Cult of the Dead and Other Weird and Lovecraftian Tales
Cover artwork by Robert H. Knox.
This book will be released for NecronomiCon 2015, where Lois H. Gresh will be a Special Guest of Honor!
Lois H. Gresh is a renowned and bestselling author of weird fiction, science fiction, and many works of nonfiction in these fields. This volume, her first short story collection in four years, collects many of her tales that ingeniously and imaginatively adapt themes and motifs from the work of H. P. Lovecraft. Gresh shares with Lovecraft a thorough grounding in the sciences of physics, biology, and chemistry, and adds an exhaustive knowledge of computer science along with a prose style of exquisite fluency and suppleness in the crafting of tales that meld terror with pathos.
Some tales take us to the remote corners of the world, such as the Peru of “Cult of the Dead” or the Antarctica of “Devil’s Bathtub.” Like Lovecraft, Gresh fuses weirdness and science fiction in such tales as “Mandelbrot Mindrot” and “Willie the Protector.” Lovecraft’s “The Shadow over Innsmouth” has been a particularly fruitful source of inspiration for Gresh, as such tales as “Dreams of Death” and “Necrotic Cove” attest. In all, this collection proclaims Lois H. Gresh as one of the towering figures in contemporary weird fiction.
“Gresh’s elegant and mellifluous prose, the imaginative power of her weird conceptions, and her skill in leading the reader step by step to a terrifying dénouement make every one of her tales a well-crafted jewel of weird fiction. And that is the greatest bond she shares with H. P. Lovecraft.” — From S. T. Joshi’s Foreword
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Lois H. Gresh
Lois H. Gresh is author of 15 pop science/culture books and 4 science fiction novels from John Wiley & Sons, Random House, and St. Martin's Press. Gresh has also written dozens of short stories, and her work spans genres such as mysteries, thriller, suspense, dark fantasy, horror, and science fiction. She is probably best known for her early weird science fiction stories, which blend computer technology with biology, botany, and post-cyberpunk. She was a staff book reviewer for Science Fiction Weekly from November 2004 through December 2008.

