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Wrapping up the month with a wistful Fritz Leiber piece - To Arkham and the Stars!

Special thanks to our reader - Andrew Leman of Voluminous!

Next up: a revisit of The Colour Out of Space!

Comments

Anonymous

Oh! I've actually heard of the Dusseldorf Monster before! He was one of the inspirations for Peter Lorre's child-murdering sadist character in Fritz Lang's film, M. Also, Colin Wilson has written at least one rather good Mythos tale, which I'd actually recommend for the podcast: "The Return of the Lloigor." It revisits the prehistoric horror of Mu with Wilson's own spin, while cheekily interlacing it with the fact that theosophical movements surrounding it are publicly-derided bunk.

Anonymous

Oh! Oh! Chad, if you wanna see the military try to exploit the Mythos, I *highly* recommend Charles Stross' "A Colder War," available free online! If you gents were to *ever* cover one other tale by a living author, I'd kill for it to be this one: http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/colderwar.htm

Anonymous

Oh, cool! I’m so stoked for your “Hypnos” and “The White Tree” re-reads!

Anonymous

It's interesting that you guys went with the weaponization of Henry Higgins. I was imagining Eliza Doolittle singing about the rain in Spain with such perfect diction that it caused the brains of the enemy to liquefy and dribble out their ears.

Anonymous

I think you mean "The Tree." "The White Tree" is an original episode of Dark Adventure Radio Theatre in which Inspector Legrasse fights the Ku Klux Klan.

Anonymous

The rain in Spain induces pain in the brain?

Anonymous

In my head, when the news of Peter Kurten`s execution came out, some guy somewhere stood up and declared "Now I am the King of the Sexual Perverts!" and then disappeared.

Richard Horsman

All I know about Peter Kurten is that Whitehouse dedicated an album to him, and it sounds pretty much like what you'd expect an album dedicated to a sex murderer would sound like (also I kind of like it, uh oh). Also in re the nameless narrator: I assumed it was supposed to be Lieber. If Lovecraft and his writing exists in the world of this story, than Lieber must too, since they were correspondents.

Anonymous

I feel like I was just at a party of folks exchanging in-jokes that I can recognize as jokes, but any laughing I'd do would sound forced. Because it would be.

Anonymous

As soon as your coverage finished, I went "...but what was the actual story?"

Anonymous

Wow was that a list of people, places and things. Schoolhouse Rock! Lovecraft Version

Anonymous

It turns out Eliza didn't learn to talk like a duchess but actually got possessed by an occult duchess ancestor.

Tomas Rawlings

Got to note the short story, A Colder War' by Charles Stross. Its an example of the 'what would happen if the military weaponised the Cthulhu Mythos'. It's actually also one of the best Mythos contemporary short stories imho. It's free online: http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/colderwar.htm

Anonymous

I really liked The Mind Parasites when I read it first as a teenager. The best thing that I found out about it over time was that Wilson wrote it to win a fight with August Derleth.

Anonymous

Wasn't it adapted into the British Horror film Life Force, with Sir Patrick Stewart?

Anonymous

I really liked everything, of course, but loved the music at the end! Is that yours Chad?

Anonymous

The assertion that "sexual-sadistic fantasies" are a normal part of being a man frankly disturbed me. I don't know what that was supposed to mean in context, but I don't like it. That said, Lovecraft did record a sadistic fantasy about Frank Belknap Long in a letter to James F. Morton. (If I can find that passage, I'll write it up.) What would Leiber's version of Wilmarth say to that?

Devin Trim

Was very interesting to hear Carl Jung get mentioned in the context of the mythos universe. I know Chad has mentioned Jung before, but I believe this is the first instance of one of the show’s authors doing so.

Devin Trim

And agreed, Lieber’s assertion for the normality of sadistic sexual fantasies surprised me too. Mr. Lieber, could we perhaps peek into your brain and your bedroom for a moment? It’s for the advancement of the literary arts....we’re sure you understand.

Anonymous

I find I’m too late to do anything but agree to this comment. Which I do WITH EXTREME SANCTION (which is surely the title of some militarized sequel somewhere).

Anonymous

Somehow the whole sexual-sadistic fantasies as normal just seems very 60s and 70s to me. I have no academic reading to back this up but there's something about the construction of American masculinity in the postwar-to-Watergate era that seems to tie into that. I think Watergate ends it with the ultimate controlling father figure of the Presidency undermined. Or I might just be blithering. Just a seat of the pants musing.

Anonymous

I liked the end of this because it spoke to the sense of wonder I always took away from Lovecraft's tales. Despite all the horror and madness and space monsters, there was always something so intriguing to me about the vastness and mystery of the Mythos. After reading Whisperer I definitely spent time wondering if it would really be so bad to be a brain in a cylinder, with all the sights of the cosmos spread out before you. As far as militarization of the Mythos goes, I quite liked Austin Grossman's Crooked. Admittedly, the actual militarization part is more in the background, but Richard Nixon fighting battles against cosmic horrors was just too delightfully bonkers a concept to resist.

Anonymous

I also agree you should check out “A Colder War” by Charles Stross as an example of alternate history and weaponizing the mythos.

Anonymous

Not a single mention of Batman or the Joker in an episode talking about going to Arkham. Disappointed. 4/5 stars.

Anonymous

I like to read this story through the lens of this being a support group for Mythos survivors who get together and with coffee by the door, everyone is drinking hard liquor and sharing experiences with the only people who could possibly understand what they've been through. Then at the end, they visit the first of their closed group to pass away knowing that eventually there will be no more survivors.

Anonymous

I have to say, this one really hit home for me. I mean all of us have spent some time in Arkham over the years. It was so nice to come back and just visit for a while. This is the first story that I've read that brought back the feeling of 13 year old me discovering Lovecraft for the first time. Leiber didn't write this story for Lovecraft, he wrote it for us.

Anonymous

Best episode yet! Keep up the good work😉

Anonymous

Colin Wilson..jn my mid to late teens I read 'The Strength to Dream' and 'The Outsider' I have the faint (and faintly embarrassing) memory of having some sense 'The Outsider' was going to reveal a Great Truth about life. I remember mounting excitement and subsequent disappointment.