The Devourer Below: An Arkham Horror Anthology
by Charlotte Llewelyn-Wells (Editor)
Arkham Horror novels
On This Page
Description
The city of Arkham falls prey to ghoulish dread in this chilling anthology of action-packed adventure, from the bestselling world of Arkham Horror Something monstrous has come to Arkham, Massachusetts. There have always been shadows here, but now a new hunger has risen from the depths and threatens those who dwell here. But there are heroes too-people who stand up and fight to stem the tide, even when it costs them everything. Explore eight shocking new tales of occult horror, captivating show more mystery, and existential fear-from a zealous new heroine to conniving cultists, bootleg whiskey to night terrors, and fiends that crawl from open graves. A nightmare has fallen across Arkham, and it will devour all. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
The Devourer Below is the fifth volume of Arkham Horror fiction to be issued under the Aconyte imprint. While the previous four have been novels, this one is a collection of short stories by various authors. I was thus expecting a wide assortment of tales, joined only by their early 20th-century Arkham, Massachusetts setting and the involvement of assorted investigator characters from the Fantasy Flight Arkham Files games. I was in fact pleasantly surprised to find that these stories are far more interrelated than that.
Players of Arkham Horror: The Card Game may recognize "The Devourer Below" as the title of the third and final scenario of "The Night of the Zealot," the campaign included with that game's core set. All of the stories in show more this book relate to that starter campaign, featuring the servitors of the Great Old One UmĂ´rdhoth. (UmĂ´rdhoth is based on Mordiggian, from Clark Ashton Smith's story "The Charnel God.") Such servitors are largely a mix of ghouls and human cultists.
Specific enemy characters from the card game campaign figure in the stories, as do the important investigator allies Leo De Luca and Lita Chantler. Investigator protagonists include Tony Morgan, Carolyn Fern, Joe Diamond, Daisy Walker, Agnes Baker, Wendy Adams, and Finn Edwards. On the whole, I found the enemy-focused stories more satisfying than the investigator-centric ones, but I liked both and appreciated the variety.
As a suite of connected tales of yog-sothothery, The Devourer Below is just fine. As a supplement to the Arkham Horror games, it is good. As an amplification of the core set adventure cycle in Arkham Horror: The Card Game, it is very good.
This book appends a "tease" reprint of the opening chapter of Ari Marmell's Arkham Horror novel Litany of Dreams, oddly included in the table of contents as if it were one of the stories written for this volume. It also sports the third Arkham Horror fiction cover art by John Coulthart. I like these highly detailed multi-panel covers a lot. show less
Players of Arkham Horror: The Card Game may recognize "The Devourer Below" as the title of the third and final scenario of "The Night of the Zealot," the campaign included with that game's core set. All of the stories in show more this book relate to that starter campaign, featuring the servitors of the Great Old One UmĂ´rdhoth. (UmĂ´rdhoth is based on Mordiggian, from Clark Ashton Smith's story "The Charnel God.") Such servitors are largely a mix of ghouls and human cultists.
Specific enemy characters from the card game campaign figure in the stories, as do the important investigator allies Leo De Luca and Lita Chantler. Investigator protagonists include Tony Morgan, Carolyn Fern, Joe Diamond, Daisy Walker, Agnes Baker, Wendy Adams, and Finn Edwards. On the whole, I found the enemy-focused stories more satisfying than the investigator-centric ones, but I liked both and appreciated the variety.
As a suite of connected tales of yog-sothothery, The Devourer Below is just fine. As a supplement to the Arkham Horror games, it is good. As an amplification of the core set adventure cycle in Arkham Horror: The Card Game, it is very good.
This book appends a "tease" reprint of the opening chapter of Ari Marmell's Arkham Horror novel Litany of Dreams, oddly included in the table of contents as if it were one of the stories written for this volume. It also sports the third Arkham Horror fiction cover art by John Coulthart. I like these highly detailed multi-panel covers a lot. show less
An excellent anthology of Arkham horror stories. There are 8 stories and I enjoyed them all. Some I enjoyed more than others but no story was terrible or so-s0. That's quite an achievement because many anthologies I've read often have both good and bad stories. I listened to the audiobook version. Jennifer Jill Araya did a great job and I hope to get to chance to listen to more books narrated by her.
I recommend this book to everyone that loves reading Arkham horror stories. Or just paranormal horror stories.
I recommend this book to everyone that loves reading Arkham horror stories. Or just paranormal horror stories.
Some ups, few downs. Nice little collection of short stories.
Feb 14, 2022German
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Lovecraftian anthologies
137 works; 4 members
Author Information
All Editions
Some Editions
Series
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, Horror, Mystery, Fantasy
- DDC/MDS
- 808.83 — Literature & rhetoric Literature, rhetoric & criticism Rhetoric and collections of literary texts from more than two literatures Literature Collections Collections of fiction
- LCC
- PZ7 .L2313 .D486 — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 48
- Popularity
- 626,023
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.75)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 3
- ASINs
- 4




























































