Ratings52
Average rating3.5
Never has a sub-genre been so closely associated with a single individual as cosmic horror is with H.P. Lovecraft. From the intricate world-building in A Song of Ice and Fire's Greyjoy plotline to the haunting atmospheres of FromSoftware's Bloodborne and Elden Ring, and even the darkly comedic realms of South Park “The Coon saga,” Lovecraft's influence permeates the creative landscape of many of my favorite works. Yet, despite this widespread influence, I had never felt compelled to explore his writings–until today.
3/5
A perfect introduction to Lovecrafts work (Also one of his earliest)
Tells the story of a man during the Great War who comes into contact the the Great Old One, Dagon, and goes mad from it. It perfectly encapsulates lots of what people love from Lovecraft, the mythos, contact with a god-like horrific entity, fear of the unknown, strange occurrences, madness, the description of things too strange for a human to describe to another or even understand himself.
Overall an excellent short story, a quick read (only 6 pages in my edition! [part of a set]), and an excellent intro to Lovecraft.
A short story that was apparently one of the author's earlier works. Despite its short length, it's obviously Lovecraft's style. The build-up to tension, an eerie setting, and a did-it-really-happen effect.
Given that I've read the more substantive later works, this one feels like unexplored potential. The story went by too quickly and ended too soon. I think there's the potential it could've been expanded more. But then again, it might've achieved a different effect.