Our Patron Book Club joins us to discuss H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath”, independent presses, Victorian architecture, one-thing-after-another type of books, Edgar Rice Burroughs’s Barsoom books, Edgar Allan Poe horror stories, graphic novel adapatations, recurring dreams and locations, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, weird townsfolk, barrel monsters, the Hexcrawl of Unknown Kadath, … Continue reading "H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath”"| Appendix N Book Club
S. M. Stirling explores L. Ron Hubbard’s Typewriter in the Sky—a witty, ironic, and genre-bending pulp classic that helped pioneer metafiction in SF.| Galaxy Press
As I mentioned online on Friday, 6th June was the 13th anniversary of the blog (it always sneaks up on me, and then Wordpress reminds me!) As I commented, that’s a lot of books and a lot of w…| Kaggsy's Bookish Ramblings
As| On An Underwood No. 5
Seabury Quinn—whose longer tales I simply| On An Underwood No. 5
Julius Schwartz| On An Underwood No. 5
Now I remember those old women’s words,| On An Underwood No. 5
H.P. Lovecraft| On An Underwood No. 5
Not every letter from every pulp writer that survives has been published; many remain on the open market and in private hands, coming up for sale from time to time...and they have stories to tell about Robert E. Howard.| On An Underwood No. 5
Yes, there was a cow. I saw the critter. Her name was Delhi, and hump shouldered to suggest Indian blood—Asian-Indian, I mean.—E. Hoffmann Price to L. Sprague de Camp, 11 Feb 1977 (IMH 297)| On An Underwood No. 5