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The Horror in the Museum & Other Stories
The Horror in the Museum & Other Stories | H. P. Lovecraft
8 posts | 5 read | 2 to read
With an Introduction by M.J. Elliott. My eyes, perversely shaken open, gazed for an instant upon a sight which no human creature could even imagine without panic, fear and physical exhaustion A wax museum in London boasts a new exhibit, which no man has seen and remained sane A businessman is trapped in a train carriage with a madman who claims to have created a new and efficient method of capital punishment A doctor plans a horrible revenge, using as his murder weapon an insect believed capable of consuming the human soul Within these pages, some of H P Lovecraft's more obscure works of horror and science fiction can be found, including several fantastic tales from his celebrated Cthulhu Mythos. No true Lovecraft aficionado dare be without this volume.
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Bookwomble
The Horror in the Museum, and Other Tales | Howard Phillips Lovecraft
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"It is only within the last few years that most people have stopped thinking of the West as a new land."

- The Mound, by Zealia Bishop and H. P. Lovecraft

#FirstLineFridays @ShyBookOwl

Bookwomble This 70-page novella was published in 1940 as by Zealia Bishop, whose actual contribution was the following synopsis, "There is an Indian mound near here, which is haunted by a headless ghost. Sometimes it is a woman," which she hired Lovecraft to write up into a full story. It's feeling like he incorporated those elements pretty early in the tale, then followed his own tentacle. Pretty good so far ? 2y
Ruthiella “His own tentacle” 😂😂😂 2y
The_Book_Ninja When I started reading this it was giving me “Bone Tomahawk” vibes. A wild film which is well worth a watch 2y
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Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja I've not seen that film, but will catch it if it ever appears on any of the media I've access to 😊 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble I know you‘re not a fan of Amazon but if you have access to Prime… https://watch.amazon.co.uk/detail?gti=amzn1.dv.gti.26ac378d-e9e9-595e-2aec-18ede... (edited) 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja I have some access to Prime, but don't like the idea of paying extra to watch a film that will eventually be broadcast free. I am old and tight 👴🏻💸😂 2y
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review
The_Book_Ninja
The Horror in the Museum, and Other Tales | Howard Phillips Lovecraft
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Pickpick

“The Horror in the Museum” & the “The Mound” fit into the Cthulhu Mythos & bookend a collection of terror tales. I enjoyed these less than the last HPL collection that I read as I think I prefer his “cosmic” horror. However, the tales are “revisions” of stories from HP‘s “clients” (early fan fiction?) The best, “Winged Death”:stunningly racist yet intriguing detective/Cthulhu mash-up. I‘d read a Sherlock Holmes meets Cthulhu if such a genre exists

Bookwomble Ask and ye shall receive! 🔎🐙 (edited) 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble My good man. You are, indeed, the sardine‘s whiskers! 🎻🐙 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja I've got this Baker Street one on my enormous TBR pile, if you fancy reading it at some indeterminate time in the future. 2y
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The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble Great! Can read it soon if you want…just bought a copy. Pulled out the skinniest Holmes (Sign of Four…but you knew that😂) Will read that to set the scene until Shadows arrives😉👍🏼 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Ok, I'll zip through Museum and we can start on Baker Street together. One of my favourite Holmes quotes is from "The Sussex Vampire" when Holmes is dismissing the supernatural as an element in the mystery: "No ghosts need apply." I'll be disappointed if none of these stories makes some reference to that! ?? 2y
The_Book_Ninja Don‘t zip on my account, Wombie…I‘m a slow reader so I‘m sure I‘ll be a few days at 221b. 💉 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble Shadows Over Baker Street arrived today but I have to send it back because pages were falling out. I‘ve ordered a replacement🙄 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Ugh! Hate when that happens 😠 I see you're getting your Lovecraftian fix from other quarters, though 😊 2y
The_Book_Ninja Quick reads while I wait for the postman😉 2y
22 likes9 comments
review
Bookwomble
The Horror in the Museum, and Other Tales | Howard Phillips Lovecraft
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Pickpick

The second story, “The Crawling Chaos“, was wholly written by HPL, but credited with a co-writer whose dream inspired the images of the tale. HPL explicitly credits Thomas de Quincy as another source for his opium-fuelled fever dream, and it harks back, too, to HPL's fascination with Lord Dunsany's dreamy fantasies, as filtered through the imagination of Edgar Allan Poe - phew! Despite all of that going on, it's decidedly HPL.
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Bookwomble There is no plot or narrative, this is all about atmosphere, which is fearful and apocalyptic. The Crawling Chaos is an epithet given to one of HPL's elder gods, Nyarlathotep, and although it doesn't make an appearance on the page, its world-ending ambition does, and if this is somebody's dream then I'd imagine they were going through a period of intense existential crisis. I really liked this one 🖤
@The_Book_Ninja @bthegood
(edited) 2y
31 likes1 comment
review
Bookwomble
The Horror in the Museum, and Other Tales | Howard Phillips Lovecraft
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Pickpick

This is a book of "revisions" by HPL of stories written or outlined by others. The title story is by Hazel Heald.
It's hardly a spoiler to say that you should decline the invitation to stay overnight in the wax museum of horrors, and that if you do accept then don't be surprised if you become an exhibit! How that happens is creepyly interesting as this has enough elements of the masters' influence to set it in his universe, ⬇️

Bookwomble ... though it's really not high enough on the "ineffable adjective" count to pull it much higher than mid-rank. Still, 3.5 squamously tendrilated ⭐
@The_Book_Ninja @bthegood I thought I'd post something, given we've all read at least this one ?
2y
The_Book_Ninja Has all the right elements that makes it fit into what I already know about the Cthulhu cannon. The cover is just too good and seems to be a spot-on interpretation of Rhan-Tegoth, the cosmic “It” of this title story. Nice to see the mythos break out of Providence and reach smoggy old, cobblestoned London. I did a Google of Hazel Heald, seems Lovecraft boasted that the story was pretty much his own. Makes sense after reading it 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Yes, I thought Fowkes cover was an excellent depiction. The street in the story is a real one, in the area described, but I couldn't find any trace of a wax museum there. Obviously a cover-up by cultists! 2y
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bthegood @Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja I think the story was well told (tight might be the right word?) - but as I stated before I was expecting something more or maybe I have read/seen so many stories that are a spin off of this theme it seemed predictable - I am listening to At The Mountains of Madness and really enjoying it. (edited) 2y
Bookwomble @bthegood Ah, I'm glad you're enjoying AtMoM 😁 HPL refers several times to the landscape looking like paintings by Nicholas Roerich and, if you've not already done so, I'd recommend doing an internet search for his stuff - it's amazing, and he sounds like he was an interesting character. 2y
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blurb
Bookwomble
The Horror in the Museum, and Other Tales | Howard Phillips Lovecraft
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@The_Book_Ninja @bthegood #LitsyLovecraftLoveIn
Well, you've got to have a tag! I'm not sure this is the one, but... 😁
I've taken the plunge and ordered the Panther edition as I have others in that series. I do have the title story in another book, so I'm getting started on that and look forward to sharing thoughts and impressions with you both 😊

Bookwomble @bthegood @The_Book_Ninja I've looked up the waxwork subjects in Rogers' Museum I wasn't aware of & now know something of the French serial killer, Landru (also the name of a mad computer in Star Trek TOS), the murder of David Rizzio, but nothing about Madame Demers, other than that she was a Canadian murdered by her husband Napoleon. Quite an eclectic presentation. Also, a nice mention of Lovecraft's artist/author friend, Clark Ashton Smith. 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble @bthegood Well I warned you I‘m a slow reader. I started and I‘m a few pages in. The introduction confirms what you told me, old Lovecraft was rewriting stories by other authors. I‘m not far in enough to tell if the difference between these and his solo work is profound, plus reading a few Cthulhu stories doesn‘t make me an expert. But I do dig this shared cosmic/eldritch universe 2y
bthegood @The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble I just started reading last night - since this is the first of Lovecraft for me I have nothing to compare it to - finished introductions and a few pages into the story - 2y
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Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja @bthegood I'm just a few pages in, too, for to nodding off while reading 😴😄 So we're on roughly the same page. I'll refrain from further comments until we're all finished so as not to spoiler anything. 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble @bthegood See you on the other side🐙 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja @bthegood I'm on the other side 👻 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble this is what I was scared of. I‘m too slow🐌 2y
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja Hey, no pressure. We're on a loose timetable 😊 I'm awaiting delivery on the actual book collection, so I'm on pause with the anthology until that arrives. Please read at a pace that feels comfortable for you 😌 2y
The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble thank you my good Womble🙌🏼 2y
bthegood @The_Book_Ninja @Bookwomble I'll cross over tomorrow 👍 2y
Bookwomble @bthegood Iä, Iä, ftaghn! 2y
33 likes13 comments
review
canoflightbulbs
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Pickpick

A collection of some of Lovecraft‘s collaborations and less popular stories, including a non-mythos sci-fi story about crystal hunters on Venus. It was good to re-read these.

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