Issue #34 – Spring 2015

Art by Peter Szmer – http://www.peterszmer.com/ – click to enlarge

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Cthulhu Does Stuff #13
a comic strip by Ronnie Tucker & Maxwell Patterson

Echoes from Cthulhu’s Crypt, #11
a monthly column by Robert M. Price

To Kiss Your Canvas
by W.H. Pugmire

The Sleekit Ones
by Cameron Johnston

Hunger Full and Lean
by J.T. Glover

What the Storm Brings
KC Grifant

Maps
by Arley Sorg

Spiral
by Matthew Lowes

Exit Horizon
by Damir Salkovic

In the Forest of the Night
by Alter Reiss

The Mask and the Mirror
by Ethan Carpenter

A Hero’s Welcome
by David Kernot 

The Unmistakable Shape of Night’s River
by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.

Back cover illustration
Illustrated by Andrew Mangum, colors by Roy Young

KINDLE

Buy the Kindle edition of this issue on Amazon

PODCAST

Click here to download the audio edition of issue #34.

PRINT

Buy the print edition at Amazon (click here).

CREDITS

Publisher & Editor: Mike Davis
Co-editor: Matthew Carpenter
Kindle & Nook versions: Kenneth W. Cain
Issue cover: Peter Szmer
Issue back cover: Andrew Mangum, Roy Young
Graphic design: Leslie Harker
Website version: Raven Daegmorgan
Story Illustrations: Nick Gucker, Dave Felton, Peter Szmer, Dominic Black, Raven Daegmorgan, Steve Santiago, John Donald Carlucci, Dauny Mandir, Max Martelli
Story Readers: Lou Columbus, Kimberly Smeltzer, David Binks, Mark Robinson, Douglas Wynne, Vincent LaRosa, Chaz Engan, Anthony Pearce
Line Editors: David Binks, Laura Dawley

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  • Who is Lovecraft?A tribute to our favourite author on his 78th anniversary. Only one player will prove to be the real Lovecraft by creating the Cthulhu Mythos using cards. An entertaining game that is easy to learn and which can be played with friends or family.
  • Monk Punk and The Shadow of the Unknown, twenty-three hard-hitting Monkpunk tales of fantasy, science fiction, and Lovecraftian horror. The Shadow of the Unknown collects Twenty-nine tales of horror inspired by H.P Lovecraft and the element of the unknown in supernatural fiction. 
  • The Lord Came at Twilight: This is New England as it was once envisioned by Hawthorne and Lovecraft, a twilit country of wild hills and barren farmland where madness and repression abound. The Lord Came at Twilight presents 14 stories of doubt and despair, haunter and haunted, the deranged and the devout.
  • Book of the Dead, a Lovecraftian novel described as Indiana Jones meets H.P. Lovecraft, by Greig Beck.
  • The Thing On the Doorstep, a new Lovecraftian psychological horror film based on the story by H.P. Lovecraft. 
  • The Stars Were Right, by K.M. Alexander.  A gritty adventure through a city rich with life and death, in the style of a tale told over some cheap whiskey at a dusty dive bar on the outskirts of a bizarre Lovecraftian town. 
  • Lucky’s Girl, by William Holloway.  Something has awakened on Grove Island. Something that, even in sleep, has held Elton Township in its black embrace. Something old, wise and patient. Something that walked the ancient forests and howled beneath black skies. 
  • The Lurker In the Library, a Lovecraftian Dinner Mystery Game!
  • Fedogan and Bremer, a Lovecraftian publisher.
  • The Revenant of Rebecca Pascal, a new Lovecraftian novel by W.H. Pugmire and David Barker.
  • Songs of the Satyrs, edited by Aaron J. French.
  • Offworld Designs: Awesome Lovecraftian t-shirts at reasonable prices.
  • That Which Should Not Be, one of my favorite Lovecraftian novels.
  • These Old Tales, by Kenneth W. Cain.

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