The origin and “core” of the Mythos start of course with the collection 23 of Lovecraft’s greatest weird tales. In these stories, monstrous entities traverse the gulfs of time and space and humankind cowers in fright at the havoc they wreak.

Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos - (Suggested Reading Order)

(Click the post for extra info)

EXTRA - The Complete Cthulhu Mythos Tales by H.P. Lovecraft from Barnes & Noble

Mythos Anthologies

  • Hal-5700X@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you’re going to get the B&N collection get the 2011 edition (purple ribbon bookmark one). Because the 2008 version (gold bookmark) haves a ton of typos and spelling errors.

  • NegentropicMan@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Thanks for the SRO and the links, I greatly appreciate that. Do you have any proposal how to continue afterwards?

  • funnystuff97@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    And beyond this, there are plenty of Cthulhu-adjacent stories not authored by HPL that are fantastic reads as well. The Lovecraft wiki has some good examples and a nice diagram for what is colloquially deemed “canon”, if someone reminds me, I can link it here if so desired.

    I’ve been reading a collection of Innsmouth-related stories in a compilation aptly named “Shadows Over Innsmouth”, very great stuff. I can’t say it exactly emulates the Innsmouth feel, but I’m still loving what I’m reading so far. I do recommend it.