Dagon and Other Macabre Tales
Selected by August Derleth. Edited by S. T. Joshi. Introduction by T. E. D. Klein
Here at last is the definitive Lovecraft – the third in a three-volume set of the collected macabre fiction that embodies the author's own final thoughts and stylistic preferences. Based upon S. T. Joshi's extensive and painstaking collation of extant manuscript materials, this new Lovecraft edition from Arkham House is the only completely authoritative text and supersedes all previous editions.
All the remaining fiction by H.P. Lovecraft is collected in this final volume, which includes every type of imaginative story in which the author excelled – Dunsanian fantasies, Gothic horror, and tales of the Cthulhu Mythos. Though secondary to the remarkable fiction preserved in The Dunwich Horror and At the Mountains of Madness, these early works constitute absorbing testimony to Lovecraft's creative development. Completing this volume is the only critical recension of "Supernatural Horror in Literature," the single most significant essay on the horror genre.
In the whole range of fantastic literature, Lovecraft created a new form that is neither pure fancy nor pure science fiction. He combined a factual and accurate scientific knowledge with its extension to the absolute limit in supernatural bizarrerie. His work defies classification, for it is as much myth as reality – both lore and legend at their haunting, haunted best, and at the same time science at its most provocative. His tales have been termed the finest weird fantasy ever written, and yet also the most superbly literate science fiction. Lovecraft's work has achieved an honored eminence among the great visionary fiction of the ages precisely because, while betraying no trace of the commonplace, his stories are based convincingly in the world of everyday reality, yet lure the mind into the farthest reaches of the imagination, the star-flung spaces of the universe, the cosmic realm of a master mythmaker.
Contents:
- A Note on the Texts, by S. T. Joshi
- A Dreamer's Tales, by T. E. D. Klein
- The Tomb
- Dagon
- Polaris
- Beyond the Wall of Sleep
- The White Ship
- The Doom That Came to Sarnath
- The Tree
- The Cats of Ulthar
- The Temple
- Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family
- Celephaïs
- From Beyond
- The Nameless City
- The Quest of Iranon
- The Moon-Bog
- The Other Gods
- Herbert West – Reanimator
- Hypnos
- The Hound
- The Lurking Fear
- The Unnamable
- The Festival
- Under the Pyramids
- The Horror at Red Hook
- He
- The Strange High House in the Mist
- The Evil Clergyman
- In the Walls of Eryx
- The Beast in the Cave
- The Alchemist
- The Transition of Juan Romero
- The Street
- Poetry and the Gods
- Azathoth
- The Descendant
- The Book
- Supernatural Horror in Literature
- Index to Supernatural Horror in Literature
- Chronology of the Fiction of H. P. Lovecraft
H. P. Lovecraft
Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890–1937) is a well known American horror, fantasy and science fiction author. He is especially known for creating the Cthulhu Mythos.
H. P. Lovecraft's readership was limited during his life, but his reputation has grown over the decades and he's regarded as one of the greatest and most influential horror writers of the 20th century. Lovecraft's short stories have inspired many authors, artists and directors.