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+2 +1
Elder Sign
Joseph Nanni
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+5 +1
Our Shoggoths, Ourselves
“The shoggoths, the tentacles, the people of color, the salads, and all the other things Lovecraft found horrifying are things I welcome in a fictive world, and also in the real world — and one way to talk about the idiocy of bigotry and the vivid delights of a many-colored world is to take Lovecraft’s stories and stand them on their heads, as I’ve tried to do.” By David Michael Greer.
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+27 +1
“Does it have functional or rudimentary wings?”
Joseph Nanni
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+1 +1
The Necronomicon
Do you want to be a nicer person? Are you looking for inspiration to do good things? Well keep looking. But if you’re into opening up terrifying vistas of reality then the Esoteric Order of the Old Ones and Cthulhu Cultists want to help. Contact us today to find out how.
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+1 +1
Donald P. Lovecraft, Or, The Doom That Came To Manhattan
What if H.P. Lovecraft wrote about Donald Trump? A darkly humorous poem written and read by The Klute in the style of 'The Horror at Red Hook.'
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+20 +1
Maybe Alien Life Runs On Cosmic Rays Instead Of Sunlight
Deadly radiation could be breakfast for microbes on rogue planets, comets, and more. By Sarah Fecht.
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+2 +1
Lovecraft Noir: "Cast a Deadly Spell" (1991), starring Fred Ward, Julianne Moore and Clancy Brown
To be honest, I’m shocked that I’ve never heard about CAST A DEADLY SPELL before 2016. After all, it’s got a shocking amount of talent associated with the film: future GOLDENEYE and CASINO ROYALE director Martin Campbell, ALIENS producer Gale Anne Hurd, FX legend Tony Gardner, THIRTYSOMETHING writer/producer Joseph Dougherty and a stunning cast that includes Julianne Moore, Fred Ward, Lee Tergesen, and Clancy Brown. But above all, it’s a genre hybrid unlike any other: a true detective noir that embraces the fantastical elements of the horror genre unabashedly.
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+6 +1
Thresher
A horror short by Mike Diva
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+18 +1
Welcome to Arkham—the (HO) Model City
A scale model of HP Lovecraft’s Arkham city.
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+22 +1
Reality Itself Is Malevolent in Thomas Ligotti’s Work
Ligotti’s stories seem almost violently unpalatable. They afford neither easy resolutions nor the seemingly ambiguous but ultimately fulfilling pleasures of so many mystery stories. By Austin Price.
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+2 +1
HPL Insurance
You can't control the gibbering madness that lies waiting on the edge of our reality but for a small monthly premium you can ensure that you don't pay for it when things go eldritch.
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+25 +1
The Conspiracy Against a Good Night’s Sleep
Cosmic horror tends to be synonymous with H.P. Lovecraft, but others, from Thomas Ligotti to Nathan Ballingrud, show the many ways in which tales of a monstrous world can scare the hell out of us. By Tobias Carroll.
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+1 +1
Arkham Horror, the 1987 and 2005 editions
Board game: 1987 edition: 6/10, primitive, overly difficult to win, but fun. 2005 edition: 7/10, flawed but fun.
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+2 +1
“Lovecraft eZine” issue 35 is online, free to read! | Lovecraft eZine
Ten stories of cosmic horror, a column by Robert M. Price, and the
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+7 +1
Ramsey Campbell's favorite Lovecraftian stories not written by Lovecraft
I recently asked Ramsey Campbell for a short list of some of his favorite Lovecraftian stories and novels. Here's the list, with links to the appropriate books!
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+2 +1
You'll love poring over Lovecraft's notes for "At The Mountains of Madness"
Click here to read H.P. Lovecraft's notes on his novella
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+13 +1
Yidhra - HEXED [Doom, Stoner, Occult]
Bandcamp: 9 track album - Highly recommend this album. It was on perma-repeat on my mobile until my vinyl arrived.
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+15 +1
Arthur Machen: the sounds from beyond the veil
Writings by Arthur Machen on London and its sounds
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+1 +2
Tales of the Crescent City from Golden Goblin Press
Tales of the Crescent City—Adventures in Jazz Era New Orleans; a collection of scenarios for the Call of Cthulhu Roleplaying Game.
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