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About the Author

Works by Glynn Owen Barrass

World War Cthulhu: A Collection of Lovecraftian War Stories (2014) — Editor; Contributor — 73 copies, 4 reviews
Doors to Darkness (2016) — Author — 67 copies
In the Court of the Yellow King (2014) 44 copies, 2 reviews
Steampunk Cthulhu: Mythos Terror in the Age of Steam (Chaosium Fiction #6054) (2014) — Editor; Contributor — 27 copies, 2 reviews
Eldritch Chrome: Unquiet Tales of a Mythos-Haunted Future (Chaosium Fiction) (2013) — Editor; Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
Anno Klarkash-Ton (2017) 9 copies
Through a Mythos Darkly (2017) 6 copies
The King of Deadtown (2008) 3 copies

Associated Works

Return of the Old Ones: Apocalyptic Lovecraftian Horror (2016) — Contributor — 38 copies
Bound for Evil: Curious Tales of Books Gone Bad (2008) — Contributor — 24 copies
D.O.A.: Extreme Horror Anthology (2011) — Contributor — 24 copies
The Dark Rites of Cthulhu (2014) — Contributor — 20 copies, 2 reviews
Beyond the Mountains of Madness (2013) — Contributor — 19 copies
Weirdbook Annual #2: The Third Cthulhu Mythos MEGAPACK (2019) — Contributor — 15 copies
Urban Cthulhu: Nightmare Cities (2012) — Contributor — 14 copies, 1 review
Kizuna: Fiction for Japan (a charity anthology) (2011) — Contributor — 9 copies
Heroes of Red Hook (2016) — Contributor — 7 copies, 1 review
Space Horrors (2010) — Contributor — 6 copies
Clerics, Charlatans, and Cultists (2013) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Birthplace
Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England
Associated Place (for map)
North Yorkshire, England

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
A decent collection of Cthulhu mythos stories taking place within some war-related context. Although the title might suggest the stories take place during World War I or World War II (or both), that’s not the case for most of them. Instead, we get a variety of times and places, including two set in the American Revolution, two in the Trojan War (one on each side), a Vietnam War story, a Cold War story or two, at least one set in a distant future war, and, I’m sure, several others I’m show more forgetting.

Having absorbed the Delta Green universe’s take in the mythos, many of these stories feel like they could take place in that world, or even be Delta Green ops themselves.

Unlike the DG universe, many of these stories end… well—at least for the immediate future if not for the main characters themselves. Generally, the mythos threats are being called up by the baddies, and we’re not especially sympathetic when things go wrong for them, but in some stories, mistakes are made, all sides suffer, and in some of the stories, some of the characters are, themselves, mythos creatures.
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Title: In the Court of the Yellow King
Series: The King in Yellow Anthology #2
Editor: Glynn Barrass
Rating: 4.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Cosmic Horror
Pages: 289
Words: 99.5K

Synopsis:

Table of Contents

These Harpies show more of Carcosa — W. H. Pugmire

The Viking in Yellow — Christine Morgan

Who Killed the King of Rock and Roll? — Edward Morris

Masque of the Queen — Stephen Mark Rainey

Grand Theft Hovercar — Jeffrey Thomas

The Girl with the Star-Stained Soul — Lucy A. Snyder

The Penumbra of Exquisite Foulness — Tim Curran

Yield — C. J. Henderson

Homeopathy — Greg Stolze

Bedlam in Yellow — William Meikle

A Jaundiced Light at the End — Brian M. Sammons

The Yellow Film — Gary McMahon

Lights Fade — Laurel Halbany

Future Imperfect — Glynn Owen Barrass

The Mask of the Yellow Death — Robert M. Price

The Sepia Prints — Pete Rawlik

Nigredo — Cody Goodfellow

MonoChrome — T. E. Grau

My Thoughts:

In the fantasy Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan, there is a power called Saidin and Saidir. One half can be used by males and the other half by females. The male half, Saidin, was tainted by the Dark One thousands of years before the series starts. The main character, Rand, can use Saidin but is affected by the taint. He describes the experience as wrestling with fire and ice that is covered with a putrid oil. He never feels more alive than when using Saidin but the taint makes him sick and drives him insane.

That is how these two Cosmic Horror Series (Cthulhu & King in Yellow) seem to be affecting me.

I couldn't stop reading this. The stories dragged along relentlessly. I felt like I had jumped into a river and that it turned out to be way more powerful than anticipated. There were times I was in the center, speeding along, but then there were times when the stories pushed me into the banks or slammed me into hidden rocks beneath the surface. By the end of this I felt battered, emotionally and spiritually. Yet I had never felt so alive either.

It was an extremely disturbing dichotomic feeling. I had to stop and really ask myself if I was capable of reading more of this stuff. While I acknowledge that I have changed over the years, is the change engendered by reading stories like these the kind I want to voluntarily submit to? Whether I like to admit it or not, what we put into our minds does affect us.

Thankfully I don't have to make that decision right away. I've got another month before I cycle back to this cosmic horror duology.

★★★★✬
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½
It is rare that collections are not a mix of quality, all but the very best having a few misfires. This is quite the opposite, a generally low standard of fiction with a couple of stand-out good stories, no great ones, and a few that are quite painfully bad. Often, the stories were just not very interesting, and reading to the end of even these short works often a slog. It must be said, I got the distinct impression that part of the issue was in the editing; several of the stories seemed to show more contain clumsy sentences or word usage of the sort that I'd have though an editor - or even a proofreader - would have picked up on.


Cthulhu Mythos stories are quite difficult to do well, having to get the right balance of weirdness and cosmic terror and hopeless dread, and the proliferation of Lovecraftian works due to ever increasingly popularity over the last few years suggests an even greater preponderance of tripe than the general run of fiction. Sadly, this volume does nothing to dispel that. One of the pleasures of a short fiction collection is finding authors to seek out in the future, but there are only a couple from this who I would even consider seeking out, and some that would actively put me off should I see them included in an anthology.
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A very good collection of stories about and around the great old one, Glaaki. This involves, cults, rituals, and the distortion of time and space. This is an interesting collection about what is a minor old one, even in the Camp ell mythos. For me, this was like gold dust. Recommended.

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Associated Authors

Brian M. Sammons Editor, Contributor
Tom Lynch Contributor, Author
Kevin Ross Author
William Meikle Contributor
Josh Reynolds Contributor
Lee Clark Zumpe Contributor
Peter Rawlik Contributor
Tim Curran Contributor
Jeffrey Thomas Contributor
David Conyers Contributor
Edward R. Morris Contributor
W. H. Pugmire Contributor
Robert M. Price Contributor
Thana Niveau Contributor
Christine Morgan Contributor
Edward M. Erdelac Contributor
C. J. Henderson Contributor
John Goodrich Contributor
D. L. Snell Contributor
Carrie Cuinn Contributor
Tim Waggoner Contributor
Nick Mamatas Contributor
John Langan Contributor
Orrin Grey Contributor
T. E. Grau Contributor
Neil Baker Contributor
Darrell Schweitzer Contributor
David Kernot Contributor
Cody Goodfellow Contributor
John Shirley Contributor
Charles Christian Contributor
Peter Rawlik Contributor
Ramsey Campbell Contributor
Scott R Jones Contributor
D. J. Tyrer Contributor
Adam Bolivar Contributor
Leigh Kimmel Contributor
Robert Neilson Contributor
Sam Stone Contributor
Terrie Leigh Relf Contributor
Nickolas Cook Contributor
Michael Tice Contributor
David Dunwoody Contributor
Ran Cartwright Contributor
Lois Gresh Contributor
Tomislav Tikulin Illustrator
Lucy A. Snyder Contributor
John Linwood Grant Contributor
Don Webb Contributor
Sal Ciano Contributor
Daniele Serra Cover artist
Vincent Chong Cover artist
M. Wayne Miller Illustrator

Statistics

Works
35
Also by
13
Members
338
Popularity
#70,453
Rating
3.8
Reviews
11
ISBNs
18
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs