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Steve Lockley

Author of The Sign of Glaaki

22+ Works 82 Members 2 Reviews

Works by Steve Lockley

Associated Works

The Story of Martha (2008) — Contributor — 289 copies, 14 reviews
Crafty Cat Crimes: 100 Tiny Cat Tale Mysteries (2000) — Contributor — 166 copies, 2 reviews
Shakespearean Whodunnits (1997) — Contributor — 149 copies, 2 reviews
Encounters of Sherlock Holmes (2013) — Contributor — 79 copies, 3 reviews
The Random House Book of Fantasy Stories (1963) — Contributor — 74 copies
Short Trips: Destination Prague (2007) — Contributor — 51 copies, 3 reviews
Touch Wood (1993) — Contributor — 39 copies, 1 review
British Invasion (2008) — Contributor — 29 copies
At Ease with the Dead (2007) — Contributor — 14 copies
The Third Black Book of Horror (2008) — Contributor — 8 copies
The Sixth Black Book of Horror (2010) — Contributor — 7 copies
Terror Tales of the Cotswolds (2012) — Contributor — 6 copies
Action: Pulse Pounding Tales Volume 1 (2012) — Contributor — 5 copies
Terror Tales of Wales (2014) — Contributor — 5 copies
Freaks, Geeks, and Sideshow Floozies (2002) — Contributor — 4 copies
Hideous Progeny: A Frankenstein Anthology (2000) — Contributor — 4 copies

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2 reviews
Although this novel is published as a supplement to the Arkham Horror games franchise, it only includes one Arkham Horror character, and that in a minor supporting role: Joe Diamond the P.I. The central characters of the novel are in fact historical figures: the young English WWI veteran Dennis Wheatley (prior to his days as an author) and escapologist Harry Houdini. Additionally, the screen actor Max Schreck has a part in the story, and it seems as though the meta-cinematic film Shadow of show more the Vampire (2000) had more than a little influence on the plot of the novel.

Despite the presence of Ramsey Campbell's ancient god Glaaki in the book's title, the god and its cult as represented here have little detail in common with "The Inhabitant of the Lake." Glaaki is still in a lake, but has been transposed from the Severn Valley in England to Dunwich, Massachusetts. The Dunwich setting notwithstanding, there are no explicit allusions to the events of Lovecraft's "Dunwich Horror," even when the investigators visit Professor Armitage at the Miskatonic University Library in Arkham.

The story uses many conventions of the murder mystery genre in addition to its horror elements, and these are fairly effective at moving the plot along. The disappearance of a movie actress and the murder of her replacement are--at first--the central subjects of investigation. What might have been a tame denouement in the final chapter pivots the focus back from mystery to horror.
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This is a contemporary urban fantasy. There is a sentient 'alternate Swansea', co-existing with the present-day one but stuck in a 1940s timewarp. It is possible for some people to travel between the two Swanseas, and the alternate one has a small population of misfits. While in the alternate world, they do not need to eat or drink, fall ill, grow old, or die of natural causes.

The plot concerns a threat to the alternate Swansea by a being called the Ragchild. There are various plot show more threads, following characters in both Swanseas whose lives gradually converge as the final contest draws near.

For once, a short book which I finished in a couple of sessions. Not a book for children; it's quite brutal in places and the language is strong. The 'sense of strange' of the alternate Swansea was quite well done, and the main characters well drawn. I liked it because it was so different - as a result I suspect it will stay in my mind for a long time, and I will keep it for a future re-read.
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Works
22
Also by
18
Members
82
Popularity
#220,760
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
2
ISBNs
11

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