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The Claverhouse Emails
- 241 statements
- 46 feature instances
- 1 referencing feature instances
The Claverhouse Emails | type |
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The Claverhouse Emails | label |
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The Claverhouse Emails | comment |
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })One day, an anonymous user of Reddit met a mysterious person on the internet that simply referred to himself as "Claverhouse". He had seen Claverhouse on numerous online message boards back when they were a student. While other posters disliked him, the user and Claverhouse struck up a friendship, and the two exchanged email addresses.Claverhouse ended sending the user stories every once in a while, all of them dealing with some facet of the human psyche. All told in first person perspective, Claverhouse never gave any insight to the identity of the teller or the content of the story itself. He simply said that everything that needed to be known was there, in the teller's own words.Claverhouse also never gave any details on who he was or how he got his hands on the stories. When questioned, he would simply say that the important thing was that the stories could tell the world about the darker side of the human experience.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Also unknown was just how true the stories were. Though they were presented to the user as truth, he found some of them hard to believe, even completely made up in some parts. But Claverhouse was adamant that at their core they all illustrate a deeper, more universal truth: that the world is not the way people think it is,and that it didn't matter if they were true or not.Ultimately, Claverhouse and the user stopped corresponding for some unknown reason. However, the user thinks that it was for the best, and that it was only fitting that Claverhouse would fade into nothingness. While no context of the stories were ever given, the user believes that it is up to the readers of the emails to decide what exactly each story means and what it has to say about humanity as a whole.In total, there were 16 stories, 15 official and 1 unofficial. All were published on Reddit between 2012 and 2015:Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); }) "The White Room": A new father begins seeing a mysterious old man in his dreams every night. "Hives": A college student's girlfriend complains that there is something living inside of her...although there is no evidence of this happening. "A Face in the Crowd": A man begins seeing people how they will look shortly after they die. "Footsteps": A young man goes on a jog up in the mountains and encounters something terrifying. "Snow": After a car wreck, a man stumbles into a snowbound house for help, but something is very wrong with the family inside...or the lack thereof. "Echoes": A retired serial killer is visited by ghosts of his victims. "The Accident": A man with bandages over his eyes after a mysterious accident learns that everything is not as it seems. "The Sleep Clinic": A man gets a job at a clinic for patients with sleeping problems, but the building is a front for something much more terrifying. "The Tree House": A girl's friend spends a night in an abandoned treehouse, and what transpired ends up affecting both of them for years afterwards. "Still Waters": A man about to commit suicide gets the offer of a lifetime from a mysterious stranger. "Monsters": A man terrorized by an unseen monster when he was a child discovers that some things never go away. "The Summer House": An invalid stays in a house he's sure is haunted. "Last Words": The son of an abusive man plots a chilling revenge on the older brother that abandoned him years ago. "Hands"(unofficial): A man is tormented by dreams of violence until he not sure what is real and what is not. "A Caress": An artist learns the bizarre story behind his friend's unusual sculpture. "Expecting": A pregnant woman goes to extreme lengths to ensure that her unborn son is perfect.Youtuber Maplecreepypasta narrated every story except "Expecting", "Hands", "Last Words", and "The Treehouse". They can be listened to_on YouTube."The White Room", "Hives", "Footsteps", "Echoes", "Snow", "The Accident", "The Sleep Clinic", "A Face in the Crowd", "The Treehouse", and "Still Waters" were all featured on The Nosleep Podcast.You can read all the stories on the user's official website here. | |
The Claverhouse Emails | fetched |
2022-01-01T20:09:22Z | |
The Claverhouse Emails | parsed |
2022-01-01T20:09:22Z | |
The Claverhouse Emails | processingComment |
Dropped link to FirstPerson: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN | |
The Claverhouse Emails | processingComment |
Dropped link to ShaggyDogStory: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
The Claverhouse Emails | processingUnknown |
FirstPerson | |
The Claverhouse Emails | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_10eb45d6 | type |
Wheelchair Woobie | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_10eb45d6 | comment |
Wheelchair Woobie: The narrator of "The Summer House". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_10eb45d6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_10eb45d6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_10eb45d6 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_125a7a4e | type |
Dream Weaver | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_125a7a4e | comment |
Dream Weaver: The antagonist of "The White Room" is a mysterious old man that torments the narrator in his dreams. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_125a7a4e | featureApplicability |
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The Claverhouse Emails / int_125a7a4e | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_125a7a4e | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1869b4b1 | type |
Unreliable Narrator | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1869b4b1 | comment |
Unreliable Narrator: The narrator of "Last Words" is clearly insane, so it's unclear what in the story is real and what is just figments of his imagination. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1869b4b1 | featureApplicability |
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The Claverhouse Emails / int_1869b4b1 | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1869b4b1 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_18d15922 | type |
Title Drop | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_18d15922 | comment |
Title Drop: Happens in almost every story. Averted, confusingly, in "Hives". Not once in the whole story does anyone call all the red bumps and scratches on the narrator's girfriend 'hives'. Insects live in "hives" | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_18d15922 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_18d15922 | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_18d15922 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1e584efa | type |
Cruel and Unusual Death | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1e584efa | comment |
Cruel and Unusual Death: The children living in the abandoned house in "Snow" are tied to poles and left outside in subzero weather to die of exposure. The man inside the tree in "The Treehouse" apparently handcuffed himself to the inside of the tree and swallowed the key (after wrapping it in barbed wire) to commit suicide by starvation. Lilith Cayce in "A Caress" is voluntarily flayed to death by her sculptor husband just so he can make a perfect marble likeness of her. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1e584efa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1e584efa | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_1e584efa | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22cf536c | type |
Chekhov's Gun | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22cf536c | comment |
Chekhov's Gun: The snowmen in the front yard of the abandoned house in "Snow". The mysterious stranger's pistol in "Still Waters". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22cf536c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22cf536c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22cf536c | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22f6000b | type |
Everybody's Dead, Dave | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22f6000b | comment |
Everybody's Dead, Dave: Out of all the characters named or mentioned in "The Treehouse", only the narrator and Jules are left standing at the end. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22f6000b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22f6000b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_22f6000b | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_24321e44 | type |
Only Sane Man | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_24321e44 | comment |
Only Sane Man: The only narrators that seem to not be outright insane are the ones of "The Treehouse", "Snow", and "Hives". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_24321e44 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_24321e44 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_24321e44 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2c45b3bb | type |
Mundane Ghost Story | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2c45b3bb | comment |
Mundane Ghost Story: The only stories that seem to have anything supernatural going on are "The White Room", "Footsteps", "Echoes" and "The Treehouse". The rest of them could easily happen in real life. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2c45b3bb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2c45b3bb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2c45b3bb | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2e8441c9 | type |
The Bad Guy Wins | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2e8441c9 | comment |
The Bad Guy Wins: The endings of "Last Words", "The White Room", "Hives", "Expecting", and "The Accident". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2e8441c9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2e8441c9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_2e8441c9 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_34f1b472 | type |
Mad Artist | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_34f1b472 | comment |
Mad Artist: Julia in "Hives", after being driven insane by the insects living inside her that may or may not exist. Edgar Cayce in "A Caress". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_34f1b472 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_34f1b472 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_34f1b472 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_398692d6 | type |
Kill 'Em All | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_398692d6 | comment |
Kill 'Em All: Every single mentioned character in "A Caress" is dead by the end. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_398692d6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_398692d6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_398692d6 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4510b368 | type |
Ambiguous Gender | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4510b368 | comment |
Ambiguous Gender: Except for "The White Room", "The Treehouse", and "Expecting", none of the narrator's genders are revealed. They could either be men or women. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4510b368 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4510b368 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4510b368 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_479d4e5a | type |
Would Hurt a Child | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_479d4e5a | comment |
Would Hurt a Child: Many examples. The father in "The White Room"... although it is involuntarily. The abusive father in "Snow". Danny from "The Treehouse". The narrator of "Monsters". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_479d4e5a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_479d4e5a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_479d4e5a | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4bfe435c | type |
Lobotomy | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4bfe435c | comment |
Lobotomy: What the narrator of "Last Words" plans to do to his older brother. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4bfe435c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4bfe435c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4bfe435c | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4e3d253b | type |
Downer Ending | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4e3d253b | comment |
Downer Ending: Almost all the stories. In fact, the only story that ends with anything resembling a happy ending is "Still Waters", and even then, the narrator is doomed to die in a year. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4e3d253b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4e3d253b | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_4e3d253b | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_50b05d30 | type |
Disproportionate Retribution | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_50b05d30 | comment |
Disproportionate Retribution: What do the children of "Snow" get for breaking a plate? They get tied to a pole and whipped by their father. This trope may or may not apply to the older brother getting a lobotomy for running away from home in "Last Words", as the narrator's state of sanity is questionable. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_50b05d30 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_50b05d30 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_50b05d30 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_590eb583 | type |
Domestic Abuse | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_590eb583 | comment |
Domestic Abuse: The father in "Snow" takes the cake, as he ties his kids to poles and whips them. The narrator's father in "Last Words". The narrator himself in "Monsters". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_590eb583 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_590eb583 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_590eb583 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62434fe2 | type |
Sanity Slippage | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62434fe2 | comment |
Sanity Slippage: Most, if not all, of the narrators of the stories are insane in some capacity. Special mention goes out to the narrators of "Last Words", "The Summer House", and "Expecting". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62434fe2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62434fe2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62434fe2 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62907b90 | type |
Bottle Episode | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62907b90 | comment |
Bottle Episode: "Last Words" takes place entirely in the kitchen of an abandoned house. "Footsteps" takes place on a mountain path. "Snow" takes place in an abandoned cabin. "The Summer House" takes place in the living room, sun room, and bedroom of the titular house. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62907b90 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62907b90 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_62907b90 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_67fedd35 | type |
Bizarrchitecture | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_67fedd35 | comment |
Bizarrchitecture: The house from "Last Words" appears to be possesed by the ghost of the narrator's father, so his face appears everywhere in the house. The titular structure of "The Treehouse", with it's strange phrases carved into the bark and the corpse in the hollow inside the tree. The house in "The Summer House". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_67fedd35 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_67fedd35 | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_67fedd35 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6d332aea | type |
Driven to Suicide | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6d332aea | comment |
Driven to Suicide: The narrator of "A Caress" kills himself at the end because he is unable to understand the meaning behind his dead friend's sculpture and cannot go on living without this knowledge. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6d332aea | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6d332aea | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6d332aea | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6edc54d5 | type |
Here We Go Again! | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6edc54d5 | comment |
Here We Go Again!: "Still Waters" ends with the narrator taking the job of the mysterious stranger and offering the same life to a new suicidal person the mysterious stranger offered him. "Hives" ends with the narrator killing Julia and kissing her corpse, which causes the insects (that may or may not have been real) living inside her to infect him. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6edc54d5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6edc54d5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_6edc54d5 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_7bc90010 | type |
Hearing Voices | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_7bc90010 | comment |
Hearing Voices: The narrators of "The Treehouse", "Last Words", and "The Summer House". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_7bc90010 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_7bc90010 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_7bc90010 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_81c23aae | type |
Bloody Horror | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_81c23aae | comment |
Bloody Horror: Averted, for the most part, in most of the stories. Played straight in "The Accident", although not until the end. Played straight again in "Echoes", where the serial killer describes his murdered victims. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_81c23aae | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_81c23aae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_81c23aae | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_82accf22 | type |
Gainax Ending | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_82accf22 | comment |
Gainax Ending: Many of the story's endings are confusing, but special mentions go out to "The Sleep Clinic" and "The Summer House". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_82accf22 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_82accf22 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_82accf22 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_87a38662 | type |
Murder-Suicide | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_87a38662 | comment |
Murder-Suicide: "The Treehouse" ends with Danny murdering the narrator's and Jules's entire families before killing himself. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_87a38662 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_87a38662 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_87a38662 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_898ff050 | type |
Villain Protagonist | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_898ff050 | comment |
Villain Protagonist: The narrators of "Monsters", "Last Words", "Expecting", and (possibly) "The Sleep Clinic". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_898ff050 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_898ff050 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_898ff050 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_8ed5c6e4 | type |
Asshole Victim | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_8ed5c6e4 | comment |
Asshole Victim: The children's abusive father in "Snow". Danny in "The Treehouse". Possibly the older brother in "Last Words". It's up to the reader to decide if he deserved the fate he received, as the narrator's state of mind is questionable. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_8ed5c6e4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_8ed5c6e4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_8ed5c6e4 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_90c54800 | type |
Scrapbook Story | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_90c54800 | comment |
Scrapbook Story: "Last Words" is told through a pre-recorded tape that a kidnap victim is listening to. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_90c54800 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_90c54800 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_90c54800 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_9c5e78d0 | type |
Kill the Cutie | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_9c5e78d0 | comment |
Kill the Cutie: This happens to the children living in the abandoned house in "Snow". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_9c5e78d0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_9c5e78d0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_9c5e78d0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4905771 | type |
Double-Meaning Title | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4905771 | comment |
Double-Meaning Title: "Hives". It could: 1) Refer to the strange red bumps that grow all over the narrator's girlfriend, or... 2) Refer to the fact that the girlfriend has insects living inside of her, making her, essentially, a hive. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4905771 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4905771 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4905771 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4cd4fc6 | type |
Cruel Twist Ending | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4cd4fc6 | comment |
Cruel Twist Ending: In "Snow" the narrator finally leaves the abandoned house, but soon discovers that those snowmen in the front yard were actually the kids that lived in the house, and it was very possible that they were still alive when he first arrived. The ending of "Expecting" reveals that the narrator isn't actually pregnant. "The Accident" 's insane ending reveals that the other "patient" the narrator had been talking to was actually the psychopath that kidnapped him, and that he has cut all the skin from off the narrator's face. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4cd4fc6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4cd4fc6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a4cd4fc6 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a8a04f6f | type |
And I Must Scream | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a8a04f6f | comment |
And I Must Scream: The father in "The White Room" is possessed by the old man and can do nothing as he prepares to slaughter his wife and daughter. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a8a04f6f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a8a04f6f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_a8a04f6f | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_b6cc7fc0 | type |
Dysfunctional Family | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_b6cc7fc0 | comment |
Dysfunctional Family: All the narrator's families in "Monsters", "Last Words", and "Footsteps", and the family that lives in the abandoned cabin in "Snow". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_b6cc7fc0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_b6cc7fc0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_b6cc7fc0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_bef696dd | type |
Mind Screw | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_bef696dd | comment |
Mind Screw: "The Summer House". What is the cause of the narrator's injuries? Is the house actually haunted or is the narrator insane? Who is the old woman that takes care of him? Why did the pistol hidden in the floorboards have three bullets missing? What is up with the ending of "Footsteps"? Is the narrator dead or alive at the end? "The Sleep Clinic" 's ending is so bizarre that trying to summarize it here would do it an injustice. Read it here. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_bef696dd | featureApplicability |
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The Claverhouse Emails / int_bef696dd | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_bef696dd | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ca87e3ec | type |
No Name Given | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ca87e3ec | comment |
No Name Given: There are only six characters that are named in the entire collection, and two of them don't physically appear in the story they are mentioned in. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ca87e3ec | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ca87e3ec | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ca87e3ec | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cb70651c | type |
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cb70651c | comment |
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: We never do find out if Julia actually had something living inside her in "Hives". It's never revealed if the house in "Last Words" is haunted or if the narrator is imagining everything. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cb70651c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cb70651c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cb70651c | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cde51255 | type |
Antagonist Title | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cde51255 | comment |
Antagonist Title: "Monsters", possibly. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cde51255 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cde51255 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cde51255 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cdfe12c3 | type |
Nothing Is Scarier | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_cdfe12c3 | comment |
Nothing Is Scarier: "Snow" uses this trope to its advantage right up until the end, where everything is resolved, so it's technically averted. "The Summer House" takes this trope and runs with it. "The Treehouse", "The Sleep Clinic", and "The White Room" all attempt this, with varying degrees of success. | |
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The Claverhouse Emails / int_cdfe12c3 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_d0f0a80d | type |
One-Word Title | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_d0f0a80d | comment |
One-Word Title: "Echoes", "Hives", "Snow", "Monsters", "Footsteps", and "Expecting". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_d0f0a80d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_d0f0a80d | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_daead778 | type |
Tear Off Your Face | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_daead778 | comment |
Tear Off Your Face: The ending of "The Accident". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_daead778 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_daead778 | featureConfidence |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_daead778 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ea2e9f2d | type |
No Ending | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ea2e9f2d | comment |
No Ending: A lot of the stories end with no resolution whatsoever, but "The Treehouse" is the best example, as, if anything, you are left with more questions than answers at the end. | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ea2e9f2d | featureApplicability |
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1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_ea2e9f2d | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_eb8ec7c8 | type |
Jerkass | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_eb8ec7c8 | comment |
Jerkass: The narrator of "Echoes" is the best example, as he is a retired serial killer with no remorse whatsoever. The father in "Snow". The sleepwalking man in "The Sleep Clinic". | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_eb8ec7c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
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1.0 | |
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_eb8ec7c8 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_f3626b09 | type |
Mercy Kill | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_f3626b09 | comment |
Mercy Kill: What the narrator of "Hives" does to Julia at the end of the story. | |
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1.0 | |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_f3626b09 | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_name | type |
ItemName | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_name | comment |
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The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_name | |
The Claverhouse Emails / int_name | itemName |
The Claverhouse Emails |
The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.
The Claverhouse Emails | hasFeature |
Digital Horror / int_fc067c48 |
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