For those asking about the original upload: over the years we've had to take recordings down for various reasons... audio quality, claims from purported rights holders, imagery issues, content concerns, etc... In most cases we're able to resolve the issues and re-upload them -- fortunately that was the case here.
Thank you for this. I had a few versions of this fascinating tale marked, but they all disappeared a couple years ago. I wondered if it might have been an estate squabble. In any event, I'm glad to have this one back.
Blackwood loves to use the wilderness, the unknown darkness as the settings for 'things that snap under your feet', and winds that seems to whisper of the horrific. I discovered this writer, somewhat late on; I am now 73 and here in New Orleans at night I listen to these with delight, and just enough shudder to make me cozy up in my blankets...
I'm from Detroit, MI. My mom's favorite time of year was Halloween. Although she wouldn't let me or my baby sister go out trick or treating because well, it was Detroit. Lol So she would make us bags full of candy. She'd also let us give it out. And at the end of the night, momma would tell us stories.And man oh man, was she good. I remember this story although not as long she told us the story of.....The Wendigo. Dude..let me tell you.I love the country. Some of my Marine Corps buddies was from different places like Denver, Alabama, even Virginia. They were straight up country boys and I was a city slicker Who didn't know s*** about the country. But I knew one thing. The Wendigo live there, and I was terrified of it. Thanks ma! 😅
Yeah I read a bunch of those old Loup Garou stories of the 19th century. Most of them are cautionary tales in service of Christianity, where if you neglect going to Easter Mass 7 years in a row, you end up turning into a werewolf lol. Or the story called "La chasse-galerie", where, essentially, you and your buddies make a pact with the devil to make your canoe lift off and fly.
This is brilliant. I live in a national forest spanning hundreds of square miles. Even after a lifetime here, I'm still overwhelmed by it. There are times when you can quite literally feel you're in a place out of time, a place more ancient than you can comprehend, and a place where you're an unwelcome intruder. Blackwood captures all those things as few people can, and your reading conveys them in a way that makes me feel that I'm right there alongside them, seeing it through their eyes. You, sir, have a Gift. Thank you for sharing it with us.
The Wendigo has long been a creature of fascination to me . The idea of a man who disapears into the wilds and through starvation becomes a grotesque creature that prays on people who visit the wilds of many countries. Bares a lot of thinking about in these days of sasquach and little grey men. Anyway cheers Ian for a brilliant story.
I really like how the Wendigo here is portrayed as a malevolent spirit of the high winds that takes possession of the mind and body, as opposed to a carnivorous and visible physical being, as it so often is.
In Algonquin stories, it's a bit of both. It is a malevolent spirit that enters a person when they engage in cannibalism. That is a more or less a central feature. Pre-colonial first nations often had to experience bouts of famine, particularly during harsh winters, and the stories of the wendigo served to reenforce the cultural taboo against eating other people, even to save onesself from starvation. More broadly, it symbolized a warning against overindulgence and taking more than what one needs to survive. If they overhunted game, the herds would move, and come winter, people would starve. The wariness of becoming a wendigo was woven into the very fabric of their understanding of the balance between themselves and the natural world.
This was an amazing story. The dread in the first half is so heavy. I was riveted and could picture the entire story with incredible detail. I put this on last night to fall asleep, but I ended up staying awake to listen to every word!
I remember that the infamous "Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark" series by Alvin Schwartz had a reduced version of this story in one of the volumes, it was just as terrifying!
Man oh man this the willows and the god pan are my three absolute favorite readings of yours, I've probably listened to those three about 15 to 20 times EASY! Keep up the great work. To see you guys still going strong years later is really awesome
The art of story telling at its finest! I would be tempted to take a "taped version" brought along your next camping trip. In the deep wilds of British Columbia although I'm reminded that Wendigo is more familiar in the forests of Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec. A bottle of "hooch" paves the way for an imaginative stupor while the snapping and sparks of the campfire enhances the background sounds.
yes!!! The Willows and Wendigo are my favorite sleepy time readings. Thanks for adding this one to youtube, was listening to (the horrorbable reading of) wendigo on bandcamp when i had the craving for it! Much appreciate the remaster. Great work as always.
It’s not often I go significantly out of my way to track down a book, but the Blackwood novella collection from The British Library Tales of the Weird is one such case. Surprisingly, for such a massive institution behind it, said book was a bit of a pain to find!
I'm always hours to late but i have so much Stress at work 🤪🤯just came home and now i can relax at last, tommorow is Sunday so story i come🤗😁❤🖤Wish you a wonderful weekend🙋♀️‼And i forgot i love Wendigo stories😉
I remember reading this in middle school in some compilation of horror short stories i found in the library. Still trying to track down some other stories i remember from around that time too, though they were aimed at younger audiences.
One of my favorites, cant wait until Ithaqua by august derleth is made public so Horrorbabble can do that story. It very in theme with the Wendigo. Love this one, I listen to it once a month at least.
I honestly thought I was having a Mandela effect. I knew you covered this excellent story, but then poor it was gone. You had me thinking I was going nuts Ian.... Can't lie, sorta liked it. Thanks for bringing it back!
I was the one that suggested this on Patreon a few months back. I had no idea you did a recording of it until you linked me to the Bandcamp version you did. It's one of my favorites from Algernon Blackwood. Glad to see the remaster and on TH-cam now. 😎
This is the best story on the Wendigo legend, far, far more chilling and terrifying than movies on the subject. Blackwood was a master of the art of suggestion. A cold breath of terror runs through all his best stories.
Perfect Ian! I was actually looking for this a few days ago and I figured you may have taken it down. Thank goodness you brought this back up. This is one of my favorites from your catalogue.
I think I prefer this to the "cannibal" version of the Wendigo. Literally the spirit of the forest, taking men's bodies just as surely as the forest takes their mind and heart. Chilling, disturbing, and wholly unstoppable.
Yes! I was wondering when you'd be able to upload this video again! I missed out when you first took the video down but I'm glad I held out on listening to this story elsewhere.
You must be exhausted after reading this! I've read this and remembered the bit about the "burning feet of fire", but was associating it with some other story. Great reading. The Wendigo is always an interesting subject. Thanks!
Excellent. Hey Ian I have a couple of other stories by Clark Ashton Smith I don't think I have heard you cover over the years. "The Hunters From Beyond and Murder in the 4th Dimension" Would love to hear your rendition of them one day. Merry Christmas old Chap and thx for all you and Jennifer's hard work.
First encountered this horror in an innocent looking book called Ghosts, Ghosts, Ghosts in our church library in the mid-50's as a ten year. It filled me with dread that I could hardly imagine with those cries of "my burning feet of fire" coming from the sky! The book also contained a couple of other classics not often found in a children's book: The Roll Call of the Reef and The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall!
Hah! I always saw this book as a calm, tragically silent sort of story where some dudes get lost in the woods and fall to hysteria. This read made it feel very dynamic and active! Like a whole different story!
I always wondered why you folks never did this one...I even had a talk with the Wendigo a few months ago, in the woods above Rat Portage! I told it to lay off you guys if you told this story...or else eat Moss! Cheers Warren, who wonders if Moss eating makes one a vegetarian?...I'm not...I think the word that describes me is anthropophagus!
“ My first vivid impression of my own presence in this terrible necropolis concerns the act of pausing with Warren before a certain half-obliterated sepulchre … “ Keep up the good work fella and stay safe!
I know this tale so well that just this once I'm going to skip it, but anyone who isn't familiar with it already is in for a an enjoyable couple of hours.
Man, it's kinda hilarious how Défago is terrorizing this guy. If I was in his shoes I don't know how many nights I could put up with the paranoia.. It'd be Skeleton Lake before any wendigo transformations took place.
Well this is interesting, will be listening for differences from your original recording... Hope you still yell out 'Oh! My feet of fire!' and it echos through the cold, unforgiving Canadian wilderness, that always got me.
That is a good reason to carry a 45.70 lever gun when you are up here in the cold and snow! Blest silver bullets couldn’t hurt……well it will to the Wendigo :@)
For those asking about the original upload: over the years we've had to take recordings down for various reasons... audio quality, claims from purported rights holders, imagery issues, content concerns, etc... In most cases we're able to resolve the issues and re-upload them -- fortunately that was the case here.
Thank you for this. I had a few versions of this fascinating tale marked, but they all disappeared a couple years ago. I wondered if it might have been an estate squabble. In any event, I'm glad to have this one back.
I hope one day you'll do a reread with added ambiance and SFX.
Thank goodness for that. This is one of my favorite stories to fall asleep to, and your recording is hands-down the best one available on TH-cam.
Read original work?
Well, I'm glad, because it might have taken much longer to come to my attention otherwise. Loved it!
Blackwood loves to use the wilderness, the unknown darkness as the settings for 'things that snap under your feet', and winds that seems to whisper of the horrific. I discovered this writer, somewhat late on; I am now 73 and here in New Orleans at night I listen to these with delight, and just enough shudder to make me cozy up in my blankets...
Well said, and here’s to discovering gems of literature late than never!
That's what I'm doing now. But my dog is with me lol.
Have listened to this probably 50 times. Truly a gift of a recording. Captures the eco-gothic perfectly.
Thank you, Kyle!
"The Enticement of the Desolation that Destroys."
That has to be one of the greatest piece of alliteration that I've ever come across!
Not as good as “Her spirit stronger than the sea’s embrace” (Will Shakespeare).
@@GradKatnice one upping
I'm from Detroit, MI. My mom's favorite time of year was Halloween. Although she wouldn't let me or my baby sister go out trick or treating because well, it was Detroit. Lol So she would make us bags full of candy. She'd also let us give it out. And at the end of the night, momma would tell us stories.And man oh man, was she good. I remember this story although not as long she told us the story of.....The Wendigo. Dude..let me tell you.I love the country. Some of my Marine Corps buddies was from different places like Denver, Alabama, even Virginia. They were straight up country boys and I was a city slicker Who didn't know s*** about the country. But I knew one thing. The Wendigo live there, and I was terrified of it.
Thanks ma! 😅
My mom's French Canadian. She passed down down the legends of the Wendigo and the Loup Garou to us. These were our bedtime stories. We loved them.
My mom's a Wendigo. She passed down stories about French Canadians to us
😂😂😂
@@Ian-ig4ho now that must have been terrifying
Yeah I read a bunch of those old Loup Garou stories of the 19th century. Most of them are cautionary tales in service of Christianity, where if you neglect going to Easter Mass 7 years in a row, you end up turning into a werewolf lol. Or the story called "La chasse-galerie", where, essentially, you and your buddies make a pact with the devil to make your canoe lift off and fly.
This is brilliant.
I live in a national forest spanning hundreds of square miles. Even after a lifetime here, I'm still overwhelmed by it.
There are times when you can quite literally feel you're in a place out of time, a place more ancient than you can comprehend, and a place where you're an unwelcome intruder.
Blackwood captures all those things as few people can, and your reading conveys them in a way that makes me feel that I'm right there alongside them,
seeing it through their eyes.
You, sir, have a Gift. Thank you for sharing it with us.
The Wendigo has long been a creature of fascination to me . The idea of a man who disapears into the wilds and through starvation becomes a grotesque creature that prays on people who visit the wilds of many countries. Bares a lot of thinking about in these days of sasquach and little grey men. Anyway cheers Ian for a brilliant story.
This dude has one of the best radio vocals ever
I really like how the Wendigo here is portrayed as a malevolent spirit of the high winds that takes possession of the mind and body, as opposed to a carnivorous and visible physical being, as it so often is.
In Algonquin stories, it's a bit of both. It is a malevolent spirit that enters a person when they engage in cannibalism. That is a more or less a central feature.
Pre-colonial first nations often had to experience bouts of famine, particularly during harsh winters, and the stories of the wendigo served to reenforce the cultural taboo against eating other people, even to save onesself from starvation.
More broadly, it symbolized a warning against overindulgence and taking more than what one needs to survive.
If they overhunted game, the herds would move, and come winter, people would starve.
The wariness of becoming a wendigo was woven into the very fabric of their understanding of the balance between themselves and the natural world.
One of my favorites by him. So memorable 🖤
This was an amazing story. The dread in the first half is so heavy. I was riveted and could picture the entire story with incredible detail. I put this on last night to fall asleep, but I ended up staying awake to listen to every word!
I remember that the infamous "Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark" series by Alvin Schwartz had a reduced version of this story in one of the volumes, it was just as terrifying!
Do you remember what it was called those books were great especially the art
@@PALACIO254 I believe it was the 1st book, and yes the art was scary as hell.
Loved that book! It was the first one and this was my favorite story in it.
da fayyyy-go!
The Wendigo, in the second book More Scary Stories to tell in The Dark@@PALACIO254
Great to see this reuploaded, Blackwood is probably my favorite author on this channel.
This channel actually introduced me to him, and he is absolutely one of my favorites now. Definitely up there with Howard and Lovecraft.
Man oh man this the willows and the god pan are my three absolute favorite readings of yours, I've probably listened to those three about 15 to 20 times EASY! Keep up the great work. To see you guys still going strong years later is really awesome
The art of story telling at its finest! I would be tempted to take a "taped version" brought along your next camping trip. In the deep wilds of British Columbia although I'm reminded that Wendigo is more familiar in the forests of Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec. A bottle of "hooch" paves the way for an imaginative stupor while the snapping and sparks of the campfire enhances the background sounds.
Love this story, Blackwood is one of my favorite horror writers. Awesome job!
The Wendigo is one of my favorite cryptic creatures. Thank you for this reading.
yes!!! The Willows and Wendigo are my favorite sleepy time readings. Thanks for adding this one to youtube, was listening to (the horrorbable reading of) wendigo on bandcamp when i had the craving for it! Much appreciate the remaster. Great work as always.
Same!!
lol these are also my 2 go to sleepy time readings.
The willows is a great one!
I love this story sooooo much! The Wendigo is such an amazing bit of folklore. I'm stoked to hear the new recording!
Glad this is back! I was looking for it a couple months ago and hoping it wasn't gone for good!
My absolute favourite!! Thanks for giving us your remastered version here on youtube!! 💫
It’s not often I go significantly out of my way to track down a book, but the Blackwood novella collection from The British Library Tales of the Weird is one such case. Surprisingly, for such a massive institution behind it, said book was a bit of a pain to find!
I'm always hours to late but i have so much Stress at work 🤪🤯just came home and now i can relax at last, tommorow is Sunday so story i come🤗😁❤🖤Wish you a wonderful weekend🙋♀️‼And i forgot i love Wendigo stories😉
Genuinely enjoyed this one..For a 3rd time.
Thanks HB!
I think about this story every time I go camping, it still freaks me out a little.
Still the #1 OG wendigo story. Thank you Algernon.
Another outstanding and amazing story thanks for all these excellent videos!!!!!!😁👍👍👍👍👍👍
Excellent reading. Thank you.
My favourite story by him! Thank you.
I remember reading this in middle school in some compilation of horror short stories i found in the library. Still trying to track down some other stories i remember from around that time too, though they were aimed at younger audiences.
One of my favorites, cant wait until Ithaqua by august derleth is made public so Horrorbabble can do that story. It very in theme with the Wendigo. Love this one, I listen to it once a month at least.
I honestly thought I was having a Mandela effect. I knew you covered this excellent story, but then poor it was gone. You had me thinking I was going nuts Ian.... Can't lie, sorta liked it. Thanks for bringing it back!
Some of the most atmospheric horror ever written. ❤
@@lusoza This is why I prefer a cabin to a tent. 😂
I was the one that suggested this on Patreon a few months back. I had no idea you did a recording of it until you linked me to the Bandcamp version you did. It's one of my favorites from Algernon Blackwood. Glad to see the remaster and on TH-cam now. 😎
Oh thank goodness this is back!
This is my favorite book you've covered still gives me chills.
Thank you for bringing this back! I really enjoyed falling asleep to this story.
Love your stuff bud. Your immortalizing your voice in a way people will listen for generations!
I'm so glad you did, and thank you for all the hard work, Ian. Onward!
Used to listen to this all the time and had been wondering why I could never find it, so glad it’s back!
This is the best story on the Wendigo legend, far, far more chilling and terrifying than movies on the subject. Blackwood was a master of the art of suggestion. A cold breath of terror runs through all his best stories.
I love this tale! Thank you guys as always for your great work.
Perfect Ian! I was actually looking for this a few days ago and I figured you may have taken it down. Thank goodness you brought this back up. This is one of my favorites from your catalogue.
You guys post this ONE DAY after I just finished re-reading it... oh well, i do like the voicework here. Third times the charm.
Did Defuegos feet transform back to regular frozen feet after deforming to look like the windegos feet? I'm confused
I first read this story many years ago and it terrified me. 50 years later it still does
Great story! Great reading! 👍🏼👍🏼
I LOVE thos story!💜💜💜💜
Thank you!
Great Reading on a great Story! Good Job!
Greetings from Germany
Wonderful performance!🙌
This book is amazing! Great narration ! Thank you :)
I think I prefer this to the "cannibal" version of the Wendigo. Literally the spirit of the forest, taking men's bodies just as surely as the forest takes their mind and heart. Chilling, disturbing, and wholly unstoppable.
Glad i found this channel. It is fantastic.
this particular story is the GOAT.
this was truly chilling, love it!
YES! Thank you, Ian! I was sad to see the original gone, I'm so happy for the re-upload. Just in time for the first snowfalls!
Oh gosh you have no idea how glad I am this has been reuploaded, I thought I'd gone mad thinking I'd imagined your reading of this story
Yes! I was wondering when you'd be able to upload this video again! I missed out when you first took the video down but I'm glad I held out on listening to this story elsewhere.
And here we go.....
Just started listening to this classic
So good to see this back up. Thank you!
I like this story much😊
So good to see this one here 💛💛💛
Thanks
You must be exhausted after reading this! I've read this and remembered the bit about the "burning feet of fire", but was associating it with some other story. Great reading. The Wendigo is always an interesting subject. Thanks!
Absolutely mesmerizing
Daughter enjoyed this tale! Keep up the great work! Oh wait, you do. :D
Thank you so much for your work
One of my favorite stories
Excellent. Hey Ian I have a couple of other stories by Clark Ashton Smith I don't think I have heard you cover over the years. "The Hunters From Beyond and Murder in the 4th Dimension" Would love to hear your rendition of them one day. Merry Christmas old Chap and thx for all you and Jennifer's hard work.
Thanks for the tip! We're aware of both... Merry Christmas to you, too!
Thank you for this- absolutely perfect recording.
Thanks!
Thank you!
listening from the ukwales 2022❤️
Hot coco and a great story.
Thank you very much Ian🤗
Just in time!!
First encountered this horror in an innocent looking book called Ghosts, Ghosts, Ghosts in our church library in the mid-50's as a ten year. It filled me with dread that I could hardly imagine with those cries of "my burning feet of fire" coming from the sky! The book also contained a couple of other classics not often found in a children's book: The Roll Call of the Reef and The Water Ghost of Harrowby Hall!
I swear at least 10 of these views are mine. This story is so perfectly crafted.
Yes!
Big fan of blackwood and this story in particular, glad to see it's up
Didnt remember the racism though, oof, cringy
OooOooo “fringed with mist” very nice!
It's back!
Hah! I always saw this book as a calm, tragically silent sort of story where some dudes get lost in the woods and fall to hysteria. This read made it feel very dynamic and active! Like a whole different story!
🤗 hell yeah! Nice remaster 🖤
Wish everybody wonderful weekend 🙋♀️🖤❤‼
Same to you, Marina!
Finally! It’s back!
I was hoping you'd re-release this. It's fantastic
Now I know where my fifth grade camp counselor got this story!
I always wondered why you folks never did this one...I even had a talk with the Wendigo a few months ago, in the woods above Rat Portage! I told it to lay off you guys if you told this story...or else eat Moss! Cheers Warren, who wonders if Moss eating makes one a vegetarian?...I'm not...I think the word that describes me is anthropophagus!
My new favorite horror story of all time!
I love this channel
this is my favorite art
“ My first vivid impression of my own presence in this terrible necropolis concerns the act of pausing with Warren before a certain half-obliterated sepulchre … “
Keep up the good work fella and stay safe!
Things I like:
1) Wendigos
2) Horrorbabble
3) Lists
I know this tale so well that just this once I'm going to skip it, but anyone who isn't familiar with it already is in for a an enjoyable couple of hours.
Man, it's kinda hilarious how Défago is terrorizing this guy. If I was in his shoes I don't know how many nights I could put up with the paranoia.. It'd be Skeleton Lake before any wendigo transformations took place.
Yes,!!!!!!! Warren is still here!!!!!!
Fantastic, it took me 3 nights to get though it but well worth it.
Well this is interesting, will be listening for differences from your original recording... Hope you still yell out 'Oh! My feet of fire!' and it echos through the cold, unforgiving Canadian wilderness, that always got me.
That is a good reason to carry a 45.70 lever gun when you are up here in the cold and snow! Blest silver bullets couldn’t hurt……well it will to the Wendigo :@)
Hey Pat! As someone else has mentioned here, perhaps we'll do a proper adaptation of this in the future with all the bells and whistles...
I read this in grade school! Thanks for the reminder! Teacher always took my library books away!
We dint like each other--no shit...!
Definitely my favorite Blackwood story so far. Too bad it’s not in any of the horrorbabble audible collections.
It will be eventually, Austin!
nice.