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Lovecraft's Legacy: A Centennial Celebration of H.P. Lovecraft
 
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Lovecraft's Legacy: A Centennial Celebration of H.P. Lovecraft (Paperback)

by Martin H Greenberg (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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From Publishers Weekly

No works by the eponymous legator himself are included in this tribute to the master of horror in his centennial year. His "legacy" is the theme around which these 14 stories are assembled, with an introduction by Robert Bloch, who acknowledges his personal debt to Lovecraft, and afterwords to each of the tales by such authors as Gene Wolfe, Hugh B. Cave and Ed Gorman. Gahan Wilson's "H.P.L." manages to sustain Lovecraft's antiquated and baroque style. F. Paul Wilson invokes the concept of "cosmic horror" in the afterword to final story, "The Barrens . " Indeed, the progression of the stories suggests that they were arranged to lead up to this "concept of another reality impinging on ours," giving rise to an all-encompassing fear that lies beyond humanity's comprehension. These tales feature, among other things, maggots eating the eyes of dead bodies, cancerous monsters consuming the world, aristocratic schemers in pursuit of immortality, out-of-body travel, demons resurrected, murderous lizards, voodoo, ghouls and soulsuckers. Of generally high caliber, this homage itals as per intro to the master is an imaginative collection.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Library Journal

Most modern horror practitioners acknowledge H.P. Lovecraft as one of the major forces sparking their own fascination with the genre. To celebrate the centennial of his birth, the editors have collected new stories paying tribute to his influence, each followed by a brief afterword explaining what Lovecraft means to the author. In paying homage, the writers for the most part have wisely followed the counsel of Robert Bloch's informative introduction: avoiding obvious imitation of Lovecraft's verbose and rather dated style, they instead emulate his spirit in dealing with concepts and beings so vast and alien that the fact of their very existence is nearly beyond human comprehension. Such well-known authors as Graham Masterton, Gene Wolfe, and Brian McNaughton contribute tales varying in tone from macabre to eerie, melancholy, even whimsical, providing something a little different for today's horror fan.
- A.M.B. Amantia, Population Crisis Committee Lib., Washington,
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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3 Reviews
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2.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars hardly his legacy, April 10 2003
some of the stories here are not in any way connected to Lovecraft. Wolfe's story here is interesting, but doesn't really get to be horrible. a story about out-of-the-body experiences is pretty good, but something seems amiss in the ending. a story about a stuffed animal amused me. also included are some mediocre stories, and also some really dull stories. the collection is perhaps not the worst in history, but you can easily do better.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Mediocre, Oct 29 2001
By Nicholas R. Hunter (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Lovecraft "tribute" volumes appear to be developing into a sub-genre all of their own and this book is...definitely one of them. I leave it to the English major to define the difference between pastiche and plagiarism, to distinguish between stories influenced by, written in homage to, or containing ideas directly stolen from Lovecraft. All these are represented in this volume, as well as a couple of tales that seem to have no connection to Lovecraft's work at all.

Of the thirteen stories collected within, four or five are memorable. Three of the stories--arguably the three best--Gene Wolfe's genuinely chilling "Lord of the Land", Gahan Wilson's whimsical fantasy "H.P.L.", and F. Paul Wilson's "The Barrens"--have also more recently appeared in the Arkham House collection "Cthulu 2000." Also worthy of mention is Brian McNaughton's darkly humorous "Meryphillia", possibly more reminiscent of Clarke Ashton Smith's oeuvre than of Lovecraft's, and Mort Castle's Poe-esque "A Secret of the Heart."

There is a touchingly affectionate introduction by Robert Bloch and a short afterword by each author, sharing a little of what Lovecraft meant to him (unsurprisingly, all the authors are "hims").

If you have already read the three volumes of Lovecraft's work in print, the collection of his revisions "The Horror In The Museum And Other Tales," the two Arkham House tribute volumes "Tales Of The Cthulu Mythos" and "Cthulu 2000," and you still want more, perhaps this book will fit the bill.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A very welcome addition to the HPL universe, Nov 17 1998
Like all short story collections, this one has varying levels of quality. The average is so high, however, that it's well worth picking up if you're a fan of horror, mystical SF, or especially a Lovecraft fan. The stories show the influence of the Great Old Ones in Elizabethan England, the space program, the pine barrens of New Jersey and astral space in dreams. And, in the standout story of the book (H.P.L. by Gahan Wilson), Lovecraft appears as a character, as do Clark Ashton Smith and many, many, many bad things from his works. Of special interest to fans of Edgar Allan Poe is the first story in the collection, which ties the cosmology of Poe's stories together with Lovecraft's, repaying the obvious debt to Poe all writers of the macabre incurred since the 1800s. Buy this book.
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