The Children of Húrin, narrated by Sir Christopher lee.
WilloftheWest
Nyarlathotep... The Crawling Chaos...
After Cthulhu, Nyarlathotep is the most famous of Lovecraft's entities. In this prose poem he is named as the "soul" of the Outer Gods. To many, the notion of an Outer God who consciously takes a role in tormenting mankind is far more chilling than the blind gods at the centre of the universe, ignorant of mankind yet unfathomably powerful.
This is my favourite poem of Lovecraft. Nyarlathotep does not push mankind to maddening nightmare through means some would consider typical of Lovecraft: tentacles and titanic monsters. Nyarlathotep appears to his audiences as a Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt. Furthermore, he uses manufactured devices and the sciences to drive entire audiences to wailing madness.
I am reminded of the opening paragraph to The Call of Cthulhu: "The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position thereiin, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age." To me, this is the true horror of Nyarlathotep. Nyarlathotep is a god that knows humanity, our scientific process, and our place in this universe. He employs our own methods of understanding the universe to reveal a deeper, more horrifying truth to his audiences; a truth that leads to pandemic levels of nightmare and mass suicide.
Nyarlathotep is far and away my favourite Lovecraftian entity.
I love Celephaïs. It's always this story in the cycle in which, for me, the Dreamlands start to take shape. The story reveals a permanence to the world of Dream which is independent from the conscious thought of the dreamer. Another point which becomes important later in the cycle is the fact that the Dreamlands experiences a different passage of time. Indeed, ones experience of time in the Dreamlands can vary wildly depending on their locale. We saw this also in The White Ship; the lighthouse keeper spent many aeons in the lands of Sona-Nyl, where there is neither time nor space.
Celephaïs is also a very tragic story. Though often Lovecraft's characters are nameless, something particular struck me about Kuranes' dream-name being revealed in the first sentence while we never learn his name in the waking world. Kuranes drives himself to ruin in the waking world in order to experience longer visits to his dream city of Celephaïs. Ultimately, Kuranes makes a permanent journey to the Dreamlands. In the waking world the unnamed broken body of a "tramp" is abused by the sea, a stones throw from Kuranes' ancestral home.
For me, the best video game has to be Eternal Darkness for the Gamecube. It has an actual sanity system and, without spoiling anything: there are amazing side effects to having reduced sanity.
The best game in general is undoubtedly Call of Cthulhu by Chaosium. The seventh edition of the game is completely backwards compatible and so there exists 40 years of amazing horror scenarios.
My groups for CoC and Arkham Horror use The Call of Cthulhu Sessions on Spotify. Nearly 4 hours of moody jazz. Perfect.
I have the B&N 2011 Edition. It is beautiful. That and Gollancz' Centenary edition of the Adventures of Conan are easily my favourite books on my shelf.
Do you organise your collection? My digital collection is mostly unorganised so I rarely look at them. I keep my bookshelf tidy and organised and I find that my books are more eye-catching. If I'm having a slow day I'll just pick one up and read a couple of chapters. Eventually you end up reading your entire collection.
This past week I read A Dreamer's Tales by Lord Dunsany, and the short stories The Doom that Came to Sarnath and The Cats of Ulthar by H.P. Lovecraft. The latter are part of the book club at !lovecraft and the former to get some background on what Lovecraft was reading at the time.
To advance on this, the entire Karla Trilogy (of which Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is the first installment) is a fantastic Cold War spy trilogy. I'd recommend anything by John le Carré; he was an intelligence officer for MI5 and MI6. He left the service as a result of a famous double agent incident, which inspired Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.