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A fairly slender volume containing sixteen stories of liturgical Yog-Sothothery, The Dark Rites of Cthulhu featured only four authors previously familiar to me, so I was grateful for the appended "About the Authors" info. The stories are reasonably solid throughout. Some do sort of stretch the category of ritual magic, such as one concerned with martial arts ("Of Circles and Rings" by Tom Lynch). A few are detective stories oriented around ritual murders. There is considerable variety of flavor within the "magic" field, encompassing voodoo, online cult recruitment, and stage magic, among others.
Most of these tales don't bother with Arkham and Lovecraft country, though some do, and a few even go so far as to include or reference specific characters from Grandpa Cthulhu's "ritual literature" (so-called by Michel Houellebecq). The Lovecraft stories that most conspicuously served as references in this assortment were "The Dunwich Horror" (of course) and "From Beyond."
"The Dark Horse" by John Goodrich is set in a stars-were-right post-apocalyptic regime of human dispossession. Edward Erdelac's story "Black Tallow" lost points from me initially by misspelling the name Aleister Crowley, but ultimately redeemed itself with a credible representation of pathological contemporary ceremonial magic, along with lovely Club Dumas bibliophile fan service.
I read this book slowly over several months, since there is no continuity from story to story. It's a decent collection of new weird fiction built around specialized themes that are of particular to interest to me, and I was satisfied by it.
Most of these tales don't bother with Arkham and Lovecraft country, though some do, and a few even go so far as to include or reference specific characters from Grandpa Cthulhu's "ritual literature" (so-called by Michel Houellebecq). The Lovecraft stories that most conspicuously served as references in this assortment were "The Dunwich Horror" (of course) and "From Beyond."
"The Dark Horse" by John Goodrich is set in a stars-were-right post-apocalyptic regime of human dispossession. Edward Erdelac's story "Black Tallow" lost points from me initially by misspelling the name Aleister Crowley, but ultimately redeemed itself with a credible representation of pathological contemporary ceremonial magic, along with lovely Club Dumas bibliophile fan service.
I read this book slowly over several months, since there is no continuity from story to story. It's a decent collection of new weird fiction built around specialized themes that are of particular to interest to me, and I was satisfied by it.