Scan barcode
montecrito's review against another edition
3.0
2.5 stars
beautiful, gorgeous, admirable writing. the rest wasn't for me.
beautiful, gorgeous, admirable writing. the rest wasn't for me.
gianlucafiore's review against another edition
5.0
The last Lovecraft's story and the very last i read of him myself. A fitting conclusion for a task, reading all Lovecraft's tales, that I started more than 20 years ago.
tianna_sk's review against another edition
dark
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.5
boborbot's review against another edition
4.0
Lovecraft never disappoints, except when he does. This one has the better selection over the two previous collections, with Cthulhu-mythos staples like The Shadow Over Innsmouth and Pickman’s Model. That said, I found his earlier works of “dreamland” rather lacking and rambling, being more of One Damn Thing After Another that too much old fantasy-scifi falls into.
These collections thus far seem to me the most comfortable, affordable and among the best looking (ever the vain one) options for catching up on lovecraft’s work.
These collections thus far seem to me the most comfortable, affordable and among the best looking (ever the vain one) options for catching up on lovecraft’s work.
rsqoop's review against another edition
4.0
The Haunter of the Dark is a fascinating story. The ending for me was a bit underwhelming and some parts of the story are unclear, but besides those aspects I'd say it's definitely worth reading.
skeptic_hecate's review against another edition
5.0
I love how H.P. Lovecraft describes places, I found myself inside the church and now I want to recreate it on my Animal Crossing island.
redsg's review against another edition
3.0
(2.5/4 upscaled to a 3/5)
I was admittedly a little worried when I began reading “The Haunter in the Dark”. It’s opening was reminiscent of “Pickman’s Model,” a tale that I was not the biggest fan of, and even if I was, I’ve always been apprehensive of rehashed approaches to storytelling- and given that this was the last piece of literature to ever be published by Lovecraft, it would be particularly inexcusable on his part.
To my delight, “The Haunter in the Dark” circumvented these warning signs and turned out to be an enjoyable enough thriller. It’s still got its fair share of problems though, and that begins with the premise and main character. The story is told via the flashback format, wherein the narrator discovers the diary of a recently-deceased artist named Robert Blake. Blake had been residing in the town of Providence, Rhode Island, during which time he grew fascinated with a haunted church in the distance. His consequent journal recounts what happened when he began to actively research and ultimately investigate the pious structure.
It's a simple exposition structure, but it has two flaws that tempered my interest, the first being the diary itself. The idea that this guy wrote down every single detail about every single thing that he did and thought is ludicrous, even by fiction standards. At least with Pickman’s Model, the narrator was present for the events described- here, the recollection of what transpired is so astute and spot-on that you might as well have told it in first person. I know some people will say I’m nitpicking here, but the foundational aspect of a story is everything, with each authorial POV providing its own pros and cons depending on the needs of the narrative, and let me say that there was nothing present in “The Haunter of the Dark” that warranted it needing to be specifically relayed in third-person omniscient. It is fully about Blake, his emotions, and his ultimate descent into madness, and that would’ve benefited significantly from a FP perspective.
The lack of development for Blake’s emotions, ironically enough, forms the basis for the second flaw, that being that I didn’t understand why he made the devil’s bargain in the first place (i.e. breaking into the church). He’s told repeatedly that the church has sinister aspects, yet continues to be drawn to it simply by the sight of it, which isn’t even made out to be all that visually-appealing. I get that Blake has a passion for all things occult, but he’s not an idiot like a teen character in a horror movie. He’s an intelligent guy who’s aware that there are real implications to even the craziest of mythos, but he continues to move forward with this plan to disrupt the town’s inhabitants. Lovecraft could’ve done a much better job depicting Blake’s thought process here, though, to my previous point, the limitations of doing a frame story may have played a part in why he was unable to achieve that.
It may seem like nitpicking, but good character motivations are the basis of strong characterizations. If you can’t understand why someone is doing something then you can’t get invested in their journey. Luckily, the writing kicks into high gear once Blake finally enters the church. Lovecraft’s descriptions of the interiors constantly emphasize the amount of dust and cobwebs, yet it somehow doesn’t come off as repetitive. You get a real sense that this building once housed true evil, and Blake’s movements through it brought back good memories of past video games and stories I played/read involving normal people gathering the courage to enter a dark netherworld.
Blake’s actions in the church trigger a series of events that, while I’m not going to go into heavy detail about, do result in the titular Haunter to come out of its eternal slumber. Like other Cthulu-type creatures, Lovecraft withholds details about it in order to let the reader’s imagination make it out to be worse than it is. Unfortunately, as he has done in prior tales, Lovecraft fails to provide enough baseline descriptors to make it seem like an epically frightening behemoth. Now, I acknowledge that here I may be going in with a smaller piece of the pie as “The Haunter of the Dark” is a sequel to another short story called “The Shambler from the Stars” by Robert Bloch, and in that tale the same monster may have existed and been better visualized. Even if that was true, I don’t buy it as a valid excuse since every story in the Cthulu mythos is treated as more spiritual in succession than narratively. And given that Lovecraft has consistently had this failing beforehand, I don’t think it’s fair to blame everything on what transpired in “The Shambler from the Stars.”
Anyway, the events that happen after the incident feel realistic in terms of the reactions from the populace, media, and Blake himself. Lovecraft does a good job balancing the rationality of a scientific community with the inherent mysteriousness of the supernatural, and how, even though some things can be explained, it doesn’t mean that they were the right explanation. I liked how Blake was treated as a normal human being as well, really wanting to do the right thing but ultimately letting his emotional fear get the better of him.
This culminates in a solid climax that didn’t fail the tense build-up. “The Haunter of the Dark” is not the powerhouse swan song that acolytes of the iconic author will have wanted as there are major issues that come up, but it proved to be a nice read, and sometimes that’s all we can ask of books, even from the greats.
I was admittedly a little worried when I began reading “The Haunter in the Dark”. It’s opening was reminiscent of “Pickman’s Model,” a tale that I was not the biggest fan of, and even if I was, I’ve always been apprehensive of rehashed approaches to storytelling- and given that this was the last piece of literature to ever be published by Lovecraft, it would be particularly inexcusable on his part.
To my delight, “The Haunter in the Dark” circumvented these warning signs and turned out to be an enjoyable enough thriller. It’s still got its fair share of problems though, and that begins with the premise and main character. The story is told via the flashback format, wherein the narrator discovers the diary of a recently-deceased artist named Robert Blake. Blake had been residing in the town of Providence, Rhode Island, during which time he grew fascinated with a haunted church in the distance. His consequent journal recounts what happened when he began to actively research and ultimately investigate the pious structure.
It's a simple exposition structure, but it has two flaws that tempered my interest, the first being the diary itself. The idea that this guy wrote down every single detail about every single thing that he did and thought is ludicrous, even by fiction standards. At least with Pickman’s Model, the narrator was present for the events described- here, the recollection of what transpired is so astute and spot-on that you might as well have told it in first person. I know some people will say I’m nitpicking here, but the foundational aspect of a story is everything, with each authorial POV providing its own pros and cons depending on the needs of the narrative, and let me say that there was nothing present in “The Haunter of the Dark” that warranted it needing to be specifically relayed in third-person omniscient. It is fully about Blake, his emotions, and his ultimate descent into madness, and that would’ve benefited significantly from a FP perspective.
The lack of development for Blake’s emotions, ironically enough, forms the basis for the second flaw, that being that I didn’t understand why he made the devil’s bargain in the first place (i.e. breaking into the church). He’s told repeatedly that the church has sinister aspects, yet continues to be drawn to it simply by the sight of it, which isn’t even made out to be all that visually-appealing. I get that Blake has a passion for all things occult, but he’s not an idiot like a teen character in a horror movie. He’s an intelligent guy who’s aware that there are real implications to even the craziest of mythos, but he continues to move forward with this plan to disrupt the town’s inhabitants. Lovecraft could’ve done a much better job depicting Blake’s thought process here, though, to my previous point, the limitations of doing a frame story may have played a part in why he was unable to achieve that.
It may seem like nitpicking, but good character motivations are the basis of strong characterizations. If you can’t understand why someone is doing something then you can’t get invested in their journey. Luckily, the writing kicks into high gear once Blake finally enters the church. Lovecraft’s descriptions of the interiors constantly emphasize the amount of dust and cobwebs, yet it somehow doesn’t come off as repetitive. You get a real sense that this building once housed true evil, and Blake’s movements through it brought back good memories of past video games and stories I played/read involving normal people gathering the courage to enter a dark netherworld.
Blake’s actions in the church trigger a series of events that, while I’m not going to go into heavy detail about, do result in the titular Haunter to come out of its eternal slumber. Like other Cthulu-type creatures, Lovecraft withholds details about it in order to let the reader’s imagination make it out to be worse than it is. Unfortunately, as he has done in prior tales, Lovecraft fails to provide enough baseline descriptors to make it seem like an epically frightening behemoth. Now, I acknowledge that here I may be going in with a smaller piece of the pie as “The Haunter of the Dark” is a sequel to another short story called “The Shambler from the Stars” by Robert Bloch, and in that tale the same monster may have existed and been better visualized. Even if that was true, I don’t buy it as a valid excuse since every story in the Cthulu mythos is treated as more spiritual in succession than narratively. And given that Lovecraft has consistently had this failing beforehand, I don’t think it’s fair to blame everything on what transpired in “The Shambler from the Stars.”
Anyway, the events that happen after the incident feel realistic in terms of the reactions from the populace, media, and Blake himself. Lovecraft does a good job balancing the rationality of a scientific community with the inherent mysteriousness of the supernatural, and how, even though some things can be explained, it doesn’t mean that they were the right explanation. I liked how Blake was treated as a normal human being as well, really wanting to do the right thing but ultimately letting his emotional fear get the better of him.
This culminates in a solid climax that didn’t fail the tense build-up. “The Haunter of the Dark” is not the powerhouse swan song that acolytes of the iconic author will have wanted as there are major issues that come up, but it proved to be a nice read, and sometimes that’s all we can ask of books, even from the greats.
theneverendingtbr's review against another edition
dark
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
"From even the greatest of horrors irony is seldom absent."
So I'd already read most of the collected stories in Volume 3, as most of them were in the Necronomicon and I've read about 80% of that one - which I'm going back to right now to finish it.
Most of the stories in Volume 3 of the collected stories are very well known ones, such as The Colour Out of Space, Herbert West - Reanimator, The Shadow Over Innsmouth and The Statement of Randolph Carter which I'd previously read so I skipped them.
The ones I hadn't read before were The Other Gods, Polaris, The Horror at Red Hook and my favourite of this bunch of unread ones was the brilliant The Shunned House.
Now back to finish Necronomicon - The Best Weird Tales of H.P. Lovecraft, which I bought back in 2014 but haven't finished because it's one of those Barnes and Nobles type books that weigh a ton and make reading awkward BUT I'm going to make this my final attempt to finish it - there's a few stories left.
Then onto finish Eldritch Tales after that and that's me done. 😌👌
brian's review against another edition
4.0
A good selection of Lovecraft's stories.
Most of these have links to his Cthulhu mythos, and feature sanity clawing horrors from beyond space and time.
Some of them seem overly verbose, but if you're getting paid by the word then it's not surprising when an author crams in long descriptions. It's also the downfall of many stories as you can see the twists coming from a mile away.
A good book for anyone who likes pulp-style horror.
Most of these have links to his Cthulhu mythos, and feature sanity clawing horrors from beyond space and time.
Some of them seem overly verbose, but if you're getting paid by the word then it's not surprising when an author crams in long descriptions. It's also the downfall of many stories as you can see the twists coming from a mile away.
A good book for anyone who likes pulp-style horror.
ktxx22's review against another edition
3.0
Not one of Lovecraft's best works. I love Lovecraft's endings but this one lacked the usual punch they pack. Meh. But the writing was excellent!!