Perhaps no story more defines H.P. Lovecraft's eldritch hold on speculative fiction than The Call of Cthulhu.
First published in 1928, in Weird Tales magazine, this launched what is now known as the Cthulhu Mythos. It was here, as much as his earlier unspeakable horrors like Dagon and The Tomb and The Nameless City, that formed what is today known as Lovecraftian; but it was great Cthulhu that gave this sub-genre it's definition and a face from which to leer down upon poor, lost humanity.
- Goodreads Review
Perhaps no story more defines H.P. Lovecraft's eldritch hold on speculative fiction than The Call of Cthulhu.
First published in 1928, in Weird Tales magazine, this launched what is now known as the Cthulhu Mythos. It was here, as much as his earlier unspeakable horrors like Dagon and The Tomb and The Nameless City, that formed what is today known as Lovecraftian; but it was great Cthulhu that gave this sub-genre it's definition and a face from which to leer down upon poor, lost humanity.
- Goodreads Review