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The Dunwich Horror and Others

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Contents:

ix · H.P. Lovecraft and His Work · August Derleth · in
10 · In the Vault · ss The Tryout Nov ’25; Weird Tales Apr ’32
19 · Pickman’s Model · ss Weird Tales Oct ’27
33 · The Rats in the Walls · ss Weird Tales Mar ’24
53 · The Outsider · ss Weird Tales Apr ’26
60 · The Colour Out of Space · nv Amazing Sep ’27
89 · The Music of Erich Zann · ss The National Amateur Mar ’22; Weird Tales Nov ’34
98 · The Haunter of the Dark · nv Weird Tales Dec ’36
121 · The Picture in the House · ss The National Amateur Jul ’19; Weird Tales Mar ’37
130 · The Call of Cthulhu [Inspector Legrasse] · nv Weird Tales Feb ’28
160 · The Dunwich Horror · nv Weird Tales Apr ’29
203 · Cool Air · ss Tales of Magic and Mystery Mar ’28; Weird Tales Jul ’27
212 · The Whisperer in Darkness · na Weird Tales Aug ’31
278 · The Terrible Old Man · vi The Tryout Jul ’20; Weird Tales Aug ’26
281 · The Thing on the Door-step · nv Weird Tales Jan ’37
308 · The Shadow Over Innsmouth · na Visionary Press: Everett, PA, 1936; Weird Tales Jan ’42
370 · The Shadow Out of Time · na Astounding Jun ’36

433 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 1929

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About the author

H.P. Lovecraft

4,568 books17.9k followers
Howard Phillips Lovecraft, of Providence, Rhode Island, was an American author of horror, fantasy and science fiction.

Lovecraft's major inspiration and invention was cosmic horror: life is incomprehensible to human minds and the universe is fundamentally alien. Those who genuinely reason, like his protagonists, gamble with sanity. Lovecraft has developed a cult following for his Cthulhu Mythos, a series of loosely interconnected fictions featuring a pantheon of human-nullifying entities, as well as the Necronomicon, a fictional grimoire of magical rites and forbidden lore. His works were deeply pessimistic and cynical, challenging the values of the Enlightenment, Romanticism and Christianity. Lovecraft's protagonists usually achieve the mirror-opposite of traditional gnosis and mysticism by momentarily glimpsing the horror of ultimate reality.

Although Lovecraft's readership was limited during his life, his reputation has grown over the decades. He is now commonly regarded as one of the most influential horror writers of the 20th Century, exerting widespread and indirect influence, and frequently compared to Edgar Allan Poe.
See also Howard Phillips Lovecraft.

Wikipedia

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 577 reviews
Profile Image for J.L.   Sutton.
666 reviews1,134 followers
October 4, 2018
HP Lovecraft’s tales are dominated by a mounting sense of dread; however, the amount of time he spends creating this atmosphere is often at odds with moving the narrative forward in an effective way. For me, that means I enjoy HP Lovecraft’s tales (and his mythos), but I haven’t always cared much for his writing. In Dunwich Horror, Lovecraft evokes a nameless, ancient terror without sacrificing the story. Once the Necronomicon is opened, our world becomes linked with the world of the Ancient Ones. Dunwich Horror is a satisfying and enjoyable read! This is not his most well- known work, but if you haven’t read any of Lovecraft’s stories before I would say this is a good place to start.
Profile Image for Jack Tripper.
462 reviews312 followers
April 18, 2018
(Full review 1/19/17)
description
1978 Jove mass-market with cover art from the always excellent Rowena Morrill.

This version of the book doesn't feature all the stories listed on this page (which is for the Arkham House editions). It includes: "In the Vault," Pickman's Model," "The Rats in the Walls," "The Music of Erich Zann," "The Haunter of the Dark," "The Dunwich Horror," and "The Thing on the Doorstep," most of which are top-tier Lovecraft, imo, ones I hadn't read in 20 years or so until now. It also features an informative intro from 1963 by Arkham House co-founder August Derleth (or "Der Leth" as he's mistakenly called on the cover).

I thought some of the tales would lose a little of that sense of awe (or "frisson," as weird fiction authority ST Joshi would say) I felt as a teen, but I was wrong. "Pickman's Model" was as effective (and horrifying) as ever, but "The Thing on the Doorstep," which closes the collection, especially creeped me out this time around, as it involves one of my biggest fears: the loss of one's own mind/loss of control. My appreciation for "Erich Zann" grew greatly as well, and is now one of my all-time favorite Lovecraft stories. It's not especially "scary," but it is straight-up weird -- very proto-Ligottian in a way, with its (now typical) strange, hidden "Ligotti-esque" town-- and is pretty much unlike anything else he's written, to my knowledge.

The only stories that didn't really hold up as well for me were "In the Vault" (short, decent-but-standard graveyard horror) and the title story, which seemed much too long, written in that dry, overly clinical style that ole' HP sometimes used, and which I really have to be in the right mood for. Still, this a must-own for collectors of vintage Lovecraft paperbacks, and even the two tales that didn't really float my boat as much aren't bad by any means.

4.5 Stars.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews11.9k followers
September 30, 2011
Wilbur Whateley is the offspring of an extreme interracial relationship. His mother is a FUGLY, deformed, inbred albino. She’s the more attractive set of chromosomes because "papa" is reeeeeeeeeeally FUBAR and quite a bit “elder.” This unnatural genetic bouillabaisse helps Wilbur sprout into an impressive 15 year old that stands over 8 feet tall, carries a full beard and has a face that can cure constipation.

Yes….Wilbur is awesome.

The Dunwich Horror is among my favorite Lovecraft stories and is a central component of the Cthulhu mythos. Now keep in mind that I have a serious smitten on for HPL and so my reviews of his stories are coming from the perspective of someone who joys at his trademark brand of atmospheric melodrama and over the top descriptions of “nameless horrors.” I like his vivid, archaic prose and love that he might describe a swamp not as “spooky looking” but rather some "eldritch conglomerate of unholy components whose fetid stench radiated evil and whose appearance cried of unspeakable dread."**

**Note: that this was my own attempt to emulate Lovecraft so don’t hold the above description against him.

PLOT SUMMARY:

The story is told as a historical recounting of the “Dunwich Horror” and takes place in a secluded Massachusetts town called...uh, Dunwich. The plot revolves around Wilbur’s unusual birth, his early development and indoctrination in the dark arts by his sorcerer grandpappy and his subsequent attempts to obtain an original Latin version of the dreaded Necronomicon. Wilbur needs the evil tome in order to perform a sinister ritual involving the “Old Ones” and the gatekeeper entity known as Yog-sothoth (pronounced just like it sounds but with a throat full of phlegm).
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HPL takes his time in this short novella and does a superb job of setting the mood with his description of Dunwich and the surrounding wilderness. The first few pages are evidence of the influence that Algernon Blackwood had on HPL’s writing as his depiction of the Dunwich valley as a malevolent, almost living presence, reads much like the beginning of Blackwood’s The Willows.
When a rise in the road brings the mountains in view above the deep woods, the feeling of strange uneasiness is increased. The summits are too rounded and symmetrical to give a sense of comfort and naturalness, and sometimes the sky silhouettes with especial clearness the queer circles of tall stone pillars with which most of them are crowned….When the road dips again there are stretches of marshland that one instinctively dislikes, and indeed fears at evening when unseen whippoorwills chatter and the fireflies come out in abnormal profusion to dance to the raucous, creepily insistent rhythms of stridently piping bull-frogs. As the hills draw nearer, one heeds their wooded sides more than their stone-crowned tops. Those sides loom up so darkly and precipitously that one wishes they would keep their distance, but there is no road by which to escape them.
It's descriptions like these, dripping with color commentary and emotional projection, that are helpful in separating the HPL lovers from those that find him full of ham, corn and cheese. I am certainly one of the former and get absolutely enrapt by his lush, vivid prose that just ooze atmosphere.

HPL raises the creep level considerably when he begins to describe the inhabitants of Dunwich. As Lovecraft explains,
…the natives are now repellently decadent, having gone far along the path of retrogression so common to many New England backwaters. They have come to form a race by themselves with well-defined mental and physical stigmata of degeneracy and inbreeding. The average of their intelligence is woefully low, whilst their annals reek of overt viciousness and of half-hidden murders, incests and deeds of almost unnameable violence and perversity.
All I could think of while reading that was the pig-loving mountain men from Deliverance and now I’m gonna have nightmares of Ned Beatty squealing like a pig out of his very perdy mouth. Thanks HPL.

This is classic Lovecraft and fans of his work should love this. If you've never read any of HPL’s work and are looking for a good place to start, you could do a lot worse than this story which provides some excellent background on the Cthulhu mythos and the “Old Ones.”

5.0 stars. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!
Profile Image for Lyn.
1,932 reviews17.1k followers
March 25, 2016
Jerry, George, Elaine and Cthulhu are sitting in Jerry’s New York apartment discussing H.P. Lovecraft’s 1928 novella The Dunwich Horror.

[Kramer bursts through the door] Kramer: Is Cthulhu still here, oh there you are. Wow, great honor your greatness.

Cthulhu: Kramer! Good to see you my friend, come on in, we’re just talking some Dunwich Horror.

Kramer: Yeah, I read it, and I’M LOVIN’ IT JERRY!

Jerry: One of H.P.’s best, no doubt.

George: What do you think of the Arkham references, Jerry?

Jerry: Well, it’s more Batman than Superman, but all good fun just the same.

Cthulhu: Lovecraft’s introduction of Wilbur Whateley into the mythos was a stroke of inspired horrific genius, providing a link from the mundane to the cryptic and profane. Something to inspire dreams and nightmares.

Jerry: I had a dream last night that a hamburger was eating me.

George : And another story that includes the Necronomicon, a fantastic and arcane tome of forbidden lore. Jerry, just remember, it's not a lie if you believe it.

Elaine: And his creepy family living back in the woods, interbreeding and carrying on, I mean – yuck! – And the old fiery rites and sacrificing bulls to Old Gods, for God knows how long. They were a very festive people.


Kramer: If you're not gonna be a part of a civil society, then just get in your car and drive on over to the East Side.

Jerry: Yeah, a little too much chlorine in that gene pool.

Cthulhu: Lovecraft further explores his thematic homage to pre-historic deity. But I gotta tell you, those were some good times. Good times.

Kramer: Here's to feeling good all the time.

Cthulhu: Thanks Kramer, and I can appreciate your enthusiasm, but it really transcended just having a good time. And H.P. picked up on this, it was also about soul scrubbing horrors of an unspeakable and sanity defying nature.

Elaine: Why does everything have to be so... horrific with you? 


Cthulhu: I'm an Old God.

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Profile Image for Jan-Maat.
1,608 reviews2,256 followers
Read
October 9, 2022
Long, long, long ago I was given a present of a large hardback volume of Edgar Allan Poe, the publisher had kindly printed an injunction on the back cover: not to be read after midnight! Naturally I waited until after midnight before starting to read only to be completely nonplussed. They were as advertised tales of mystery and imagination, but not for me at that time (after midnight) disturbing or unsettling, but then again I was then in the habit of watching the evening news on the TV.

I had a similar reaction reading these stories (The Dunwich Horror, The dreams in the White Hose, The lurking fear, the thing on the doorstep, Hypnos, The Outsider), they were weird - which I'll get to in a minute, but less than a hundred years after being written neither frightening nor horrific unless you have a particular fear of slimy things, or things with tentacles chewing peoples faces off because they are a bit hungry, but like I have said, I tend to follow the news.

The basic idea behind these stories is that just beyond or perception there are other realms of being, where odd looking things dwell, and can in certain circumstances pop into our perceptual universe either to, as already mentioned, snack on available humans, occasionally impregnate them, and as a bonus terrify people up to and beyond the edge of madness.

Some people are keen to interact with these beings, it is a bit unclear what is potentially in it for them, but there seem to be some opportunities to develop occult or supernatural powers, other people are horrified by these beings but - and these tend to be the narrators of these stories - they are keen to track them down and forcibly remove them from our environment, to simply investigate them - it's a bit unclear exactly why, and this is why the stories are really weird, because getting close to these beings tends to leave you insane. This raises all kinds of problems, but never mind.

I was interested that in say, Ethan Frome, which came out only about ten years before Lovecraft was publishing, the New Englander is initially seen by the narrator as an ideal type, pure, and unaffected by either more recent immigrants or indigenous persons. Here there is an absolute reaction to that, instead the hardy, native New Englander is at constant risk of degeneration through inbreeding and rural life. This leads them to not only talk funny but also with a bizarre tendency to interact with those beings who dwell beyond our perception , but as they are mostly inbred hill billies who talk funny nobody seems much fussed apart from the intrepid investigators.

In the years since these stories were published, a lot of things have happened, and if you have for your sins seen a sufficient amount of Star Trek, or for that matter Futurama or even read Terry Prachett or Douglas Adams, you won't find the events of these stories horrific, but instead mostly cheerfully familiar but considerably more coy.

I was interested in how in the dreams in the witch house non-Euclidean calculus and quantum physics are related to witchcraft and lead the hero of the story into realms beyond rational human perception and into risk of, well, risk. I don't know if this represents a rejection of modern science in favour of a safe Newtonism or if it was intended to be broadly humorous - it did make me smile a little . Along similar lines in Hypnos we are told Wise men have interpreted dreams, and the gods have laughed. One man with oriental eyes has said that all time and space are relative, and men have laughed. But even that man with oriental eyes has done no more than suspect (p.185) which does give a sense of contemporary 1920s culture given a spin for a pulp readership, modernity as an incomprehensible threat, today we could read this as an allegory for the assault on the environment maybe - the real horror is all those Ford motor cars and sturdy refrigerators bursting into our universe. Or in The Lurking Fear the death of several sidekicks could now be read as an allegory of AIDS: sleeping unprotected with muscular men in strange bedrooms can cause them to die hideously and for you to be driven to the brink of madness. If Lovecroft would appreciate that I don't know.
Profile Image for [ J o ].
1,962 reviews508 followers
November 21, 2017
I'm going to have to think up a name for a shelf on GoodReads for these types of books. They're not quite fantasy or sci-fi, not quite gothic and not quite wholly esoteric. Maybe just "Lovecraftian" will have to do...

Much like his other works, this was sublimely written. The story seemed much more fleshed out and seemed to have a linear purpose beyond just being a short story about esoteric dealings and horrific things from the blackness etc

If I weren't so lazy I'd look up the chronology of this story, which I imagine was written much later than the others I've read, simply because it reeks of advanced storytelling, and not the simple "ooh, and then this happens" kind of storytelling I've found in his others.

My only consternation with this story is the rather trite Now Let That Be A Lesson To You dialogue that occurs towards the end, when Mr. Education defeats the monster and must chide the Backwater Idiots, verbally spanking them and making sure They Never Do It Again. No more interbreeding or incest, thank you. Look what happens when you do. Possible apocalypse, etc.

Still bloody good, though. What an imagination. H.P. (or Brown Sauce as we like to call him) was magnificent, yet assuming like all great minds, really fucking fucked up.
Profile Image for Jason Koivu.
Author 7 books1,343 followers
June 28, 2017
After you're finished with The Call of Cthulhu and you feel as if you still have your senses about you (You think you do, but you don't. Good try though!), give The Dunwich Horror and Other Stories a go. Herein you'll find more possessed people and plenty others driven insane, as per usual.

If nothing else, this is a wonderful foundational work on the Lovecraftian mythos that details in creepy color Cthulhu and that devilish book of magic, The Necronomicon.

The language evoked by Lovecraft is more simplified here than it was in Call... or The Horror at Red Hook. Dunwich... often reads like an old-timey newspaper story. That style tends to distance the reader from the action, but this is an intentional device used to keep up the mystery. Perhaps some might call the writing stiff at times. Maybe a modern reader or two might find this too formal. Well, this was writing about 90 years ago.

The fact is, this is still solidly spooky stuff. I'm thinking I should read Lovecraft every time Halloween comes around, if I dare...
Profile Image for Markus.
483 reviews1,879 followers
May 9, 2020
I find myself wanting to read Lovecraft every time I pick up a Fallout game again. This time, quarantine has led me into Fallout 4, and a couple chances to visit the desolate mine of Dunwich Borers, undoubtedly one of the most well-made eerie places in video game history. I thought, however, that I had read the story which the mine references. Apparently not. And so it provided a nice entry point to a new Lovecraftian journey.

The Dunwich Horror is classic Lovecraft, firmly in the Cthulhy mythos, and certainly one of his best stories that I have read (although, admittedly, I have not actually read that many yet). It is a step below the insurmountable masterpiece that is The Shadow over Innsmouth, but it is not a big step, and the two stories share many of their biggest strengths.

The Old Ones were, the Old Ones are, and the Old Ones shall be. Not in the spaces we know, but between them, they walk serene and primal, undimensioned and to us unseen.
Profile Image for Greg.
1,123 reviews2,019 followers
June 26, 2012
This is a cheat review, I didn't actually read this book. I read the story The Dunwich Horror and maybe this edition has only that story in it, or maybe it has some other ones included as well. I don't know. And this unknowing kind of disturbs me, and I think maybe I shouldn't review this as a book, but just tack it on to my review of The Weird. It almost fills with the horror that the citizens of Dunwich feel when they take turns looking up on the hill towards the end of this story. Yeah, it's that serious and incomprehensible to rational thought.

This is the most bearable of all the Lovecraft I've read. This isn't say too much, since I haven't read too much by him, but I didn't feel like throwing the book across the room at any point while reading it. The book did a decent job of ruining my Sunday though. This was my daily story I had to read from The Weird so I sat down to read it, and told myself that I'd make my way through it and then go on to more productive things, but instead I couldn't keep reading more than a couple of pages at a time before all sorts of banal things would seem more interesting and needing my attention than continuing to read. But I wouldn't let myself do anything actually productive or fun (not that I had any ideas for anything fun to do, but maybe I would have thought of something (No, I wouldn't have)). So I started the story around 10 am and sometime just shy of 4 pm I finished it. In that time I also started to read a Dan Simmons novel, read a chapter or two in The Remainder, watched snippets of Friday night's UFC on FX (which I also blame for my lethargic Sunday, what a bunch of boring fights, I couldn't watch more than about half a round before feeling the need to break the monotony with returning to Lovecraft or to do something else, like pick up pieces of paper on my floor or just sit on my bed and stare, it was a fun Sunday, it's a shame I didn't document it for look at what I do when Karen isn't around to orchestrate AIFAF.

But, as much as the story didn't really hold my interest it didn't actively annoy me (maybe I was just easily distracted yesterday?) and I found the basic story to be pretty interesting. I thought ending (being the immediate build up to and the climax) to be suck but the build up and character development I enjoyed (which seems odd to say since I couldn't sit still long enough to get through much of it at a time). In theory I like the misanthropic qualities of the Old Gods, or Cthulu or whatever you want to call it (were the monsters in this books supposed to be even more baddass than Cthulu? I tried deciphering the passage where octopus face is mentioned but couldn't really make out what Lovecraft meant (am I just stupid? Probably), but every time he brings one of these creatures onto the page the reaction of people and the description (or non-description because they are so horrific that they just cause feinting and insanity among men) is a literary turn off for me.

Fortunately the stories in this collection (that would be The Weird, not the rest of the stories in this Lovecraft book) should be leaving the era and style that Lovecraft is an example of. I have high hopes for most of the rest of this collection, but please no more unspeakable horrors.
Profile Image for Wanda.
639 reviews
October 7, 2015
6 OCT 2015 - Today was a very slow day at work. It happens sometimes. We are not permtted to read real books at our desks; so, I could not read the Narrow Road. Instead, we are permitted mobile devices. I downloaded The Dunwich Horror from Project Gutenberg and spent the day being scared out of my mind. Holy Mud! This is a spooky read.

Here is your link to being frightened: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50133

Do NOT read before bedtime. You have been warned.

Dagny and I shared our Lovecraft reading experience. I want to include it here.

Dagny wrote: "I can still remember the first time I read a story by Lovecraft. It was back in the 70s and I thought it was the scariest story I had ever read."

Exactly. There is such a build-up to the ending - excitement, tension. There are no wasted words. I love when an author makes words come to life and those alive words have the ability to create such strong emotions in the reader.
Profile Image for Bettie.
9,989 reviews
October 6, 2015

https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50133

Opening: When a traveler in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of the Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean's Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country. The ground gets higher, and the brier-bordered stone walls press closer and closer against the ruts of the dusty, curving road. The trees of the frequent forest belts seem too large, and the wild weeds, brambles, and grasses attain a luxuriance not often found in settled regions. At the same time the planted fields appear singularly few and barren; while the sparsely scattered houses wear a surprizing uniform aspect of age, squalor, and dilapidation. Without knowing why, one hesitates to ask directions from the gnarled, solitary figures spied now and then on crumbling doorsteps or in the sloping, rock-strewn meadows. Those figures are so silent and furtive that one feels somehow confronted by forbidden things, with which it would be better to have nothing to do. When a rise in the road brings the mountains in view above the deep woods, the feeling of strange uneasiness is increased. The summits are too rounded and symmetrical to give a sense of comfort and naturalness, and sometimes the sky silhouettes with especial clearness the queer circles of tall stone pillars with which most of them are crowned.

This was a scary one. Must make an effort to read more from the Welsh author Arthur Machen.




A month of Halloween 2015 reads:

#1: 3* Nobody True by James Herbert: fraudio
#2: TR The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard: fraudio
#3: 1* Brain Child by John Saul: fraudio
#4: 3* Domain (Rats #3) by James Herbert: fraudio
#5: CR The Mourning Vessels by Peter Luther: paperback
#6: 2* The Doom of the Great City: ebook short-story
#7: 5* Long After Midnight by Ray Bradbury: fraudio
#8: 5* The Dead Zone by Stephen King: fraudio
#9: TR The Chalice: hardback
#10: TR Seven Gothic Tales: ebook
#11: TR Tales of Men and Ghosts
#12: 2* Shattered by Dean Koontz: fraudio
#13: 5* The Dunwich Horror: e-book: gutenberg project

Profile Image for Maciek.
571 reviews3,641 followers
October 31, 2015
When a traveller in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of the Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean’s Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country.

The Dunwich Horror is set in the isolated and derelict village of Dunwich, and is the story of an isolated and derelict family - the Whateleys. The story is centered around the youngest Whateley, Wilbur, who is a most unusual person - son of an albino mother and an unknown father, he grows up much faster than other children, reaching maturity in just ten years. There are whispers of the Whateley grandfather strange and disturbing influence on the boy, as old Whateley constantly buys more and more cattle, having a seemingly unending amount of money - yet the size of his her never increases. The Whateley farm is also a topic of many hushed talks - there's an omen of a strange presence in the farmhouse, which the Whateleys keep rebuilding, and strange noises frighten infrequent visitors.

The Dunwich Horror builds up slowly to the actual horror, which occurs at the very end; most of the novel focuses on the disintegration of the Whateley family, and the growing strangeness of young Wilbur. At fourteen Wilbur resembles a gargoyle rather than a man, and is universally hated by dogs; he has to buy a gun to be able to defend himself from them. Lovecraft's trademark Miskatonic University in Arkham makes an appearance as the place where young Wilbur ventures to study the infamous Necronomicon. The actual horror occurs at the end of the novel, and affects most of Dunwich in its grotesque monstrosity; it is notable that The Dunwich Horror remains one of the very few (if not only) Lovecraft stories where a group of heroes not only actively study the nature of said horror, but put up successful resistance against it. Still, the story lacks the intrigue and suspense of The Shadow Over Innsmouth, which I thought was much more engaging and enjoyable.

As always with Lovecraft, you can freely and legally read this story online, or download a copy for your eReader.


Profile Image for Rebecca.
76 reviews3 followers
August 11, 2024
I was very excited to read speculative fiction of the last 100 years, each month, a decade at a time, for all of 2022. I decided, thankfully, to add on lit fic/fiction of the time to add context. I might end up abandoning the project for the gen fic side project if it doesn’t improve.

The first two months (covering 1910-1919 in January and 1920-1929 in February) have been a gruelling slog through the works of the “fathers” on spec fic, most of which were high on eugenics and misogyny. This stuff isn’t subtle; it’s grotesque; it’s full-view, racist vomitribe with some interdimensional time travel and flying spaghetti monsters thrown in for shits and giggles.

Also: compared to their non-spec fic peers of the time, especially those from the Harlem Renaissance, the prose sucks. I get it, these are pulpy reads. Hard to compare. However, if you’re going to write obsessively about the superiority of white folks, and you can’t string a sentence together that’s worth rereading—to quote The NYC Orange Horror—“sad.”

I’ve read Lovecraft now. That’s all I can say I got out of it, aside from another confirmation that the beginnings of speculative fiction are gross on a human level. Like maybe the folks who believe in eugenics, then and now, should just be all be swallowed by a chinless, in-bred monster from Massachusetts.
Profile Image for Brian .
423 reviews5 followers
November 6, 2015
Dunwich claims a story, a “blasphemy” of a story. The Horror, the “blasphemy” came to the town as a boy named Wilbur Whately. At three little Wilbur could read with a profound intelligence, a prodigy, who looked twelve instead of three. The town produces strange phenomena, such as the whippoorwills; they move to a rhythm when people die. The birds sing in glee, and legend says they stop singing if they become discouraged at a person’s death. You see, the birds want to capture and torment that person’s soul.

Wilbur wants to get his hands on “The Necronomicon,” an ancient book remembering a world before ours, an ancient world when the “Ancient Ones” once lived and ruled. Wilbur becomes obsessed and unlocks a portal with strange words, calling on an ancient entity of which Cthulhu has no contest. Portals become opened. The man becomes a beast, an inhuman, other-worldly beast, and he calls upon a foreign power invisible to the human eye, an entity from another dimension.

“Oh, oh, my Gawd, that haff face – that haff face on top of it… that face with the red eyes an’ crinkly albino hair, an’ no chin, like the Whateley’s… It was a octopus, centipede, spider kind o’ thing, but they was a haff-shaped man’s face on top of it, an’ it looked like Wizard Wateley’s, only it was yards an’ yards acrost….”

This story helps me see why Lovecraft has become the face of the Fantasy Award, why he has developed into a name evoking respect in the fantasy and horror fields. The short scared me and freaked me out. I loved it. I deeply respect the imagination of this man, and his ability to create other worlds and dimensionality.
Profile Image for kimera.
172 reviews65 followers
October 15, 2020
Mankament Lovecraft ma taki, że jest bardzo powtarzalny. Jeden trzon lubi powracać - dawno temu był sobie taki jeden chłoptaś, bardziej lub mniej przypadkiem odgrzebał ohydnie mroczne tajemnice, ponurkował w okultystycznych księgach dawnych szalonych mędrców... Powietrze robiło się coraz cięższe, mrok gęstniał, włosy stawały dęba, bo COŚ rosło w siłę. Dla wielbicieli klimatu i stylu powtarzalność może być największą zaletą, mnie jednak ten efekt dejavu srogo zaczął męczyć, szczególnie po okropnie nieudanych "Szep­czący w ciem­no­ści" i "W górach sza­leń­stwa".
Ale generalnie spoko ;-)
178 reviews32 followers
April 26, 2012
This book was my first exposure to H. P. Lovecraft, way back in 1991 or so. I was eleven years old. The book shook my world to its very foundations. At the time, isaac Asimov was my favourite writer, but Lovecraft showed me how to appreciate moody, lapidary writing full of atmosphere and dripping with menace. I gave the book five stars mostly because of its revelatory impact on me and my personality, even though if I had discovered Lovecraft for the first time today, especially being familiar now with writers like Clark Ashton Smith, a contemporary of Lovecraft's who was admittedly a much better stylist; Fritz Leiber, who writes about real people with real emotions in his horror stories; Thomas Ligotti, whose sense of alienation and misanthropy in the face of an uncaring cosmos is almost unparalleled; William Hope Hodgson, who journeyed to unfathomed depths of time and space and brought back something too horrible to contemplate a good thirty years before Lovecraft did, I might have knocked the rating down by one star.

But really, none of those authors were even remotely in my sights at the time, and reading these stories today, I believe most of them still stand up very well. True, none of Lovecraft's characters feel like real people. But this connects with a theory I have about horror fiction: the "blank slate" approach to character works very well in horror precisely because these are "empty shells" of people, which your imagination can fill at its leisure. When we have pages and pages of background about a person, that person becomes integrated and real to us, in a sense, and although we can feel sadness when such a fictional character experiences loss or pain or death, we never for one moment think of that person as "us", and our minds don't really pull the trick of substituting that made-up individual with our own beings. In stuff like Lovecraft's fiction, or David Lindsay's book A Voyage to Arcturus, the fact that the people written about are ciphers that never have lives outside of the story means that that space can be filled, unconsciously perhaps, with our own experiences, and so the stories become all the more disturbing and get under the skin with surprising ease.

Or maybe all that's just me.

But at any rate, here we really do have some of Lovecraft's best fiction. not all of it, mind you, but more than enough to get a taste and then some of what the man was all about. Creepy, short pieces with clear Poe influences, like "In the Vault" are here in a small number. Frightening tales of descent, of degeneracy into screaming madness, oh, most certainly. Stories about the unknowable horrors that lurk beneath the sea and wait for the right moment to call the minds of the pitiful human herds to do their bidding! Great cosmic beings, winging their way towards us, on unfathomable missions whose principles alone would transform the strongest men into gibbering wrecks! Ancient, cold, aloof beings who survive time and death to take possession of human psyches! All can be found within the forbidding pages of this tome!

I read these for the first time, late in the evening or at night. Mostly, I remember waiting to be picked up from school, in a room full of other ten or eleven-year-olds, completely shut off from everything. I wasn't interested in a damned thing but finishing these stories. IN particular, I remember reading "The Color out of Space" in just such an environment, and finally going home with a sick, queazy feeling, wondering if I would hear a strange dragging noise in the night, and I would tip-toe quiveringly down the stairs only to find my family collapsing around me, turning to piles of grey dust. "The Whisperer in Darkness" read to me like a science fiction story, but one of a kind with which I was completely unfamiliar. Beforehand, my ideas about space were wonderous, excited. Now I thought to myself, "what horrors could really be out there?" And that ending! "The Shadow over Innsmouth" also chilled me to the bone, and yes, I think it's much more effective than the film Dagon, which borrows a lot from this tale. it's also one of the more action-oriented pieces in the anthology, so if you're afraid to tackle Lovecraft because you've heard he's slow and pedantic, perhaps start with this one. I love how the narrator manages to escape from the horrors confronting him, only to find that a worse fate has been waiting for him all along. These are the best sorts of endings in horror, and represent the pinnacle of what the genre is really all about.
Profile Image for Jon Reading Books.
159 reviews61 followers
September 21, 2020
Lovecraft is undoubtedly a master of atmospheric writing. His strength is in setting scenes and crafting an appropriate mood with which to manage the experience he's looking for from his readers. The opening paragraph of The Dunwich Horror is a fine example of this skill:

When a traveler in north central Massachusetts takes the wrong fork at the junction of the Aylesbury pike just beyond Dean's Corners he comes upon a lonely and curious country. The ground gets higher, and the brier-bordered stone walls press closer and closer against the ruts of the dusty, curving road. The trees of the frequent forest belts seem too large, and the wild weeds, brambles, and grasses attain a luxuriance not often found in settled regions. At the same time the planted fields appear singularly few and barren; while the sparsely scattered houses wear a surprizing uniform aspect of age, squalor, and dilapidation. Without knowing why, one hesitates to ask directions from the gnarled, solitary figures spied now and then on crumbling doorsteps or in the sloping, rock-strewn meadows. Those figures are so silent and furtive that one feels somehow confronted by forbidden things, with which it would be better to have nothing to do. When a rise in the road brings the mountains in view above the deep woods, the feeling of strange uneasiness is increased. The summits are too rounded and symmetrical to give a sense of comfort and naturalness, and sometimes the sky silhouettes with especial clearness the queer circles of tall stone pillars with which most of them are crowned.


Beyond that, though, I have to make the striking confession that I think I hate H.P. Lovecraft's work.

Reading Lovecraft's stories are, to me, the horror equivalent of reading a trashy romance paperback on a crowded train. You've got to have significant self-confidence to take undampened pleasure in reading this sort of thing in public. Lovecraft's naming conventions and otherworldly jargon always read undeniably cheesy to me. The actions which take place in the story and his characters' absurdly overdone gravitas in reaction to them always strike me as so unnatural and overly saturated that I find them impossible to take seriously:

"Ygnaiih ... ygnaiih ... thflthkh'ngha ... Yog-Sothoth...." rang the hideous croaking out of space. "Y'bthnk ... h'ehye ... n'grkdl'lh...."
"Eh-ya-ya-ya-yahaah ... e'yaya-yayaaaa ... ngh'aaaa ... ngh'aaaa ... h'yuh ... h'yuh ... HELP! HELP! ... ff—ff—ff—FATHER! FATHER! YOG-SOTHOTH!..."


Perhaps that's part of the charm. I have never been a fan of camp. It often falls deafly on me and I gather no amusement from it whatsoever. I feel a lot of the same vibe shared between Lovecraft's stories and cheesy '80s horror films. So maybe that's what I'm missing here. Either way, the content of these stories and the way in which they are told is not something that appeals to me, and given that I am now several stories into Lovecraft's oeuvre, I expect they will never appeal to me the way they appeal to Lovecraft's fans.

Undoubtedly inspired by far better writers such as Poe, Lovecraft falls into some of the same complaints I have with Poe's work (although I love him, generally); he relies on some of the same woefully overdone dialogue in fruitless attempts to reconstruct the vernacular of the time period which he depicts:

"An' then she let aout a turrible yell, an' says the shed daown the rud hed jest caved in like the storm hed blowed it over, only the wind wa'n't strong enough to dew that. Everybody was a-listenin', an' ye could hear lots o' folks on the wire a-gaspin'. All to onct Sally she yelled agin, an' says the front yard picket fence bed jest crumpled up, though they wa'n't no sign o' what done it. Then everybody on the line could hear Cha'ncey an' ol' Seth Bishop a-yellin', tew, an' Sally was shriekin' aout that suthin' heavy hed struck the haouse—not lightnin' nor nothin', but suthin' heavy agin' the front, that kep' a-launchin' itself agin an' agin, though ye couldn't see nuthin' aout the front winders. An' then ... an' then...."


I won't mince words here: This is utter garbage. I cannot stand it, and I refuse to read it. Perhaps I'm missing out on key story turns by skipping this stinking trash, but I'd rather stop reading the story than plod through this kind of thing. I have the same complaints about Poe when he pulls this crap, and Lovecraft has no excuse because folksy vernacular has already been depicted in a far better manner by writers prior to him from which he ought to have taken inspiration.

I find it more than passing amusing that some works created in the modern day which are undoubtedly inspired by Lovecraft appeal to me far more than the work of the man himself. I think this is a credit to his imagination and the atmospheric quality of his writing, but also affected by his lack of ability as an actual storyteller and his lack of properly managing the tone of his stories. They've never struck me as particularly terrifying, either; this could be due to the fact that he so often leans heavily on fear of the other; that which is foreign to us. This was surely more revolting and disconcerting to one such as Lovecraft, who is often criticized in modern circles for being a racist and a xenophobe. Such an enlightened, open-minded thinker as myself is utterly unaffected by such archaic thinking. Kidding aside; this brand of horror doesn't work for me, although the otherworldliness of his cosmic horror is something I do find enticing. I suspect his aesthetic is strongly responsible for why I gravitate towards Lovecraftian horror, but not Lovecraft's horror.

The more of Lovecraft I read, the less I like him. Which is ironic considering that Lovecraft relies so much on the horror of the unknown, the unknowable, and the other... And his mythology is so much more strange and enticing when you know very little about it.
Profile Image for Lou.
887 reviews928 followers
January 19, 2012
Master of horror writes a story of true forces of evil. The story beats a lot of modern writers in prose, characters and plot. I can see why many screenwriters have taken from pages of Lovecraft's characters. It seems that The Dark Tower series by King has a lot of inspiration from these elements in Dunwich Horror and other stories. A dark malevolent force of evil has taken over Dunwich is there hope?
You are taken through the accounts and findings of this evil, a very good tale.

"Young Wilbur‘s precociousness,
Old Whateley's black magic, and
the shelves of strange books, the
sealed second storey of the
ancient farmhouse, and the
weirdness of the whole region
land its hill noises. "
Profile Image for ᴥ Irena ᴥ.
1,652 reviews221 followers
November 28, 2014
4.5

This is one of my favourite Lovecraft's stories. It is wonderfully written, the imagery is perfect for what it was set out to do and some of the characters are just horrifying enough to keep you on your toes.

Dunwich is an isolated little place in New England. It wasn't much better before the events told here either.

Wilbur Whately was born in 1913. His mother Lavinia Whateley, a deformed albino woman, spends her days wondering through the countryside. After his birth, his grandfather starts buying a lot of cattle and sheep, but their numbers don't seem to increase at all when the nosy and curious neighbours check them.
Wilbur is not an ordinary child. He grows too fast, he starts speaking almost right away. And dogs seem to hate him with passion.

Every now and then Wilbur and his grandfather, a black magic practitioner, would start working on the house, rebuilding and changing. All the people know is that part of the house is almost completely closed. One thing the Whatelys couldn't get rid of is the all-present stench that enveloped Wilbur.

Wilbur's father is interesting. You know from the start that the father isn't human. Later you get another surprise too. Cthulhu is not mentioned, but Yog-Sothoth is and you get a glimpse of a threat the Old Ones present and how far they'd go to return.

The whole story is told by a narrator who did not experience the Dunwich horror events himself. The reader somehow ends up being totally immersed in the story, but from above. If I had to choose one book to introduce Lovecraft to someone, this would be it.
Profile Image for Jonathan Dunne.
Author 19 books1,304 followers
December 11, 2021
You know that feeling when you read an author and think...where have you been all my life? When a story is just so perfect for you that you think you might have written it in another life. I thought I was imagining things when I noted a hint of racism, but apparently it's a thing with H.P.

Deliciously dark and wonderfully weird. Cosmic horror at its finest.
Profile Image for Rebecca Schmitz.
204 reviews38 followers
November 13, 2009
Like a lot of other mopey adolescents, I devoured H.P. Lovecraft when I was in high school; I owned several collections of his short stories and novellas. I remember loving his unwholesome, horrifying vision of Earth's past, present and future. Inspired by an article that recently appeared on a favorite pop culture website, I decided to say hello to Howard P. again. Iä! Iä! Big mistake. I forgot he has just one plot: someone (usually a middle-aged professor at witch-haunted Arkham's Miskatonic University) recalls, with the help of supplementary materials (diaries, letters, phonograph recordings, newspaper clippings), an encounter with gibbering beings from outside our solar system/the afterlife/below desert wastes or oceans. This someone is usually on the brink of madness by the end of his tale. The man had an incredible imagination; it's too bad his stories, when read back to back in a collection, are so annoyingly repetitive.

Oh well. I'm going to wait a bit before tackling Lovecraft's masterpiece, At the Mountains of Madness. Cthulhu fhtagn!
Profile Image for shakespeareandspice.
351 reviews523 followers
October 19, 2015
I started out incredibly skeptical and wary of this collection as I was made aware that Lovecraft is racist and that his prejudicial attitude appears in his writing often. I liked the title story and “The Thing on the Doorstep” quite a bit, but as I continued jumping around the collection, I found the collection too repetitive ultimately. He seems to play with the same themes repeatedly and, forget scaring me, the stories eventually stop becoming even mildly entertaining.

I think I’ll pass on more Lovecraft in the future.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews11.9k followers
September 17, 2008
4.5 stars. Outstanding collection of H.P Lovecraft stories. The Dunwich Horror is an amazing story that reads as well today as when it was first written. Lovecraft was a unique talent and his stories are just a ton of fun.
Profile Image for Joseph.
719 reviews114 followers
December 31, 2020
I already expressed my thoughts about Lovecraft at length in reviews of Collected Fiction Volume 1 (1905-1925): A Variorum Edition, Collected Fiction Volume 2 (1926-1930): A Variorum Edition and Collected Fiction Volume 3 (1931-1936): A Variorum Edition, so all I'll say here is:

This is a companion volume to the first Lovecraft book I ever read, The Colour Out of Space -- between the two volumes, they contain almost all of the stories from one of the three Arkham House collections of his major fiction, The Dunwich Horror and Others (and it's SUPER CONFUSING for sites like Goodreads or LibraryThing because there are multiple Lovecraft collections with the same title but with very different sets of stories), and when they were reprinted in 1978 by Jove, they were given very nice matching covers by Rowena:

The Dunwich Horror and Others by H.P. Lovecraft The Colour Out of Space by H.P. Lovecraft

Although I've read all of the stories in this book many times over the years, I didn't know that this particular edition existed until just a few years ago. And as a collection of Lovecraft stories it's, eh, fine. Nothing particularly juvenile or horrible (well, except for the name of the protagonist's cat in "The Rats in the Walls". If I tell you the cat is black, you can probably make a pretty good stab at the name), but none of the stories are what I would consider top-tier. You have an assortment of his, mostly earlier, Poe-esque weird fiction like "In the Vault" or "The Music of Erich Zann" and you have a trio of his Cthulhu Mythos stories, of which the most famous is the title story, "The Dunwich Horror" which, TBH, has never actually been a favorite of mine -- personally, I prefer the stories in The Colour Out of Space. But if you're in the mood for some Lovecraft and this the book that falls into your hand, well, you could do worse. (Or better.)
Profile Image for Kenneth McKinley.
Author 2 books287 followers
March 17, 2015
In my quest to discover the works of one of the most influential writers in all of horror, I immerse myself into yet another story by H.P. Lovecraft. This time it is The Dunwich Horror and I find, yet again, its hard to go wrong with Lovecraft.

In the backwoods town of Dunwich, Mass., Wilbur Whateley is born to his disfigured albino mother Lavinia. The father's identity is unknown but later in the story it is alluded that the father is Yog-Sothoth by Wilbur's half-mad and witchcraft practicing grandfather, Old Whateley. Wilbur grows at an abnormally fast rate and reaches maturity by age ten and continues to grow. The locals try to avoid Wilbur and his family and animals detest him due to the smell he gives off. Wilbur continues to grow into a freakish size and learns sorcery and black magic from his grandfather. The locals begin getting suspicious as Old Whately always seems to be purchasing cattle, yet his herd never seems to grow and the cattle that are seen in the pasture have open sores on them.
Wilbur attempts to secure an unabridged Latin version of the Necronomicon in an effort to summon the "Old Ones" into this world. As the years go by, Wilbur and his grandfather continually remodel their home to larger proportions and strange rumblings are heard inside the house. Soon afterwards, Wilbur's grandfather and mother mysteriously die and the rumblings get worse and more frequent. What could be going on in the Whateley house?

Lovecraft's tale continues the revealing of Yog-Sothoth, the Old Ones, and the Necronomicon. It is wonderfully written with lots of suspense and eerieness. Its impossible to miss his influences on so many well-known horror stories and movies of the past and present. I've really enjoyed this journey into discovering Lovecraft. I'm looking forward to the next chapter of our journey together....into the macabre.

5 out of 5 stars



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TWITTER - @KenMcKinley5
Profile Image for Alcides Martinez.
168 reviews2 followers
May 30, 2023
En mi primer acercamiento a la obra de Lovecraft me llevé una gran sorpresa. Después de esta lectura creo q nunca había leído una obra verdaderamente de terror. El terror cósmico, de los que dan pavor y pesadillas están aquí, con este autor, y todo su mundo cósmico y de mitos merecen ser aplaudidos y leídos.
Si lo que buscan es el verdadero horror, Lovecraft es la respuesta. Me ha encantado y aunque no todos los relatos son de la misma calidad en este compilado, la que más me ha gustado es EL COLOR QUE CAYO DEL CIELO.👏👏👏
Profile Image for Esther G. Recuero.
Author 31 books262 followers
July 9, 2019
Nos encontramos ante una edición muy bonita y cuidada de tapa dura con ilustraciones (a cargo del genial John Coulhart) y la maravillosa traducción de Alejandro Pareja Rodríguez, todo de la mano de la editorial Alma Clásicos.
En esta antología nos encontramos 2 novelas cortas y dos relatos del autor de Providence:
-El Horror de Dunwich
-El caso de Charles Dexter Ward
-El que susurra en la oscuridad
-El color que surgio del espacio
Lovecraft tiene una forma de escribir densa, con muchas descripciones y a menudo reitera ideas imagino que para que el lector capte la importancia de esos detalles. Juega mucho con los recursos del entorno como lugares casi con personalidad propia, voces en el viento, animales que se comportan de cierta forma y la "investigación" (que es llevada siempre por un personaje externo, ya sea periodista, doctor o un funcionario). A esto lo llamo "sota, caballo y rey", o para que nos entendamos, tirar siempre de los mismos recursos en muchos de los relatos e historias. Esto, dicho así puede sonar mal, pero funciona muy bien ya que el autor supo insertarlo en cada contexto concreto. Dioses, seres de otros planetas, componentes desconocidos, brujería y obsesión son algunas de las cosas que encontraréis en este volúmen.
Una lectura que, para mí y por mis gustos, me ha parecido cautivadora. Me quedo sin duda con El horror de Dunwich porque el rollo "pueblo endogámico perdido en el mapa que tiene muchos secretitos oscuros" me apasiona.
Si queréis más detalles sobre el libro y las historias, los tenéis en la vídeo reseña: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPuze...
Profile Image for Dean.
527 reviews126 followers
June 2, 2020
I'm fully into Lovecraft bizarre fantasy worlds!!
I loved it..

"The Dunwich Horror" is one hell of a short story..
Lovecraft builds up the tension, and creates a unique dense atmosphere..

Creepy and unlike any other horror story I've read!!
Let me only say that a child is born, deform and with an unnatural behavior!!
Nobody knows who is the father of this child!!!

The worst is still to come..
Because it evolves more and more resemblimg to an ever higher degree his father!!!

Encantantions, Occult books, spells, secret circles, and a dark entity trying to force his way into our reality!!!
A classic Lovecraft not to be missed at all by readers fond of fantasy and horror stories..

Dean;)

PS:
My kindle edition contains only "The Dunwich Horror" and no other stories..


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