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LOVECRAFT EZINE
A writer vacations at a small remote fishing village, where she discovers the town’s dark secret and falls into a Lovecraftian nightmare. Listen live with us tonight at 9:00pm Eastern! Read Article→.
EVENTS: THE LATEST AUDIO PODCAST, LATEST VIDEOCAST, A NEW Hi there! Here are the latest events at Lovecraft eZine: AUDIO: Horror movies we’ve watched lately: SHUTTER, THE DEAD CENTER, and more. (Also on iTunes, Spotify, etc.: Simply search for “Lovecraft eZine Podcast”.) VIDEO: Guest Mike Allen, author of Unseaming, The Spider Tapestries, and more.Plus: we chat about the year so far in horror. REVIEW: “AFTERMATH OF AN INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT” BY MIKE Reviewed by Pete Rawlik.. Purchase Aftermath of an Industrial Accident here. “Mike Allen habitually upends Lovecraftian tropes with his own brand of cosmic horror.” — Laird Barron. Many years ago I stumbled across Mike Allen’s collection Unseaming which I enjoyed immensely and still haunts my bookshelves as a permanent part of my weirdfiction collection.
LOVECRAFTIAN NOVELS THAT I RECOMMEND This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of Lovecraftian novels; just the opposite, in fact. This is a short list of some of my favorites. I'll be adding to this list in the future! If you have a suggestion, please email me at lovecraftezine@gmail.com . Click the book title to purchase. 14, by FIVE RECENT WEIRD AND/OR LOVECRAFTIAN BOOKS YOU’LL WANT TO Smoke and Dagger: A Spectra Files Prequel, by Douglas Wynne – Praise for The Spectra Files: “Black January unites the best tradition of thrillers and cosmic horror. Wynne expands upon Lovecraftian mythology with style.”. – Laird Barron. A Lush and Seething Hell, by John Hornor Jacobs – “A beautiful, haunting book full of beautiful “THE PRISONER” AND HP LOVECRAFT: DID ROVER ARISE FROM A While McGoohan was a fine actor, with many other credits to his name, The Prisoner, is a standout, named by many in the TV culture as one of the best series of all times. It charmed even the band, Iron Maiden, to write a song entitled, “The Prisoner” (1982). LOVECRAFT AND TOLKIEN: LOVECRAFTIAN HORRORS IN MIDDLE At the same time, Lovecraft began to come into his own. In the late 60s, H. P. Lovecraft was the name taken by an American psychedelic rock band from Chicago, inspired by HPL’s macabre writings.Later, like Tolkien’s Sauron, HPL’s Cthulhu and other gods became the evil Dungeons and Dragons aficionados tried to overcome. And in the 1980s, Lovecraftians like Dr. Robert M. Price began 5 OF LAIRD BARRON’S FAVORITE LOVECRAFTIAN SHORT STORIES Welcome to our weekly list of Lovecraftian short story favorites. Note this is not a "Top Five" list, just a list of five favorites by Lovecraftian authors, editors, reviewers, etc. This week, author Laird Barron gives us his list: Children of the Kingdom, by T.E.D. Klein. (In Dark Gods.) Exactly what was the cause of the 1977 NewCALL OF CTHULHU
H. P. Lovecraft’s famously twisted universe will be coming alive on consoles and PC in 2017, in the official video game adaptation of Chaosium’s pen & paper RPG Call of Cthulhu. THE SCARIEST OLD-TIME RADIO EPISODES OF ALL TIME I'm fond of pointing out that Lovecraft fans are, of course, also horror fans. And given that I love old-time radio, I thought it would interesting to list what I think are the scariest old-time radio shows of all time. I'm not going to give plot synopses for these shows, because it's best to listenLOVECRAFT EZINE
A writer vacations at a small remote fishing village, where she discovers the town’s dark secret and falls into a Lovecraftian nightmare. Listen live with us tonight at 9:00pm Eastern! Read Article→.
EVENTS: THE LATEST AUDIO PODCAST, LATEST VIDEOCAST, A NEW Hi there! Here are the latest events at Lovecraft eZine: AUDIO: Horror movies we’ve watched lately: SHUTTER, THE DEAD CENTER, and more. (Also on iTunes, Spotify, etc.: Simply search for “Lovecraft eZine Podcast”.) VIDEO: Guest Mike Allen, author of Unseaming, The Spider Tapestries, and more.Plus: we chat about the year so far in horror. REVIEW: “AFTERMATH OF AN INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT” BY MIKE Reviewed by Pete Rawlik.. Purchase Aftermath of an Industrial Accident here. “Mike Allen habitually upends Lovecraftian tropes with his own brand of cosmic horror.” — Laird Barron. Many years ago I stumbled across Mike Allen’s collection Unseaming which I enjoyed immensely and still haunts my bookshelves as a permanent part of my weirdfiction collection.
LOVECRAFTIAN NOVELS THAT I RECOMMEND This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of Lovecraftian novels; just the opposite, in fact. This is a short list of some of my favorites. I'll be adding to this list in the future! If you have a suggestion, please email me at lovecraftezine@gmail.com . Click the book title to purchase. 14, by FIVE RECENT WEIRD AND/OR LOVECRAFTIAN BOOKS YOU’LL WANT TO Smoke and Dagger: A Spectra Files Prequel, by Douglas Wynne – Praise for The Spectra Files: “Black January unites the best tradition of thrillers and cosmic horror. Wynne expands upon Lovecraftian mythology with style.”. – Laird Barron. A Lush and Seething Hell, by John Hornor Jacobs – “A beautiful, haunting book full of beautiful “THE PRISONER” AND HP LOVECRAFT: DID ROVER ARISE FROM A While McGoohan was a fine actor, with many other credits to his name, The Prisoner, is a standout, named by many in the TV culture as one of the best series of all times. It charmed even the band, Iron Maiden, to write a song entitled, “The Prisoner” (1982). LOVECRAFT AND TOLKIEN: LOVECRAFTIAN HORRORS IN MIDDLE At the same time, Lovecraft began to come into his own. In the late 60s, H. P. Lovecraft was the name taken by an American psychedelic rock band from Chicago, inspired by HPL’s macabre writings.Later, like Tolkien’s Sauron, HPL’s Cthulhu and other gods became the evil Dungeons and Dragons aficionados tried to overcome. And in the 1980s, Lovecraftians like Dr. Robert M. Price began 5 OF LAIRD BARRON’S FAVORITE LOVECRAFTIAN SHORT STORIES Welcome to our weekly list of Lovecraftian short story favorites. Note this is not a "Top Five" list, just a list of five favorites by Lovecraftian authors, editors, reviewers, etc. This week, author Laird Barron gives us his list: Children of the Kingdom, by T.E.D. Klein. (In Dark Gods.) Exactly what was the cause of the 1977 NewCALL OF CTHULHU
H. P. Lovecraft’s famously twisted universe will be coming alive on consoles and PC in 2017, in the official video game adaptation of Chaosium’s pen & paper RPG Call of Cthulhu. THE SCARIEST OLD-TIME RADIO EPISODES OF ALL TIME I'm fond of pointing out that Lovecraft fans are, of course, also horror fans. And given that I love old-time radio, I thought it would interesting to list what I think are the scariest old-time radio shows of all time. I'm not going to give plot synopses for these shows, because it's best to listen LOVECRAFTIAN ANTHOLOGIES AND COLLECTIONS (SHORT STORIES Here's a list of Lovecraftian anthologies and collections that I personally recommend. Enjoy! NOTE: This is not meant to a complete list of all the Lovecraftian short story collections available; in fact, just the opposite. The books in the list below are the some that I personally have enjoyed reading. Ancient Exhumations +2 - Shortstories by
FIVE RECENT WEIRD AND/OR LOVECRAFTIAN BOOKS YOU’LL WANT TO Smoke and Dagger: A Spectra Files Prequel, by Douglas Wynne – Praise for The Spectra Files: “Black January unites the best tradition of thrillers and cosmic horror. Wynne expands upon Lovecraftian mythology with style.”. – Laird Barron. A Lush and Seething Hell, by John Hornor Jacobs – “A beautiful, haunting book full of beautiful MIKE’S LIST OF RECOMMENDED LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIES MIKE DAVIS' LIST OF RECOMMENDED LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIES (Follow Lovecraft eZine on: Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube. And be sure to check out our weekly podcast, where we talk about Lovecraftian and horror movies, books, and much more!) Below is a list of Lovecraftian-themed movies that I recommend -- what I consider to be the best of the best. THE SCARIEST OLD-TIME RADIO EPISODES OF ALL TIME I'm fond of pointing out that Lovecraft fans are, of course, also horror fans. And given that I love old-time radio, I thought it would interesting to list what I think are the scariest old-time radio shows of all time. I'm not going to give plot synopses for these shows, because it's best to listen FREE LISTEN: FIVE LOVECRAFTIAN OLD-TIME RADIO SHOWS Here are some old-time radio episodes with Lovecraftian themes. Enjoy. The Dunwich Horror (Suspense): Listen via the player below, or download here . When a traveller in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean’s Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country. LOVECRAFT AND TOLKIEN: LOVECRAFTIAN HORRORS IN MIDDLE At the same time, Lovecraft began to come into his own. In the late 60s, H. P. Lovecraft was the name taken by an American psychedelic rock band from Chicago, inspired by HPL’s macabre writings.Later, like Tolkien’s Sauron, HPL’s Cthulhu and other gods became the evil Dungeons and Dragons aficionados tried to overcome. And in the 1980s, Lovecraftians like Dr. Robert M. Price began THE LOVECRAFTIAN STORIES OF STEPHEN KING Revival (novel) – This rich and disturbing novel spans five decades on its way to the most terrifying conclusion Stephen King has ever written. From a Buick 8 (novel) – Shortly after his father, a Pennsylvania state trooper, is killed in a senseless automobile accident, Ned Wilcox discovers that the members of Troop D have asecret
THE GROANER IN THE GLEN, BY ERIC IAN STEELE The sky hung overhead in a leaden pall, filled with the promise of more sleeting rain. Against the clouds, our golden eagle shone in stark contrast to the colourless heavens. The drum-beaters struck up a march, and the long column headed out through the wooden gates of the fort at a steady pace. IS “PROMETHEUS” A LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIE? There are a lot of reviews and discussion on the internet about Prometheus. I don't want to duplicate those here -- rather, my goal with this post is to focus on whether Prometheus should be considered a "Lovecraftian" movie. After I watched it, one of the theater employees asked me if I liked it. I “LOVECRAFT, NIHILISM, AND FASCISM”: AN ARTICLE BY PAUL ST After the Charlie Hebdo atrocity, astute Anglo readers may have twigged that one writer whose name keeps coming up in that context, Michel Houellebecq, also happens to be H.P. Lovecraft’s biggest French fan. His seminal work H.P. Lovecraft: Contre le monde, contre la vie (H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life), first published in 1991 but only translated into English in 2005, wasLOVECRAFT EZINE
A writer vacations at a small remote fishing village, where she discovers the town’s dark secret and falls into a Lovecraftian nightmare. Listen live with us tonight at 9:00pm Eastern! Read Article→.
LOVECRAFTIAN NOVELS THAT I RECOMMEND This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of Lovecraftian novels; just the opposite, in fact. This is a short list of some of my favorites. I'll be adding to this list in the future! If you have a suggestion, please email me at lovecraftezine@gmail.com . Click the book title to purchase. 14, by LOVECRAFTIAN VIDEO GAMES Description: Conarium is a chilling Lovecraftian game that follows the gripping story of four scientists and their endeavour to challenge what we normally consider to be the “absolute” limits of nature. Inspired by H.P. Lovecraft’s novella At the Mountains of Madness, but largely set after the original story. YouTube. FIVE RECENT WEIRD AND/OR LOVECRAFTIAN BOOKS YOU’LL WANT TO Smoke and Dagger: A Spectra Files Prequel, by Douglas Wynne – Praise for The Spectra Files: “Black January unites the best tradition of thrillers and cosmic horror. Wynne expands upon Lovecraftian mythology with style.”. – Laird Barron. A Lush and Seething Hell, by John Hornor Jacobs – “A beautiful, haunting book full of beautiful THE LOVECRAFTIAN STORIES OF STEPHEN KING Revival (novel) – This rich and disturbing novel spans five decades on its way to the most terrifying conclusion Stephen King has ever written. From a Buick 8 (novel) – Shortly after his father, a Pennsylvania state trooper, is killed in a senseless automobile accident, Ned Wilcox discovers that the members of Troop D have asecret
CALL OF CTHULHU
H. P. Lovecraft’s famously twisted universe will be coming alive on consoles and PC in 2017, in the official video game adaptation of Chaosium’s pen & paper RPG Call of Cthulhu. FREE LISTEN: FIVE LOVECRAFTIAN OLD-TIME RADIO SHOWS Here are some old-time radio episodes with Lovecraftian themes. Enjoy. The Dunwich Horror (Suspense): Listen via the player below, or download here . When a traveller in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean’s Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country. THE CREVASSE, BY DALE BAILEY AND NATHAN BALLINGRUDTHE CREVASSE BY EDGAR MUELLERCREVASSE DEFINE OEDINTO THE CREVASSE 30 ROCKINTO THECREVASSE WOW
Crouching in the low tent, Garner dressed. He shoved a flashlight into his jacket, shouldered aside the tent flap, and leaned into the wind tearing across the waste. The crevasse lay before him, rope still trailing through the pitons to dangle into the pit below. Garner feltthe pull of
THE GROANER IN THE GLEN, BY ERIC IAN STEELE The sky hung overhead in a leaden pall, filled with the promise of more sleeting rain. Against the clouds, our golden eagle shone in stark contrast to the colourless heavens. The drum-beaters struck up a march, and the long column headed out through the wooden gates of the fort at a steady pace. DID THE WRITER OF “TRUE DETECTIVE” PLAGIARIZE THOMAS (Above: Video comparing lines from True Detective to phrases from the works of Thomas Ligotti.) Like many fans of weird fiction, I was overjoyed to discover HBO's True Detective. But as the season progressed, I became increasingly uneasy. It seemed to me that True Detective writer Nic Pizzolatto was "borrowing" words and phrasing from other authors, especially Thomas Ligotti.LOVECRAFT EZINE
A writer vacations at a small remote fishing village, where she discovers the town’s dark secret and falls into a Lovecraftian nightmare. Listen live with us tonight at 9:00pm Eastern! Read Article→.
LOVECRAFTIAN NOVELS THAT I RECOMMEND This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of Lovecraftian novels; just the opposite, in fact. This is a short list of some of my favorites. I'll be adding to this list in the future! If you have a suggestion, please email me at lovecraftezine@gmail.com . Click the book title to purchase. 14, by LOVECRAFTIAN VIDEO GAMES Description: Conarium is a chilling Lovecraftian game that follows the gripping story of four scientists and their endeavour to challenge what we normally consider to be the “absolute” limits of nature. Inspired by H.P. Lovecraft’s novella At the Mountains of Madness, but largely set after the original story. YouTube. FIVE RECENT WEIRD AND/OR LOVECRAFTIAN BOOKS YOU’LL WANT TO Smoke and Dagger: A Spectra Files Prequel, by Douglas Wynne – Praise for The Spectra Files: “Black January unites the best tradition of thrillers and cosmic horror. Wynne expands upon Lovecraftian mythology with style.”. – Laird Barron. A Lush and Seething Hell, by John Hornor Jacobs – “A beautiful, haunting book full of beautiful THE LOVECRAFTIAN STORIES OF STEPHEN KING Revival (novel) – This rich and disturbing novel spans five decades on its way to the most terrifying conclusion Stephen King has ever written. From a Buick 8 (novel) – Shortly after his father, a Pennsylvania state trooper, is killed in a senseless automobile accident, Ned Wilcox discovers that the members of Troop D have asecret
CALL OF CTHULHU
H. P. Lovecraft’s famously twisted universe will be coming alive on consoles and PC in 2017, in the official video game adaptation of Chaosium’s pen & paper RPG Call of Cthulhu. FREE LISTEN: FIVE LOVECRAFTIAN OLD-TIME RADIO SHOWS Here are some old-time radio episodes with Lovecraftian themes. Enjoy. The Dunwich Horror (Suspense): Listen via the player below, or download here . When a traveller in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean’s Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country. THE CREVASSE, BY DALE BAILEY AND NATHAN BALLINGRUDTHE CREVASSE BY EDGAR MUELLERCREVASSE DEFINE OEDINTO THE CREVASSE 30 ROCKINTO THECREVASSE WOW
Crouching in the low tent, Garner dressed. He shoved a flashlight into his jacket, shouldered aside the tent flap, and leaned into the wind tearing across the waste. The crevasse lay before him, rope still trailing through the pitons to dangle into the pit below. Garner feltthe pull of
THE GROANER IN THE GLEN, BY ERIC IAN STEELE The sky hung overhead in a leaden pall, filled with the promise of more sleeting rain. Against the clouds, our golden eagle shone in stark contrast to the colourless heavens. The drum-beaters struck up a march, and the long column headed out through the wooden gates of the fort at a steady pace. DID THE WRITER OF “TRUE DETECTIVE” PLAGIARIZE THOMAS (Above: Video comparing lines from True Detective to phrases from the works of Thomas Ligotti.) Like many fans of weird fiction, I was overjoyed to discover HBO's True Detective. But as the season progressed, I became increasingly uneasy. It seemed to me that True Detective writer Nic Pizzolatto was "borrowing" words and phrasing from other authors, especially Thomas Ligotti. EVENTS: THE LATEST AUDIO PODCAST, LATEST VIDEOCAST, A NEW Hi there! Here are the latest events at Lovecraft eZine: AUDIO: Horror movies we’ve watched lately: SHUTTER, THE DEAD CENTER, and more. (Also on iTunes, Spotify, etc.: Simply search for “Lovecraft eZine Podcast”.) VIDEO: Guest Mike Allen, author of Unseaming, The Spider Tapestries, and more.Plus: we chat about the year so far in horror. REVIEW: “AFTERMATH OF AN INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT” BY MIKE 1 day ago · Reviewed by Pete Rawlik.. Purchase Aftermath of an Industrial Accident here. “Mike Allen habitually upends Lovecraftian tropes with his own brand of cosmic horror.” — Laird Barron. Many years ago I stumbled across Mike Allen’s collection Unseaming which I enjoyed immensely and still haunts my bookshelves as a permanent part of my weird fiction collection. MIKE’S LIST OF RECOMMENDED LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIES MIKE DAVIS' LIST OF RECOMMENDED LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIES (Follow Lovecraft eZine on: Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube. And be sure to check out our weekly podcast, where we talk about Lovecraftian and horror movies, books, and much more!) Below is a list of Lovecraftian-themed movies that I recommend -- what I consider to be the best of the best. LOVECRAFTIAN NOIR AND DETECTIVE FICTION, A LIST BY MATTHEW Deadstock (Jeffrey Thomas, Solaris, 2007, ISBN 978-1844164479) Jeffrey Thomas created Punktown, a city on the planet Oasis, where humans and aliens mix uneasily in a festering sea of desperation and crime (All of the Punktown books are well worth reading.). Deadstock is a sequel to an earlier book, “Monstrocity”, but it happens to be of LOVECRAFT AND TOLKIEN: LOVECRAFTIAN HORRORS IN MIDDLE At the same time, Lovecraft began to come into his own. In the late 60s, H. P. Lovecraft was the name taken by an American psychedelic rock band from Chicago, inspired by HPL’s macabre writings.Later, like Tolkien’s Sauron, HPL’s Cthulhu and other gods became the evil Dungeons and Dragons aficionados tried to overcome. And in the 1980s, Lovecraftians like Dr. Robert M. Price began LOVECRAFT’S CTHULHU AND THE GREAT OLD ONES: FACT, FICTION 1. Who were Lovecraft’s Great Old Ones? “Of such great powers or beings there may be conceivably a survivala survival of a hugely remote period whenconsciousness was manifestedin shapes and forms long since withdrawn before the tide of advancing humanityforms of which poetry and legend alone have caught a flying memory and called them gods, monsters, mythical beings of all 5 OF LAIRD BARRON’S FAVORITE LOVECRAFTIAN SHORT STORIES Welcome to our weekly list of Lovecraftian short story favorites. Note this is not a "Top Five" list, just a list of five favorites by Lovecraftian authors, editors, reviewers, etc. This week, author Laird Barron gives us his list: Children of the Kingdom, by T.E.D. Klein. (In Dark Gods.) Exactly what was the cause of the 1977 New THE LOST TALES OF ROBERT BLOCH The following is by Rick Lai.. H. P. Lovecraft’s Letters to Robert Bloch and Others (Hippocampus Press, 2015, edited by S T. Joshi and David E. Schultz) contained discussions of several unpublished early tales by Bloch that never saw print. The text of these stories has been lost, but clues exist in Lovecraft’s letters and elsewhere as to their probable contents. EXPLORATION OF THE LOVECRAFTIAN UNIVERSE WITH THE USE OF Another 25% of the universe is dark matter, which is matter that we cannot detect or perceive. The remaining 70% of the universe is dark energy. This is a type of energy that is smoothly distributed throughout the universe. It should be noted that dark matter and dark energy are inherently different from ordinary matter and energy. IS “PROMETHEUS” A LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIE? There are a lot of reviews and discussion on the internet about Prometheus. I don't want to duplicate those here -- rather, my goal with this post is to focus on whether Prometheus should be considered a "Lovecraftian" movie. After I watched it, one of the theater employees asked me if I liked it. ILOVECRAFT EZINE
WEIRD FICTION, COSMIC HORROR, THE CTHULHU MYTHOS, FUN PODCAST, ANDMORE
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* Issue #1 – February 2011 * Issue #1, February 2011: Introduction * Sledding and Starlings, by Bruce L. Priddy * Rickman’s Plasma, by William Meikle * The Brown Tower, by John Prescott * The Crane Horror, by Bruce Durham * Issue #2 – March 2011 * Issue #2, March 2011: Introduction * Some Distant Baying Sound, by W.H. Pugmire * A Different Morecambe, by Simon Kurt Unsworth * False Light, by Adrian Chamberlin * Allure, by Josh Wagner * Issue #3 – April 2011 * Issue #3, April 2011: Introduction * Cockroaches, by Amanda Underwood * A Meeting on the Trail To Hot Iron, by Joseph S. Pulver * Things We Are Not, by Brandon H. Bell * Descent Into Shadow and Light, by W.H. Pugmire * The Slickens, by Jeremy Russell * Issue #4 – May 2011 * Issue #4 – May 2011: Introduction * All The Gold, by Joseph S. Pulver * Dreams of Fire and Glass, part 1, by Neal Jansons * O, Lad of Memory and Shadow, by W.H. Pugmire * Dragon Star Lucky Food, by John Medaille * Curse the Child, by David J. West * Issue #5 – June 2011 * Issue #5, June 2011: Introduction * The Case of the Galloway Eidolon, by Bruce Durham * The Call of the Dance, by William Meikle * Unearthly Awakening, by W.H. Pugmire * Dreams of Fire and Glass, conclusion, by Neal Jansons * Darius Roy’s Manic Grin, by Brian Barnett * Issue #6 – September 2011 * Issue #6, September 2011: Introduction * Ushered On the Wind, by Jeffrey J. Taylor & W.H. Pugmire * The Wagon’s Trail, by Joseph S. Pulver * The Audient Void, by Mark Lowell * In Phantom Isolation, by W.H. Pugmire * The Weird Studies of Harley Warren, by Berin Kinsman * Issue #7 – October 2011 * Issue #7, October 2011: Introduction * Sky Full of Fire, by Corinna Sara Bechko * The Lord of Endings, by John R. Fultz * Loaners, by Aaron Polson * The Prophecy of Zarah, by Jenne Kaivo * The Stranger From Out of Town, by John Prescott * Issue #8 – November 2011 * Issue #8, November 2011: Introduction * Desert Mystery! Gas & Go!, by Ann K. Schwader * The Tunnel Inside the Mountain, by A.J. French * #Dreaming, by William Meikle * What Dances In Shadow, by Derek Ferreira * The Time Eater, by Adam Bolivar * Issue #9 – December 2011 * Issue #9, December 2011: Introduction * Elder Instincts, by W.H. Pugmire * Among the Dark Places of the Earth, by Julio Toro San Martin * At Best an Echo, by Bradley H. Sinor * Stone City, Old as Immeasurable Time, by Kelda Crich * Just An Accountant, by Henrik Sandbeck Harksen* 2012
* Issue #10 – January 2012 * Tark Left Santiago, by Joseph S. Pulver, SR * The Spaces Between Space, by Brett J. Talley * Eliza, by Joshua Reynolds * White Noise, by Michael Matheson * The Vessels, by Nancy O. Greene * Lovecraftian Art – Issue #10 – January 2012 * Issue #11 – February 2012 * Marked as Urgent, by A.J. French * This Scattered Ash, by W.H. Pugmire and Jacob Henry Orloff * I Am the Key, by Mike Davis * Inheritance, by Patricia Correll * Dark Ambient Metamorphosis, by John Claude Smith * The Locked Door, by Brian M. Sammons * Lovecraftian Art – Issue #11 – February 2012 * Issue #12 – March 2012 * A Catechism for Aspiring Amnesiacs, by Nicole Cushing * Available Light, by John Palisano * That Old Problem, by T.E. Grau * Taking the Cure, by Mark Howard Jones * The Fire of Zon Mezzamalech, by Randall D. Larson * Issue #13 – April 2012 * Ecstasy of the Gold, by Stephen Mark Rainey * Scale Hall, by Simon Kurt Unsworth * The Dog Who Wished He’d Never Heard of Lovecraft, by AnnaTambour
* The Ouroboros Apocrypha, by Jayaprakash Satyamurthy * Over the Hills, by Victor Takac * This Inscrutable Light: A Response to Thomas Ligotti’s “The Conspiracy Against the Human Race”, by Brandon H. Bell * Lovecraftian Art – Issue #13 – April 2012 * Issue #14 – May 2012 * Issue #14 – May 2012 – Introduction, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia * A Beer and Tentacles, by Holliann Kim * Now She Preys Through Endless Days, by Jenna M. Pitman * Fiesta of Our Lady, by Ann K. Schwader * God Serum, by Wendy N. Wagner * Drive, She Said, by Tracie McBride * Art – Issue #14 – May 2012 * Issue #15 – June 2012 * Bus Stop, by Jerod Brennen * Starry… Yet…, by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr * Station Waiting Room, by Simon Kurt Unsworth * Pickman’s Marble, by Peter and Mandy Rawlik * Invitation, by Siobhan Gallagher * In Memoriam: Robert Nelson, by W.H. Pugmire * A Stranger at the Door, by Bradly Shelby * Issue #16 – July 2012 * In the Tank, by Scott Nicolay * The Thing in the Depths, by Pete Rawlik * Fish Eye, by David A. Riley * Fade to Black, by Robert Borski * The Visitor From Outside, by A.J. French * Issue #17 – September 2012 * A Mote in the Void, by Simon Kewin * Miscegenation, by Glynn Barrass * Twilight Turns From Amethyst, by Nicola Belte * Red Sands, by Douglas Poirier * Extraction, by Julio Toro San Martin * Issue #18 – October 2012 * Introduction to Issue #18, by Trent Zelazny * A Counting Game, by Derek Ferreira * Carnacki: The Parliament of Owls, by William Meikle * Twenty to Life in the Lonesome October, by Evan Dicken * The Great and Groovy Game, by Joshua Wanisko * My Least Immemorial Year, by Zach Shephard * The Gotterdammerung Gavotte, by Josh Reynolds * Big D, Little D, by Edward Morris * The Blackbird Whistling, or Just After, by Orrin Grey * Fallen Books and Other Subtle Clues in Zelazny’s “A Night in the Lonesome October”, by Dr. Christopher S. Kovacs * Issue #19 – November 2012 * A Thousand Smokes, by W.H. Pugmire * The Strange Case of Crazy Joe Gallo, by Jeffrey Thomas * In the House of the Hummingbirds, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia * The Treatment Room, by Kevin Crisp * Obsidian Capra Aegagrus, by Christopher Slatsky * The Dig, by Monica Valentinelli * Amtopians, by Logan Davis * Issue #20 – December 2012 * Of Faith and Fallow, by William R.D. Wood * The Dead of Winter, by Jay Caselberg * Herbert West in Love, by Molly Tanzer * Wind Walker, by Neil John Buchanan * Yule Log, by Richard Holland* 2013
* Issue #21 – January 2013 * Beneath the Pier, by Stephen Mark Rainey * An Eidolon of Filth, by W.H. Pugmire * A (~BIG~) Fishy Menu, by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. * Dom and Gio’s Barber Shop, by Gerry Huntman * The Stranger’s Trail, by Tom Lynch * Dunwich Redux, by Tim Scott * Issue #22 – February 2013 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #1, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * The Dance, by Robin Spriggs * Maybe the Stars, by Samantha Henderson * The Pyramid Spider, by Simon Kurt Unsworth * Powers of Air and Darkness, by Don Webb * Verbapeutic, by Joe Nazare * The Masked Messenger, by David Conyers & John Goodrich * Issue #23 – April 2013 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #2, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #1, by Robert M. Price * The Strange Tale of Samuel Winchester, by Andrew Nicolle &Samantha Hendersen
* Tracking the Black Book, by Douglas Wynne * Not With a Bang, But Waves Whispering, by Wendy Wagner * A Cold Yellow Moon, by Joe Pulver & Edward Morris * The Whisper From the Deep, by Cora Pop * Nectar of Strange Lips, by Michael Griffin * Issue #24 – May 2013 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #3, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #2, by Robert M. Price * Less A Dream Than This We Know, by Christopher M. Cevasco * The Horror Under the City, by Kevin Crisp * How Rare are Light and Life, by J.T. Glover * The Basalt Obelisk, by Michael Wen * Evolved, by Kenneth W. Cain * Cosmic Terror From Poe to Lovecraft, by Sandro D. Fossemò * Issue #25 – July 2013 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #4, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #3, by Robert M. Price * And They Did Live by Watchfires, by Evan Dicken * In Dark Corners, by Bradley H. Sinor * Missing Presumed Wiped, by Derek John * The Eye, by Justin Munro * A Glimpse of the Future, by Stewart Horn * Issue #26 – August 2013 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #5, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #4, by Robert M. Price * The Crevasse, by Dale Bailey and Nathan Ballingrud * Cement Shoe Cthulhu, by Derek Ferreira * Between, by William Meikle * The Moon’s Architecture, by Graham Lowther * The Arkham Terror, by Pete Rawlik * The Pariah, by Bruce Durham * Issue #27 – October 2013 * Introduction to issue 27, by Trent Zelazny * Cthulhu Does Stuff #6, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * He Knew Not the Month Was October, by Zach Shephard * Crash_the_World.exe, by Derek Ferreira * A Knight in the Lonesome October, by William Meikle * Mother of Monsters, by Josh Wanisko * The Bells of Northam, by Joshua Reynolds * What You Leave Behind, by Evan Dicken * Issue #28 – December 2013 * Introduction to Issue #28, by S. T. Joshi * Cthulhu Does Stuff #7, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #5, by Robert M. Price * A Massing of the Shades, by Richard Gavin * The Storm Horses, by Scott Thomas * Vyvyan’s Father, by Jayaprakash Satyamurthy * The Winds of Sesqua Valley, by Ann K. Schwader * Jar of Mist, by Jeffrey Thomas * (he) Dreams of Lovecraftian Horror . . . , by Joseph S. Pulver,Sr.
* The Deep Black Pit, by Jessica Salmonson* 2014
* Issue #29 – February 2014 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #8, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #6, by Robert M. Price * The Mouth of God, by Gary Myers * Burning Stars, by K.G. Orphanides * The Time Travelers’ Ex-Wife, by Pete & Mandy Rawlik * The Chamber, by Jonathan Richardson * The Carrion Birds and the Drone, by Harry Baker * The Establishment of the Doctors Hamilton, by L.T. Patridge * The Groaner in the Glen, by Eric Ian Steele * Adrift in Black Seas, by Michael Matheson * The Eldritch Force – A Cthulhu Mythos Round Robin * Re:Animated, by Kenneth W. Cain * Issue #30 – April 2014 * Introduction to Issue #30, by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. * Cthulhu Does Stuff #9, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * The Queen’s Speech, by Ann K. Schwader * O Skies Above O Earth Below I Love The Best, by JayaprakashSathyamurthy
* The First Act, by Pete Rawlik * The Masks of Hastur, by Rick Lai * Stairsie, by Tom Lynch * No Mask to Conceal Her Voice, by Michael Griffin * The Yellow Sign, by Robert W. Chambers * Issue #31 – June 2014 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #10, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #8, by Robert M. Price * Stone Cold Fever, by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. * The Shadow Under Scotland, by Cameron Johnston * alligators, by Scott Nicolay * Pick’s Ghoul, by Ross E. Lockhart * Changes, by Lars Kramhøft * Pawn to E4, by Jenna E. Pitman * War Gods of Men, by David Conyers and David Kernot * Spectacles, Tentacles, Wallet, and Watch, by Wayne Helge * U.S. of Kaos, by Federico de Luca * Issue #32 – August 2014 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #11, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #9, by Robert M. Price * Beyond the Wakeful Senses, by W.H. Pugmire * The Presence, by William Rasmussen * The White Cathedral, by Robert Karol * All Within the Tender Bones, by Jason Rolfe * Leviathan’s Wake, by Mark Howard Jones * The Power of a Name, by David Anthony * The Princess and the Bee, by Gregory L. Norris * King Kane, by John Howard * Issue #33 – December 2014 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #12, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #10, by Robert M. Price * Rain Blush, by Neil Murrell * Song in the Dark, by Andrew Jack * A Sense of Time, by Pete Rawlik * That Which Dwells Beneath, by Andrew Nicolle * The Pnakotic Puzzle, by Josh Reynolds * Books (Misc.), by Steven Prizeman * The Story of Herr Hackenschmidt, by Benjamin Welton * Monarch of the Mountains, by Matthew Warner* 2015
* Issue #34 – Spring 2015 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #13, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #11, by Robert M. Price * To Kiss Your Canvas, by W.H. Pugmire * The Sleekit Ones, by Cameron Johnston * Hunger Full and Lean, by J.T. Glover * What the Storm Brings, by KC Grifant * Maps, by Arley Sorg * Spiral, by Matthew Lowes * Exit Horizon, by Damir Salkovic * In the Forest of the Night, by Alter Reiss * The Mask and the Mirror, by Ethan Carpenter * A Hero’s Welcome, by David Kernot * The Unmistakable Shape of Night’s River, by Joseph S. Pulver,Sr.
* March 2015 Back Cover * Issue #35 – Summer 2015 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #14, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Echoes From Cthulhu’s Crypt #12, by Robert M. Price * The Drunks’ Totem, by Simon Kurt Unsworth * Seeking Whom He May Devour, by Josh Reynolds * Art as a Mirror, by Tracie McBride * Gently Down the Stream, by Evan Dicken * The Silent Symphony, by Sam Gafford * The Changing Things, by Josh Wagner * Rowan, by K.G. Orphanides * Eden, by Tom Lynch * The City of Yellow Lights, by Jason Andrew * The Secret of Ventriloquism, by Jon Padgett * Issue #36 – Autumn 2015 * Cthulhu Does Stuff #15, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * Better Halves, by KC Grifant * The Last Leaves, by Derek Wentz * Descent, by Christopher M. Cevasco * Restless Nights, by Justin Munro * The Thing in the Corner, by David A. Anthony * The Pardon of the Fogs, by Cora Pop * Mortuus Machanus, by D.B. Poirier * Resonance, by Stewart Horn * The Voice of Zarnak, by Rick Lai * Notes on “The Voice of Zarnak” by Rick Lai * White Light Panic, by Phillip J. Johnson* 2016
* Issue #37
* Introduction, by Aaron J. French * Cthulhu Does Stuff #16, by Ronnie Tucker and Maxwell Patterson * Inundation, by John Langan * Just Watch Me Now, by Jodi Renée Lester * Tidal River, by Gio Clairval and Chris Kelso * An Ocean Between Them, by Erik Johnson * Nothing Lies Beyond the Pillars of Hercules, by Darren Speegle * Atlantis Rising, by Donald Tyson * Cone of Heaven, by Kurt Fawver * Deeper Roots, by K.G. Orphanides * In the Deeps of Dreams, by Mark Howard Jones* Issue #38
* Cthulhu Does Stuff #17, by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson * The Spaces Between, by Pete Rawlik * The Voyager, by Douglas Wynne * Endure Within a Dying Frame, by Michael Griffin * Catch Me If You Can, by Marcus Grimm * DreamShock, by Benjamin Knox & Toby Bennett * The Secret Goatman Spookshow, by Jonathan Raab * Winter Things, by Raven Daegmorgan * Further, by F. J. Bergmann * Lovecraft eZine Movie Night “THE FLYING NONE” BY CODY GOODFELLOW LOOKS INSANELY GREATMay 24, 2021
THE SCARIEST SHORT STORIES EVER WRITTENApril 13, 2021
MIKE’S LIST OF RECOMMENDED LOVECRAFTIAN MOVIES — UPDATED!March 18, 2021
WATCH FREE: “IN A FOREIGN TOWN” – THOMAS LIGOTTI’S DARK WORLD COMES TO THE DIGITAL SCREENDecember 26, 2020
INTERVIEW: PAUL TREMBLAY AND STEPHEN GRAHAM JONES TALK ABOUT SURVIVOR SONG AND THE ONLY GOOD INDIANSJune 25, 2020
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