Cthulhu : the mythos and kindred horrors

by Robert E. Howard

On This Page

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

4 reviews
Short stories with a horror element. I'm not a huge Conan fan, and Howard sometimes veers into the melodramatic, but I enjoyed all these stories. It was nice to see Howard's work outside of Conan (although there is a Conan story here). I wish I'd been alive during the era of the pulps. So much imagination .
½
I've been a fan of Robert E. Howard ever since reading his Conan stories when I was a teenager.

This is a collection of some of his horror/weird fiction (this being R.E.H., several of the stories still had a strong adventure element, particularly The Fire of Asshurbanipal). It was nice to see Howard writing (and writing well) outside of the usual sword and sorcery he's most famous for.

These stories aren't everyone's cuppa, but I liked most of them. In a couple of stories (though not all of them as the book seems to imply) Howard played in Lovecraft's Cthulhu sandbox. While his tone was very different (his characters tended to have a little more fortitude than an average H.P. protagonist), his writing was much stronger. And the unlikely show more named Pigeons From Hell is a minor horror classic (and a lyric in a Pretenders song!). show less

5.0 out of 5 stars Tales of Horror & Suspense by the Master Writer, December 4, 2009

I will on occasion pick up an old sci-fi or horror anthology and stuff it in my pocket for safekeeping. Such a book is "The Mythos and Kindred Horrors", a collection of stories originally appearing in Weird Tales back in 1930s America, when pulp was king and Robert E. Howard was tops.

Howard, author and creator of the Conan series, also delved into Lovecraft territory. Lovecraft was a contemporary of Howard and they would often correspond. Unfortunately Howard committed suicide at a young age, so we will be forever rereading his wonderful horror stories.

Here's the contents!

Contents
* Introduction by David Drake
* Arkham (poem)
* The Black Stone
* The Fire of show more Asshurbanipal
* The Thing on the Roof
* Dig Me No Grave
* Silence Falls on Mecca's Walls (poem)
* The Valley of the Worm
* The Shadow of the Beast
* Old Garfield's Heart
* People of the Dark
* Worms of the Earth
* Pigeons From Hell
* An Open Window (poem)

The Old Ones and ancient Gods, such as Cthulhu and others will seem familiar to Lovecraft fans. The stories were pretty scary in their time and still grab you by the heart and freeze it! What lurks in the abandoned mansion in "The Shadow of the Beast?" Why does Old Jim still live and looks like he hasn't aged a day in the last 100 years in the horror western, "Old Garfield's Heart"?

The "Pigeons from Hell" is not a tale of white-spotted bronze statues!

The "Black Stone" harkens to the horrors of ancient gods and the spirits that still worship them and still appear on Midsummer's Night during the full moon. The "Necromicon" appears throughout several of the tales, a book that just by reading it you go screaming insane!

Recommended!
show less

5.0 out of 5 stars Tales of Horror & Suspense by the Master Writer, December 4, 2009

I will on occasion pick up an old sci-fi or horror anthology and stuff it in my pocket for safekeeping. Such a book is "The Mythos and Kindred Horrors", a collection of stories originally appearing in Weird Tales back in 1930s America, when pulp was king and Robert E. Howard was tops.

Howard, author and creator of the Conan series, also delved into Lovecraft territory. Lovecraft was a contemporary of Howard and they would often correspond. Unfortunately Howard committed suicide at a young age, so we will be forever rereading his wonderful horror stories.

Here's the contents!

Contents
* Introduction by David Drake
* Arkham (poem)
* The Black Stone
* The Fire of show more Asshurbanipal
* The Thing on the Roof
* Dig Me No Grave
* Silence Falls on Mecca's Walls (poem)
* The Valley of the Worm
* The Shadow of the Beast
* Old Garfield's Heart
* People of the Dark
* Worms of the Earth
* Pigeons From Hell
* An Open Window (poem)

The Old Ones and ancient Gods, such as Cthulhu and others will seem familiar to Lovecraft fans. The stories were pretty scary in their time and still grab you by the heart and freeze it! What lurks in the abandoned mansion in "The Shadow of the Beast?" Why does Old Jim still live and looks like he hasn't aged a day in the last 100 years in the horror western, "Old Garfield's Heart"?

The "Pigeons from Hell" is not a tale of white-spotted bronze statues!

The "Black Stone" harkens to the horrors of ancient gods and the spirits that still worship them and still appear on Midsummer's Night during the full moon. The "Necromicon" appears throughout several of the tales, a book that just by reading it you go screaming insane!

Recommended!
show less

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Weird and Weirder Fiction
270 works; 35 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
1,894+ Works 32,188 Members
Robert E. Howard was born in Peaster, Texas on January 22, 1906. At the beginning of his writing career, he primarily wrote pulp fiction and had numerous stories published in the pulp magazine Weird Tales including Spear and Fang, The Hyena, Wolfshead, Red Shadows, and The Shadow Kingdom. He created the character of Conan the Barbarian in the show more pages of Weird Tales. By 1936, almost all of his fiction writing was in the western genre and his first novel, A Gent from Bear Creek, was about to be published. He committed suicide on June 11, 1936 at the age of 30. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Robert E. Howard has a Legacy Library. Legacy libraries are the personal libraries of famous readers, entered by LibraryThing members from the Legacy Libraries group.

Some Editions

Drake, David (Editor)

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Cthulhu : the mythos and kindred horrors
Original publication date
1987
People/Characters
James Allison; Niord Worm's-bane

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.52Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991900-1945
LCC
PS3515 .O842 .C84Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
BISAC

Statistics

Members
366
Popularity
86,067
Reviews
4
Rating
(3.85)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1
ASINs
3