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Orion

Rat Queens

Red Sonja

“Sword of the Reanimator” by Junji Ito

Fiction

Far Away & Never by Ramsey Campbell

The Necromancer Chronicles series by Amanda Downum

Griots: A Sword and Soul Anthology edited by Milton J. Davis and Charles R. Saunders

The Night Land by William Hope Hodgeson

Nameless Cults: The Cthulhu Mythos Fiction by Robert E. Howard, as well as plenty of individual stories, such as “The Slithering Shadow” and “The People of the Black Coast”

The Heretic Land by Tim Lebbon

Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser series by Fritz Leiber

“Masquerade of a Dead Sword” by Thomas Ligotti

The Dream Cycle of H. P. Lovecraft

The House of Cthulhu by Brian Lumley

The Throne of Bones by Brian McNaughton

The Elric Saga by Michael Moorcock

Jirel of Joiry by C. L. Moore

Sword and Mythos edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Paula Stiles

A Land Fit for Heroes series by Richard K. Morgan

Imaro by Charles R. Saunders

In Yana, The Touch of Undying, and the Nift the Lean books by Michael Shea

The Collected Fantasies 1-5 by Clark Ashton Smith

Darkness Weaves, Bloodstone, and Dark Crusade by Karl Edward Wagner

Tales of the Dying Earth by Jack Vance

The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe

Magazines

Beneath Ceaseless Skies

Innsmouth Free Press

Strange Aeons

RPGs and Board Games

Carrion Hill (Pathfinder Module)

Cave Evil

Chaos in the Old World

Cthulhu Invictus (Call of Cthulhu supplement)

The Complete Dreamlands (Call of Cthulhu supplement)

The Dying Earth

Swords Against the Outer Dark

  Video Games

Black Knight Sword

Bloodborne

Crawl

Darkest Dungeon

Demon’s Souls/Dark Souls series

Diablo series

Dragon Age series

Eldritch

Heretic/Hexen series

Inquisitor

Lords of the Fallen

Planescape: Torment

Shadow of the Colossus

Author Biographies

Natania Barron is a word tinkerer with a lifelong love of the fantastic. She has a penchant for the speculative and has written tales of invisible soul-eating birds, giant cephalopod goddesses, gunslinger girls, and killer kudzu, to name just a few. Her work has appeared in Weird Tales, EscapePod, Steampunk Tales, Crossed Genres, Bull Spec, and various anthologies. Her debut novel, Pilgrim of the Sky, was called “... a lush, dreamy fable — both vintage gothic, and modern mystery ... lovingly laced with magic and darkness from start to finish” by Cherie Priest. When not venturing in imagined worlds, she can be found in North Carolina, where she lives with her family.

Eneasz Brodski lives outside Denver with his wife and their two dogs. He was raised in an apocalyptic sect of Christianity, which has heavily influenced his writings. He produces a podcast of Rationalist fiction at hpmorpodcast.com, and blogs at deathisbadblog.com. His short work has previously appeared in Asimov’s Science Fiction, and he is currently working on a novel based upon this very story (“Of All Possible Worlds”).

Jesse Bullington is the editor of the Shirley Jackson Award-nominated anthology Letters to Lovecraft, and wears the influence of the Gentleman from Providence on the pages of his fiction. Under his own name he has published the weird historical novels The Sad Tale of the Brothers Grossbart, The Enterprise of Death, and The Folly of the World, and under the pen name Alex Marshall he has released A Crown for Cold Silver and A Blade of Black Steel, the first two volumes in his epic dark fantasy trilogy The Crimson Empire. He has published numerous short stories, some of them Mythos-themed, as well as various articles and reviews; a full bibliography can be found at jessebullington.com.

Nathan Carson is a writer and musician from Portland, Oregon. He is a founding member of the internationally touring doom metal band Witch Mountain. When not on the road, Carson’s byline can be found in Willamette Week and Noisey. Decades after discovering Lovecraft through the early eighties roleplaying scene, he has recently sat on panels at NecronomiCon, Cthulhucon, Bizarro Con, and Living Dead Con. His weird fiction has been published by Word Horde and lauded in Rue Morgue. A debut novella, Starr Creek, will be published in 2016 by Lazy Fascist Press.

Michael Cisco is the author of many novels, including The Divinity Student, The Great Lover, and The Narrator. His stories have appeared in The Thackery T. Lambshead Pocket Guide to Eccentric and Discredited Diseases, Blood and Other Cravings, Lovecraft Unbound, Black Wings vol. 1, and Aickman’s Heirs, among other titles. His latest novel is Animal Money. Michael Cisco lives and teaches in New York City.

Andrew S. Fuller grew up climbing trees and reading books, later dabbling in archery, occult studies, paleontology, theater, and heavy metal. His works include fiction in the magazines On Spec, Crossed Genres, Daily Science Fiction, The Pedestal; the anthologies FISH, Bibliotheca Fantastica, and A Darke Phantastique; the novelette The Circus Wagon; and the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival awardee screenplay Effulgence. He’s edited Three-Lobed Burning Eye magazine since 1999. He lives and writes in Portland, Oregon. You can find him online at andrewsfuller.com and Twitter @andrewsfuller.

A. Scott Glancy had played the Call of Cthulhu roleplaying game for decades before co-authoring Delta Green, a gaming supplement that marries the gritty spy thrillers of John le Carré with the cosmic horrors of H. P. Lovecraft. He joined Pagan Publishing in 1998 to work full-time developing new Call of Cthulhu products. Delta Green remains his first love. Little is known of Mr. Glancy’s career plans prior to his joining Pagan Publishing, save for his cryptic references to the collapse of Soviet Communism as “the day those drunken Bolsheviks fucked my employment plans into a cocked hat.”