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Loading... Genius Loci and Other Tales (original 1948; edition 1948)by Clark Ashton Smith
Work InformationGenius Loci and Other Tales by Clark Ashton Smith (1948)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Classic horror must read This story begins with an artist who wants to tap into his well of talent until it becomes an obsession. The maddening search for perfection, yet there's more . . . Maybe it's something other than our own demons. I enjoyed this classic short story and was amazed at the author's extensive vocabulary. reprint of an Arkham House edition, this is a collection of tales from various worlds CAS imagined. his language is archaic and ornate, his descriptions so detailed you can see the settings come to life right off the page. a natural successor to Lovecraft, but his morbid imagination is all his own, and he excels especially at portraying the decadence and decay of civilizations and characters that have lived too long beyond their time. an acquired taste, perhaps, but he's worth acquiring. no reviews | add a review
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.9Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern PeriodLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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The stories usually have downbeat endings: 'The Charnel God' is one of the few with a happy ending for the protagonist and his wife. Some, like 'The Willow Landscape', concern the hostile intrustion into our world of malevolent forces both in the contemporary period when the stories were written and the distant past, such as Medieval France; others deal with Smith's imaginary ancient kingdoms or what could be termed as science fiction but of a rather metaphysical kind or set in a Martian environment which even at that date must have been becoming increasingly unlikely. Routinely the characters are victims or passive onlookers, such as in 'The Eternal World' where the sole human character can only witness the destruction of an entire star system.
I think I enjoyed his work much more when I first read it as a teenager but now find it emotionally uninvolving so can award only a 3 star rating. ( )