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The Taint and Other Novellas (Cthulhu…
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The Taint and Other Novellas (Cthulhu Mythos) (No. 1) (originale 2007; edizione 2008)

di Brian Lumley (Autore)

Serie: Best Mythos Tales (Vol. 1)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiConversazioni
1253220,481 (3.93)Nessuno
1.  Brian Lumley is a legend of horror writing. 2.  Will appeal to fans of H.P. Lovecraft, as well as other horror lovers 3.  Guaranteed high profile review coverage 4.  Lumley and Lovecraft are perennial best sellers   A collection of thrilling tales from H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos by one of horror's biggest legends. This volume contains the very best of Brian Lumley's Mythos novellas.      … (altro)
Utente:PhilOnTheHill
Titolo:The Taint and Other Novellas (Cthulhu Mythos) (No. 1)
Autori:Brian Lumley (Autore)
Info:Solaris (2008), 416 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca, In lettura, Da leggere
Voto:***
Etichette:anthology, lovecraftian, horror

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The Taint and Other Novellas di Brian Lumley (2007)

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Welcoming the chance to get my Lovcraftian horror on via the excellent narration of Joshua Saxon, I tore into THE TAINT AND OTHER NOVELLAS. What fun!

A collection of 5 novellas which were written back in the mid to late 1900s, these tales do not have the polish of Lumley's later works, like the Necroscope series. These stories are more the work of a writer starting out, (while serving in the military), a writer bewitched by Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythos. The fun parts of the mythos are here, but they lack the racism and other issues of Lovecraft's work.

My favorites of the 5 were: LORD OF THE WORMS This tale featured Titus Crow, a name I remember from back in the day, though I can't quite remember the tales in which he featured. In this story, he's invited to a home under the pretense of cataloging a large book collection at an old estate. Of course nothing is as it appears. Throw in some mesmerizing hypnotism, (see what I did there?!), some maggots and some spiked wine and you have yourself a great time!

THE TAINT was a fun tale involving fish-men. That's right, fish-men. With all the creepiness inherent in that phrase. It's not as much a pulp tale as one would think, with just the right mix of horror and perhaps a bit of social commentary, (but that's just my take.)

Finally, the last story THE TEMPLE HOUSE takes the form of a man inheriting an old estate from his uncle. He takes a friend and goes to Scotland to inspect his inheritance, and soon finds a letter from his uncle asking him to destroy the place. Why? You'll have to read this to find out!

Regarding the narrator, Joshua Saxon-I've only listened to one other performance of his, which was the excellent THE CIPHER by Kathe Koja. In that book he was voicing only one character while in this collection, he voices all kinds of people and he does it quite well. English, American, Scottish, he does them all and never for a moment did I doubt the origins of any of the characters. Well done, sir!

This was a collection full of fun Lovecraftian monsters, fish people, maggots and worms. If these are the things that delight you, then you'll enjoy the hell out of this volume!

Recommended!

*I received this audio download free from the narrator, in exchange for my honest feedback. This is it!* ( )
1 vota Charrlygirl | May 27, 2020 |
A rather split compilation of several of Lumley's novellas within the scope of the Cycle of Cthulhu Myth. About half of them are pure pastiche; channeling Lovecraft so precisely that I thought I might have been reading August Derleth. That said, Lumley is a great writer and one of my favorite in the field, so he's a pleasure to read even when the pastiche prose are purple. Lumley's introductions to each novella (exclusive to this gorgeous Subterranean Press edition) help soften the blow a bit in their self-deprecating humor and earnestness. Most of the pastiche stories were written 35-40 years ago and represented some of Lumley's earliest published works, so one can't fault him too fiercely, if at all.

As much pulpy fun as it was to read the handful of Lovecraft homages, the real joy comes in the later novellas also included here, especially The Taint and Born of the Winds. Clearly written after his style had matured somewhat, these tales are unique in character and content (if not necessarily in setting) and were a real pleasure to encounter.

I've been a fan of Lumley's since reading his Necroscope novels some years ago, but had had very little exposure to his Mythos Cycle stories. This was a pretty good collection with which to rectify that omission and the brief time it took me to read them was well-spent. A solid comp with some slight lows, a lot of midlines, and a couple of very high highs. Four stars for fans of Lumley or the Mythos, probably far less than that for anyone else. ( )
  Daninsky | Aug 19, 2017 |
An interesting collection of ... tertiary?* Cthulhu Mythos tales. They're collected from throughout his career and each has a brief preface by Lumley giving some background and his opinions of the piece. Spoilers follow, major spoilers are marked.

*Primary was of course Lovecraft and correspondents, Derleth was a late enough protegée to be secondary, so Lumley as Derleth's protegée is tertiary.

I've heard mixed things of Lumley, including that his writing is unsatisfactory pastiche. I found all of them worth reading, but that's not an unfair comment. Most of the stories are heavily based on Lovecraft's works (the exceptions being from Derleth's), with a heavy focus on Cthulhu and watery entities, and long lists of the same old Mythos tomes. The writing is also, to varying extents, influenced the same way, as Lumley points out. I don't know whether it's down to being a Best Of collection but a certain sense of sameness pervaded the collection. There are two tales written as witness statements by protagonists thought to be insane and possibly murderers. There seemed to be an emphasis on water and Cthulhu, and a small collection of tomes focused on these topics. There are also two stories where it turns out someone is a Mythos cultist. In a book of seven stories, that feels like a lot.

Despite this I enjoyed it reasonably well. My personal favourites were the final two, Lord of the Worms and the House of the Temple. The House I enjoyed not least because it felt the most original in terms of what was actually going on, though the ending owes something to Lovecraft's "The Thing on the Doorstep" and the protagonists seem a little feckless. Lord of the Worms did something rather different, had a pleasingly practical (if stubborn) protagonist, and a satisfying aura of menace.

"The Taint" is the title story and it probably earned it, though I thought the writing was a bit creaky. The opening was quite heavy, and the middle-class domestic troubles felt just a tad too prominent to me. However, the developments in the rest of the novel were interestingly different, and I didn't have much idea where exactly it was going, though the overall lines were clear enough. I'm still not sure about stories where the protagonist is a villain, let alone a Mythos cultist. This was miles better than the revolting "Doom that Came to Innsmouth" which gave us a serial killer rapist protagonist, but I still find something intrusive and unwanted about having the character through whose head we see the world casually condemning a mildly inconvenient friend to a slow and horrible death. There was also some slightly confusing stuff about genetic modification, which left me confused about the book's intended period for a while - was this supposed to be alt-hist or maybe actual sci-fi? I don't think so, but then there seem to be some actual successes in gene therapy and genetic engineering... that kind of thing would be blazed over the media as a staggering triumph, but both it and the Innsmouth Lookers have obviously been kept mostly obscure.

The remaining stories were fine, all with their own strengths and weaknesses. Indecisive narrators who hesitate to do anything, even in the face of huge volumes of Mythos tomes and evidence they're telling the truth, are a bit of a theme in Mythos fiction so I can't really fault it for that. I did feel the writing tends to get too thick, especially where Mythos is concerned, and that it worked best when it broke free of the Lovecraft/Derleth influence to something a little freer and more natural. On the whole I'd call this a fairly solid and readable collection, with interesting ideas and scenes, but not one I see myself coming back to. I may be interested to see what becomes of Titus Crow, who I know has a bit of a series. ( )
  Shimmin | Dec 6, 2016 |
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» Aggiungi altri autori (1 potenziale)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Brian Lumleyautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Eggleton, BobImmagine di copertinaautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
Saxon, JoshuaNarratoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
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1.  Brian Lumley is a legend of horror writing. 2.  Will appeal to fans of H.P. Lovecraft, as well as other horror lovers 3.  Guaranteed high profile review coverage 4.  Lumley and Lovecraft are perennial best sellers   A collection of thrilling tales from H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos by one of horror's biggest legends. This volume contains the very best of Brian Lumley's Mythos novellas.      

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