The Yellow Wallpaper:In this captivating psychological thriller, Charlotte Perkins Gilman transforms a room with yellow walls into an arena of internal conflict between the self and its repression, between sanity and madness, between the desire for liberation and the confines of a male-dominated society.The story is told by a young woman suffering from postpartum depression, who is forced into "therapeutic" isolation in a remote mansion. There, in a room with disturbingly dirty wallpaper, everything begins to crack—logic, language, and time. With every page, the reader slips with her into a terrifying abyss of psychological collapse, led by the strange motifs on the walls and a cracked mirror reflecting the face of a woman imprisoned not for a crime, but for thinking. "The Yellow Wallpaper" is not just a horror story, but a feminist manifesto ahead of its time. In it, Gilman wrote her profound protest against enforced isolation and society''s refusal to hear women''s voices or acknowledge their psychological pain as a reality. This short novel, written in 1892, remains today one of the most powerful works to address mental illness from within, in a literary form that is both fascinating and terrifying.