NEUE REZENSION: Die Selene Society

Der 1. Band von Sebastian Dietz' neuer Indie-Comicserie "wandelt abseits von ausgetretenen Pfaden, ist erzählerisch komplex und hervorragend komponiert."

https://comicgate.de/rezensionen/die-selene-society/

#comicrezensionen #sebastiandietz #lovecraft #horrorcomic #Indiecomic #lesetipp #comicempfehlung #okkultismus

Die Selene Society

Der primitive Mensch erklärte sich die unheimliche Welt mit Mythologie und magischem Denken. Nach und nach aber erwarb die Menschheit die Mittel, sich die Welt rational zu erklären und erklärte das Magische zum Aberglauben. Sebastian Dietz, dem wir bereits die ausgefuchste Lovecraft-Aneignung Yuggoth Rising verdanken, hat in diesem Spannungsfeld seine neue Indie-Serie Die Selene Society angelegt. Die Story spielt um 1890 herum und sie erzählt von einer Zeit, in der die Wissenschaft keine Zweifel mehr zulassen will, alles muss rational erklärbar sein. Und doch lauert in den Schatten stets das Unerklärliche – und je mehr es zurückgedrängt wird, desto mächtiger wird es hervorbrechen. Es beginnt damit, dass der Wissenschaftler und Mythenforscher Dr. Sinclair von seinem Widersacher Montcalfe zu einer Besprechung eingeladen wird. Der reagiert ungläubig, denn Montcalfe ist seit Kurzem verstorben. Nach und nach entfaltet sich eine groß angelegte Geschichte, in der wir sowohl erfahren, wie es Montcalfe mit Hilfe von Hypnose gelang, seinen Geist vom Körper zu trennen, als auch, warum Sinclair sich so sehr dem Rationalen verschrieben hat. Wir lernen ein halb indisch, …

Comicgate

DESERT RADIO: “Pontypool meets Lost Highway filtered through a cosmic horror lens”

Desert Radio by Pamela M. Durgin. Published by Word Horde.

Desert Radio is one of the most mature and affecting cosmic horror novels I’ve read this side of Laird Barron and Gemma Files. This book is an apprehension engine creating images and sounds (yes, sounds!) that will burrow under all the layers of your skin.” —Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts and Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep

Ross Lockhart sent me an email a while back with a list of upcoming Word Horde books. As I was scrolling the list, Desert Radio by Pamela M. Durgin caught my eye. The book synopsis pushed many of my buttons: a 1990s desert setting, night radio, and of course, cosmic horror. I asked Ross to send it to me, which he kindly did.

While I waited for my copy to arrive in the mail, I kept wondering if this book could possibly live up to my expectations. Well, it didn’t; it blew them away. This is a novel that every fan of weird fiction, cosmic horror, and, frankly, horror in general needs to read.

Pre-order it; you’ll thank me, I promise.

(On that note: If you think you’re going to read this book, don’t wait to order it until it comes out. Pre-orders really help publishers and writers to gauge interest. It’s one of the best things you can do for a writer, second only to reviewing it.)

Get Desert Radio here.

Book synopsis:

The California desert hides a lot of things. For Gloria, it is a place to get away from her past and her addictions. Gloria expected to find a quiet place, where salt flats and dunes stretch on and the night sky is littered with stars. What she didn’t expect to find was an oasis, a community, and a job as a late-night DJ on a rock-and-roll radio station.

There is strangeness in the desert. Missing persons. Ancient petroglyphs. Distorted voices on the radio. Ghostly dogs. And more. Government conspiracies, weird rituals, and unfathomable entities that have been visiting the area for centuries.

Sure, the people in the desert are little bit strange, a little bit paranoid. But they’re survivors, just like Gloria.

Things are about to get very weird.

Get Desert Radio here.

Here’s what others had to say:

Desert Radio is a complex novel with grand weirdness that taps into the curiosity we have as human beings, as well as our many vulnerabilities. The uncanny, the liminal, and the wondrous unfold in so many fascinating ways. It’s Pontypool meets Lost Highway filtered through a cosmic horror lens. One of my favorite authors writing today.”
Richard Thomas, author of Transubstantiate

“Here’s a PSA for you: Pamela Durgin knows secrets. She knows the great deserts of the American West are as weird as the ancient forests of the North—and she knows these deserts come alive at night. She knows the slow, soft tread of the tarantula, and the scorpion’s sudden sting—and she knows these are not the strangest creatures moving through the dark. Not even close. She knows that the key to so much of the best Weird Fiction—from Blackwood and Hodgson right up till now—is atmosphere. And she knows how to build it. She also knows when to strike. And where. Pamela Durgin knows secrets. Maybe more than she should. In Desert Radio she’ll share them with you. Maybe more than you’re ready to learn.”
Scott Nicolay, author of And At My Back I Always Hear

“Outré radio transmissions. Clandestine government experiments. Otherworldly beings. Cults and occult rituals. A desert town whose blistering heat incubates dark secrets. Pamela Durgin’s fantastic debut novel Desert Radio reads like Banshee Chapter meets From Beyond.
Matthew M. Bartlett, author of Gateways to Abomination and Dangerous Creeps

“A shimmering descent into madness. This is a tale of betrayal drenched in a beautiful weirdness. Atmospheric, tense, and delicious, Durgin makes the heat and grit of the desert feel like pleasure.”
S.L. Coney, author of Wild Spaces, an Esquire Best of Horror 2023 pick

“Pamela Durgin’s debut is a dust devil of fantastic weird fiction and liminal high-strangeness dialed to eleven. Government conspiracy, MK ULTRA, Crowley, & numbers stations all converge in a tale I simply couldn’t put down. Highly recommended.”
Todd Keisling, Bram Stoker Award-nominated author of Devil’s Creek and The Sundowner’s Dance

#books #cosmicHorror #horror #lovecraft #lovecraftian #reading #weirdFiction

LA CABRA EN LA BUHARDILLA

Viernes 13 de Febrero de 1931,

Ancud, Chile

Amada mía:

He llegado sin novedad alguna. El viaje en tren y barco ha sido extenuante, pero finalmente, lo he logrado.

Te escribo esta carta desde una pequeña posada en el centro de Ancud, es tarde en la noche y apenas llevo un par de horas en la ciudad.

Llueve a ratos, pero, dentro de todo, el tiempo me ha sido benévolo.

Te extraño profundamente, aun cuando han sido solo algunos días de viaje sin ti. Sin embargo, el pensar en estar solo en estas tierras pudiendo compartirlas juntos, me parece tan soso. Sin duda caminar juntos por la ribera parece más agradable en los próximos días.

Mañana iré a ver la casa y en unos días más te escribiré mis apreciaciones. De cualquier modo, Ancud promete ser un agradable lugar para vivir

Siempre tuyo

Francisco

#Cuento #Lovecraft #Terror #Ancud #Chile

En janvier, l'idée de faire un scénario dans une fête foraine me trottait dans la tête, mais aussi l'envie d'aller explorer autre chose de Lovecraft, notamment, Les contrées du Rêve.

#roliste #lovecraft #scenariojdr #annees1920 #horreurcosmique #oneshot
3/5

"Miskatonic University Field Research, Central Europe, 1920s." Video version. Digital photo-montage with one of my Lovecraftian bas-reliefs. #lovecraft #cthulhu #weird
https://youtube.com/video/kgpUCcbAaeg
Miskatonic University Field Research, Central Europe, 1920s

YouTube
"Miskatonic University Field Research, Central Europe, 1920s."
Digital photo-montage, with one of my Lovecraftian bas-reliefs.
#lovecraft #cthulhu #weird
Lovecraft Investigations: The Call of Cthulhu

Something ancient is stirring. The Lovecraft Investigations brings H.P. Lovecraft's The Call of Cthulhu into the modern world — a new season of cosmic horror from the hit independent audio fiction show.

BackerKit

Retour à la Cité Sans Nom dans Hypnos ! L'accès anticipé est là, live avec le Dév.

https://yt.lostpod.space/w/7sXDvaWxwSuCRtapKCpozd

Retour à la Cité Sans Nom dans Hypnos ! L'accès anticipé est là, live avec le Dév.

PeerTube