21 April 2012

Every dog has his story

THERE WAS A MAN who had a dog who had–for the good part of every day–never heard of H. P. Lovecraft, though this dog enjoyed his Will Cuppy, always licking his chops over the line, “The nuthatch cannot sing and does not try.” . . .

out today in the newest issue of the daringly heretical Lovecraft eZine

TABLE OF CONTENTS for Issue #13 - April 2012

Ecstasy of the Gold
by Stephen Mark Rainey

Scale Hall
by Simon Kurt Unsworth

The Dog Who Wished He’d Never Heard of Lovecraft
by Anna Tambour

The Ourorboros Apocrypha
by Jayaprakash Satyamurthy

Over the Hills
by Victor Takac

This Inscrutable Light: A Response to Thomas Ligotti’s “The Conspiracy Against the Human Race”
an essay by Brandon H. Bell

Lovecraftian Art
Eric Lofgren & Jonny Christopher Ledford

CREDITS

Co-editor: A.J. French

Kindle version: Kenneth W. Cain

Issue cover: Ronnie Tucker (text: Stjepan Lukac)

Story illustrations: Nick Gucker, Robert Elrod, Galen Dara, Steve Santiago

Story readers: Justin Zimmer, Morgan Scorpion, Bruce L. Priddy, David Binks

Publisher & Editor: Mike Davis

The stories are beautifully set, the artwork is delicious, and zounds! Each story is also presented in an audio version. "Ibsen" highly approves of Bruce L. Priddy's reading of "The Dog Who Wished He'd Never Heard of Lovecraft", and who am I to disagree?

Thanks, Mike, for giving me the opportunity! Writing this was so much fun, it must be illegal.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

CONGRATS, THXXXXXXXXXXXXX [loved this tale! !!], and YayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyY, fine fine stuff that one! !!

Bruce said...

Tell "Ibsen" I said "thank you" for his approval of my reading. I am proud and humbled at the same time.

anna tambour said...

Dear Anon. Thanks muchly! So happy you loved this shaggy tale.

And Bruce. I looked all over for your private email so that I could send you a personal note of thanks. So this is wonderful that you've dropped in here. We both love your reading, and the best thing is that we can listen to your rendition at any time now, even the most dark and stormy night. It's a great privilege to have one's story read, and to have it read by someone who throws himself into it, shows in every nuance of your timbres.
Drop me a line if you would care to. I'd love to encourage your artistry.

Adam Browne said...

It's so cheeky and cool that your story in a Lovecraft antho is about a healthy hatred of Lovecraft.

Such a great story - I loved how chthulhu becomes a sympathetic character...

Anonymous said...

http://storify.com/melikhovo/writing-tips-from-lovecraft

(Adam B)

anna tambour said...

Thank you! It's always so hard to find writing advice.