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Tales of Yog-Sothoth: A Cthulhu Mythos Anthology (Books of Cthulhu Book 2) Kindle Edition
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Paperback, Import
"Please retry" | ₹1,389.00 |
- Kindle Edition
₹239.00 Read with Our Free App - Paperback
₹1,389.00
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication date27 April 2021
- File size1013 KB
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2Tales of Yog-Sothoth: A Cthulhu Mythos Anthology (Books of Cthulhu Book 2)Kindle Edition₹ 239.00
Product details
- ASIN : B08RS4VTZR
- Publisher : Crossroad Press (27 April 2021)
- Language : English
- File size : 1013 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 328 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #997,799 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #12,217 in Horror (Kindle Store)
- #19,123 in Horror (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Non- Fiction: (Swarm Troopers, Weapons Grade) David Hambling is a freelance technology journalist based in South London.
He writes for New Scientist magazine, Aviation Week, Popular Mechanics, WIRED, The Economist, The Guardian newspaper and others.
Fiction (Shadows From Norwood series): Norwood in South London has deep roots. When I first moved here in 2001, I thought that that all London's history, like all the tourist sites, lay North of the river. I was wrong. Scratch the surface and this place is older and stranger than you think.
The houses on my street are modern; but they are built on Musto's Field, the name a corruption of 'Moot-Stow', a medieval village meeting place. The unremarkable woodland overlooking the garden is a remnant of the primeval Great North Wood which became Norwood. A wood notorious for outlaws, gypsies, hermits and other strange folk.
Our River Effra runs was diverted into an underground sewer a century ago. What hidden creatures flop and scuttle down there, what unhallowed Things are buried beneath those old oak trees, trees untouched since Druids sacrificed beneath them? I mused, and Shadows from Norwood crawled forth...
Follow the series on Facebook here - https://www.facebook.com/ShadowsFromNorwood
David J. West writes dark fantasy and weird westerns because the voices in his head won’t quiet until someone else can hear them. He is a great fan of sword & sorcery, ghosts and lost ruins, so of course he lives in Utah.
Matthew Davenport hails from Des Moines, Iowa where he lives with his wife, Ren, and daughter, Willow. When his scattered author brain isn't earning weird looks from the ladies of his life, he enjoys reading sci-fi and horror, tinkering with electronics, and doing escape rooms.
Matt is the author of the Andrew Doran series, the Broken Nights series (along with his brother, Michael), The Trials of Obed Marsh, and Satan's Salesman among other titles.
He's also a self-styled student of the Cthulhu Mythos and exercises that influence in his stories and as an editor at the blog Shoggoth.net
You can keep track of Matthew through his twitter account @spazenport.
You can also support him and get regular chapter and novel postings at http://patreon.com/matthewdavenport
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Customer reviews
Top reviews from other countries

I am fan of David Hambling and having his story, "The Ghost Door" was top of the list and reason for buying the book. I read it. Loved the story itself. Found the mystery and scare factor top notch as always. Then along comes the big nasty BUT! Who edited or read his story before it got published? I KNOW I KNOW! 19th Century vernacular is his style. BUT nothing should cause his reader to stumble over or stumble over double words page after page in the story. Nothing to do with the language. JUST POOR EDITING or proof reading of the story. Distracting as hell and if Mr. Phipps was supposedly the Editor he was not doing his job. Five stars to Hambling for the story, three stars to Phipps for editing.
I move on . . .
Then I ran across David Niall Wilson, a vernacular writer who made me smile because I recognised my relatives from back home Arkansas and South Georgia. But despite the vernacular and the homey start I was surprised and disturbed by the overall irritating and unpleasant and angering story line. It is ok, I know Mr. Wilson has a passel of fans who just love his down home style. But he wanders in his story telling, getting to the core of the short story point without making clear any Mythos connection for the longest part of the tale.
As for the rest of the stories I was glued to the book till I reached the final page of the FINAL GATE and enjoyed that one a great deal. Despite the writer leaving me, a person who has not read his work, ignorant of his heroes dual personality and the strange world in which the story plays out. A little more fore knowledge and prologue would have helped make sense of the hero and his supernatural elements that actually ran the story.
I give this book only four stars for these reasons. Originally it was three stars but felt guilty because I loved several of the stories enough to want to reread them.
OVERALL READ THIS AND JUDGE FOR YOURSELF!

I haven't (yet) read any of the other stories but the Harry story makes it a worthwhile purchase.

If you love Lovecraft and especially his creation Yog -Sothoth. Pic this one. up.
