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Lovecraft achieves classic status at last August 13, 2000 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
This volume, in its own small, quiet way, is a momentous book. Momentous not for being necessarily the best collection of Lovecraft's stories (there are plenty of others to choose from) but because it marks the passage of Lovecraft's reputation from the genre ghetto to the broader realms of literature.Consider this: Lovecraft's career ran parallel with that of Jon Dos Passos (Lovecraft was six years older). Dos Passos' first novel, 'Manhattan Transfer' was published in 1926, the same year as 'The Call of Cthulhu' made its debut appearance in the pulp magazine 'Weird Tales'. Yet while Dos Passos went on to achieve great acclaim for his subsequent novels, Lovecraft's writing remained ignored during his life outside a small group of enthusiastic magazine writers and readers. 'Cthulhu' when first published didn't even rate cover status in the magazine, that honour being granted to Elliot O'Donnell and some ridiculous piece of his called 'The Ghost Table'. At Lovecraft's early death in 1937 he was recognised as a modern master of the horror story by his friends but to the world outside he was invisible; no collections of his stories had been published, his work languished in the crumbling pages of the pulps. Sixty years on, after the heroic efforts of August Derleth at Arkham House, who put his own money into publishing the first Lovecraft collections, Howard Phillips Lovecraft finally has his place in the sun (probably an inapt metaphor, he used to spend all day with the curtains drawn). The stories are in print all over the world, there's a growing body of critical writing about his work and spin-off items in the form of comics, games, films, music, etc. show how far his reputation has travelled. It's a simple fact that powerful work in any medium cannot be kept down, however humble its origins; the 'Chants de Maldoror' of Isidore Ducasse (Lautreamont) followed a similar path from obscurity to cult renown (among the Surrealists) to world fame. Lovecraft's champions along the way have included some real heavyweights such as Jorge Luis Borges (who dedicated a story, 'There are More Things', to him) and William Burroughs ('Cities of the Red Night' contains references to "Kutulu, the Sleeping Serpent"). So here he is finally, a classic of the Twentieth Century, complete with the usual well-chosen Penguin cover art; for this edition it's a painting by the apocalyptic Romantic John 'Mad' Martin. The book has an excellent introduction by the world's leading Lovecraft scholar S. T. Joshi who also provides sixty pages of notes for references in the stories. The texts are taken from the definitive versions compiled by Joshi for the editions Arkham House put out ten years ago, correcting many accumulated typos that had dogged the works since original publication. The story selection tries to cover the whole of Lovecraft's career and includes some of his weaker, more fantastical material. I personally would have preferred a different selection ('Herbert West - Reanimator' is not one of his best stories) but then every fan would probably have a different choice of their own. For a curious reader this is a great place to start and its status in the Penguin canon may serve to draw some to Lovecraft who would have shunned the garish packaging of a horror paperback. Some of us have known for years this stuff was the business, it's satisfying to have these feelings reinforced. Well done Howard.
Excellent collection assembled by ST Joshi April 29, 2005 J. A. Stewart 36 out of 37 found this review helpful
This volume contains the stories: Dagon, Randolph Carter, Arthur Jermyn, Celephais, Nyarlathotep, Picture in the House, Outsider, Herbert West, Hound, Rats in the Walls, Festival, He, Cool Air, Call of Cthulhu, Colour out of Space, Whisperer in Darkness, Shadow Over Innsmouth, Haunter of the Dark, as well as a fourteen page Introduction by Joshi (the foremost scholar on Lovecraft), a suggestion for further reading, a note on the text, and an extra sixty pages of explanatory notes.This is an excellent collection of Lovecraft stories with a lot of interesting notation and material on his background, his childhood, his inspirations for each story, and various other pieces of fascinating information. It is also, in my opinion, the strongest of the three current Penguin collections of his work, containing as it does the superb Colour out of Space, Shadow over Innsmouth, and Call of Cthulhu (my favourite). Each story is annotated with numbered reference points which can be a bit distracting at first but doesn't really get in the way of your enjoyment of the stories, and provides fascinating insight into the use of certain words, the origins of characters' names, towns and events that influenced the plot, etc. In addition, each of these stories are the definitive editions compiled by Joshi himself, making this currently one of the best Lovecraft collections in the UK. Highly recommended.
If you haven't read any Lovecraft yet, you should start here April 30, 2002 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I actually read a shorter book first - The Case Of Charles Dexter Ward, but i would say this book is betetr as a first read, 'cos you get a wide selection of the stories Lovecraft wrote, all with xtensive and interesting notes about them in an appendix, written by the Lovecraft sholar S T Joshi. Within most of these stories you'll find rich detail in the descriptions, and some of them are truly good horror (why haven't more of Lovecraft's stories been made into films? these days it would be possible to do them justice) Anyway on the downside i want to build up a collection of Lovecraft stories but this means most of those included here will be repeated in another book...
Wonderful set of bizarre, intriguing & scary short stories December 30, 2001 A. B. Barak (Oxfordshire, England) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This was the first Lovecraft book I read and I really enjoyed it. There are 18 stories here which cover mysteries the unsuspecting come across which could be explained by sea monsters, aliens, elementals, ghosts, you get the picture! Some of the stories seem a bit formulaic and there is a little repatition of themes, but this shouldn't distract - there are plenty of very original ideas here and also a useful commentary of notes by Joshi which explain some of the references and sources of the works and the relationships between the stories. One of the stories, The Colour Out of Space, is particularly chilling.
everlasting excellence April 14, 2003 David (United Kingdom) 15 out of 21 found this review helpful
Lovecraft is The author in my opinion, with a great big gothic capital 'T'. I go back time and again to his work and I never travel anywhere without it. It is fantastic for all ages but the older I grow the more excited I feel about re-reading one of his books. His secret lay in his slow but thourough pace. His attention for detail is extraordinary and the reader will never, never be asking those frequent questions such as: "but he forgot about such and such, or, how could that happen without this happening first, or, I wonder what happened to so and so". Every angle is explored in his high gothic style of writing. His imagination is a place where I could easily holiday. It is without limitation and he is one of the rare writers who gives this boundless fiction of his mind to his writing. Buy everything this man has written...I only wish he was still alive to write more.....
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