Snag The Unspeakable And Others Conceived By Dan Clore Accessible In Publication

is more imagination in a page of Clore than there is the entire oeuvre of Stephen Kingand you can toss in most of the other "mainstream" writers who wrote alleged "horror" fiction, but in fact produce reams of tedious melodrama.
If you like Clark Ashton Smith, or Lovecraft, or Bierce, or maybe even Borges, Clore should be of interest, but he is really sui generis.
Be prepared for large doses of misanthropy and scatology, however, Finally purchased this nice, strange collection of stories, Wonderful collection, if not for everybody's taste,

Since Wildside Press stopped having this book earlier this year they didn't think it sold well enough, I guess, I've been so fortunate that the author has agreed for me to try and reprint it through my own small press company, H.
Harksen Productions. It's going to be the first oneman collection in English from me I am really excited about it,

The revised amp edited reprint from me will see publication early, Right now we are working on getting the right illustrator onboard: What is refreshing in Clore's work is a misanthropy as rare in literature as the Asianic style itself.
Here one can only look to some of the darkest satirists of the past two millenniaJuvenal, Jonathan Swift, Arthur Schopenhauer, Ambrose Bierce, and Shirley Jackson almost exhaust the catalogue.
The idea that we are required to extend benevolence to human beings merely because they are human beings is one of the deepest and most irrational prejudices in human thought.
Let us recall Lovecraft: "may not all mankind be a mistakean abnormal growtha disease in the system of Naturean excrescence on the body of infinite progression like a wart on the human hand Might not the total destruction of humanity, as
Snag The Unspeakable And Others Conceived By Dan Clore Accessible In Publication
well as of all animate creation, be a positive boon to Nature as a whole" Whether Clore agrees with this remark is only for him to say but that misanthropy is at the heart of all the tales of Lord Weyrdgliffe can hardly be gainsaid.
S. T. Joshi, from the Introduction.