amazon.in/dp/9370026606
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