Posts Tagged ‘Chaosium’

Halloween Adventure & Cover Art Contest

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Chaosium is now accepting submissions for the fourth Halloween Horrors Monograph.

Each entry must be an original BRP adventure between 6,000 - 10,000 words. Text files or word documents only. Don’t submit PDF’s, quark files, etc. Don’t worry, 6,000 words is much shorter than it sounds!

Entries must be turned in before October 1st, 2008.

If you think you’re a good writer, or a good artist, then why don’t you head over to Chaosium and take a look.

Book Review: Frontier Cthulhu

Monday, August 4th, 2008

I’ve been a bit busy lately, so I’ve actually managed to finish two other books before even writing about this one… And this one in particular happens to be Chaosium’s “Frontier Cthulhu“.  As with most of Chaosium’s short story collections, I really enjoyed this one, although I will say that “Song of Cthulhu” and “Hard Boiled Cthulhu” were more enjoyable for me.  Maybe I’m just not all that big of a Westerns fan.

The Long Road Home” by Paul Melniczek, is a great story to open up with.  Following a group of Viking warriors, the story creates a scene filled with the unknown and peril.  This one does a great job at not being the standard Lovecraftian story in setting, creating a world, and horror intriguing and new.

In Waters Black the Lost Ones Sleep“, by Angeline Hawkes, is a great story stirring up the doomed colony of Roanoke with the Cthulhu Mythos.  Good story.  I enjoyed this one.

Now, “Where Men Had Seldom Trod“, by Lee Clark Zumpe, is a story of heroes, adventure, and fighting the evils of the horrific old gods.  We see this one set in the 1760’s following two members of a secret organization, one the teacher, and one the student.

And the stories just get better with “Something to Hold the Door Closed“, by Lon Prater.  This story actually has a good lesson in it.  Greed leads to one’s downfall.

Stephen Mark Rainey and Durant Haire’s “Terror from Middle Island” was a good read.  Nothing spectacular, but still worth reading.

Stewart Sternberg’s “Children of the Mountain” is another really good story.  A fur trapper traps something otherworldly and ends up paying for it.  I really enjoyed this one and the mixing of these unique creatures with Native American mythology.

They Who Dwell Below“, by William Jones is anotherone of the better stories in this compilation.  One word, “Rage”.

Scott Lette’s “Wagon Train for the Stars” is a decent story about a wagon train and the odd religious group they’re carrying.

Ron Shiflet created a rather good story with “Incident at Dagon Wells“.  Its also fun to see Dagon used somewhere other than on the ocean coast.

Robert J. Santa’s “Ahiga and the Machine” is one of my favorite stories in the collection.  Robert does an excellent job writing about a Native American who comes across something from outer space.

And what is any compilation about the New World without a story about a gambler?  Jason Andrew’s “The Dead man’s Hand” does an excellent job injecting the Lovecraftian mythos into the old west, gambling, and a deck of cards.

Jedediah Smith and the Undying Chinaman“, by Charles P. Zaglanis, is rather remeniscent of Robert E. Howard’s “Skull-Face”.  This story follows a gun slinging archaeologist who is hot on the heels of a Chinese priest of the dead gods who stole a disc from his museum.  The hero is strong and resilient, the Chinese priest dark and evil, and the girl, because what is any Howardesque story without a girl to fall for, is thin and beautiful.

Matthew Baugh’s “Snake Oil” pulls inspiration from the snake people.

Tim Curran’s “Cemetary, Nevada” takes place in… Cemetary, Nevada, a ghost town in 1892.  here we see a group of regulators following an outlaw only to find something got to him first.  This one is one of the star stories of the collection, and starts and ends in good ol’ Lovecraftian style with a letter written by the protaganist.

And for the last story, we have what has to be the most entertaining story of the bunch.  Darrell Schweitzer’s “The Rider of the Dark” takes Lovecraft’s mythos, smacks it across the head, dumps it in a pot, laugh’s at it, then stirs in a drunken aged cow poke, a young college student, Nyarlathotep, and zombie cattle.  If you only read one story, this one has to be it.

Over all, I enjoyed “Frontier Cthulhu“, and would recommend it to any fan of weird fiction, especially those with a hankerin’ for some old west stories.

You can find it over at Chaosium with a really decent price.

Secrets of Morocco

Monday, July 28th, 2008

Secrets of Morocco
In the remote reaches of the world are hidden secrets and dangerous mysterious.

Chaosium’s latest source book, “The Secrets of Morocco”, will be available and in stock August 25, 2008.  Head over to Chaosium for more details.

Review: Hardboiled Cthulhu

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Hardboiled CthulhuElder Sign Press’ “Hardboiled Cthulhu” is a great treat for fans of Lovecraft and pulp detective stories. It is a collection of unimaginable horror, leggy dames, and the stubborn men who charge up against both.

William Jones’ “A Change of Life”, a great pulp story, and John Sunseri’s Pickmanesque “A Little Job in Arkham” are both excellent stories, doing a great job with merging Lovecraftian horror into the gritty detective genres. And no other story in the collection has quite the Lovecraft ending as Robert M. Proce’s “The Prying Investigations of Edwin M. Lilliibridge”.

James Chambers’ “The Roaches in the Walls” is the star of the collection. Not only does it hold very well with the style of the old pulp detective stories, and to the horrific nature of Lovecraft’s terrors, but it’s also one of the most original and creative stories in the collection. Chambers wrote a fantastic story and I hope to read more from him.

Sometimes you fight your whole life for everything you believe is right and come up the loser for it. What keeps you going is the golden fragment of your past, that fading memory that stokes the last ember of hope glowing in your soul, because when that burns out - which it inevitably will - all that’s left is terminal emptiness.

- James Chambers : The Roaches in the Walls

I really enjoyed this collection. I could say something nice about just about every story in the collection, but I’ll leave it at this: This is a must purchase item for fans of Horror and Pulp detective stories.

You can find “Hardboiled Cthulhu” and more books from Elder Sign Press at their website.

New books from Chaosium

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

The Klarkash-Ton CycleChaosium has two new books for Summer 2008.

The first, “The Klarkash-Ton Cycle” is a collection of Lovecraftian stories from Lovecraft friend and fellow writer Clark Ashton Smith.   Just who is this “Klarkash-Ton” character?  Well, besides having been an Atlantean priest, the name was a joke on Clark Ashton Smith’s name that HPL used in stories and personal letter to Smith.  Those wacky weird fiction writers!
The second is a Zombie novel entitled “Voodoo Virus” from author William Jones, telling the story of a deadly virus and a post-apocalyptic New York City.

New Call of Cthulhu gaming

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Yog-Sothoth.com and “Papers Falling from an Attic Window” both have news of new game related goodies for Call of Cthulhu.

Head over to YSDC for news on Call of Cthulhu coming to the virtual desktop.

And click to PFfaAW for news on a new Chaosium Licensee

R’lyeh report for March 2008

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Chaosium News for March 2008.

Chaosium has more Malleus Monstrorum in stock.  A couple of books in the works, and conventions they’ll be going to.  And a catalog update.

Read more at Chaosium.

MULA: Shadows of War

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

MULA: Shadows of WarHere are four longer scenarios set in and around the Second World War. Each scenario offers a distinct setting and location though, roughly speaking, each gives players at least a glimpse of the Mediterranean Sea. There is no plausible way (we can see) of linking the scenarios into a campaign, but this is the idea: the situation of war is ideal for one-shot scenarios.

Read more at YSDC