The Outsider(1921) Pickman’s Model(1926) The Picture (1907; nonextant) The Picture in the House(12 December 1920) Poetry and the Gods(with Anna Helen Crofts; 1920) Polaris(May? 1918) The Quest of Iranon(28 February 1921) The Rats in the Walls(August–September 1923) ...
In addition to such classics as “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” and “Herbert West: Reanimator,” this volume contains some fascinating rarities of Lovecraft’s earliest strange tales.An intern in a mental hospital relates his experiences with a patient who died . . . a lighthouse keeper engages...
By H. P. Lovecraft Illustrated by Pete Von Sholly Introduction by S.T. Joshi Dustjacket Text Dagon, the story that may have launched Lovecraft’s career in weird fiction is here along with a trove of gripping tales such asThe Picture in the House,The Outsider,The Terrible Old Man,The Sh...
Lovecraft writes that Cthulhu came to Earth from "the stars," and that he now lies "dreaming" in his house at R'lyeh, a sunken city on the bottom of the sea. At the end of the 2020 film Underwater, a deep-sea drilling operation appears to have stirred Cthulhu from his slumber, ...
“Probably nothing has done more damage to America’s credibility in the world than the spectacle we’ve seen these past few weeks,†the president said in an impassioned White House appearance. Good God, its like he's urging a sell order on his own stock. ...
Below is a chronological list of Lovecraft’s fiction, revisions, collaborations, and miscellaneous minor works, as well as some tales that are not extant. It is based primarily on S.T. Joshi’s “Chronology of the Fiction of H.P. Lovecraft” included in Arkham House’s Dagon and Other ...
(Cisco, Cushing, Tchougounova-Paulson, VanderMeer)Non-European Cultures in the Pulp Era (Di Filippo, Murray, Ruch, Walker) Graduate, Biltmore BallroomThe Jewish Tradition in Weird Fiction (Braum, Erdelac, Gerlach, Gold, Kaufmann, VanderMeer)H. P. Lovecraft and James F. Morton ...
By H. P. Lovecraft (Dedicated to Robert Bloch)I have seen the dark universe yawning Where the black planets roll without aim— Where they roll in their horror unheeded, Without knowledge or lustre or name. —Nemesis. Cautious investigators will hesitate to challenge the common belief that ...
and at the picture of an humanity turned suddenly to a race of abnormal statues, each encasing a living brain doomed to inert and helpless consciousness for untold aeons of futurity. The old Düsseldorf savant had a poisonous way of suggesting more than he stated, and I could understand why...
the house there fell a newly washed-out precipice of red earth, whilst ahead of me the hideous waves were still rolling in frightfully, eating away the land with ghastly monotony and deliberation. Out a mile or more there rose and fell menacing breakers at least fifty feet in height, and...