Some dreams fade with morning. This one never does. In The Dream Snake, a man confesses a recurring nightmare so detailed, so immersive, that it feels like another life entirely. Each time the dream returns, he stands alone in an isolated bungalow on the African grasslands, waiting through endless nights for something massive and unseen that moves through the tall grass outside.
What makes the dream unbearable is not what he sees, but what he knows will eventually happen. With no awareness that he is dreaming, fear stretches time into eternity. The sound of movement grows nearer with every recurrence, and the dream tightens its grip until the boundary between sleep and waking reality begins to crack.
Robert E. Howard is best known as the creator of Conan the Barbarian, but his imagination reached far beyond sword and sorcery. He wrote horror, science fiction, and psychological tales marked by intensity, atmosphere, and raw emotional power.
In The Dream Snake, Howard channels cosmic dread and psychological terror, crafting a story where fear itself becomes the monster. It stands as an early example of his ability to explore the fragility of the human mind when confronted with the unknowable.























