Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy
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Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy
Best PDF Ebook Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy
Antarctica... a frozen wasteland of penguins, blinding ice and snow, and blizzards to kill the unprepared in minutes. But it is an ancient land, with ancient secrets, mysteries that humanity is only beginning to glimpse. HP Lovecraft introduced the world to the terrifying reality of this lonely continent in his famous novella, At the Mountains of Madness, and now a new team of intrepid authors follows in his footsteps.New dimensions of horror will send chills up your spine, from the pens of Ken Asamatsu, Glynn Owen Barrass, Pierre Comtois, Laurence J. Cornford, Cody Goodfellow, C.J. Henderson, Willie Meikle, Edward Morris, William Patrick Murray, Joe Pulver, Mark Rainey, Peter Rawlik, and Brian M. Sammons, with a special guest appearance by Weird Tales legend John Martin Leahy and an introduction by Robert M. Price.
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy- Amazon Sales Rank: #134477 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-05-19
- Released on: 2015-05-19
- Format: Kindle eBook
Where to Download Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy
Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Mostly Good By Jack-O-Lantern An interesting book, and mostly a really good read. As with any anthology it was a mixed bag. There were a couple spectacular stories, some that were good, a couple mediocre, and one really awful one. I'm not going to go through each story, as every reader's taste and opinions are different. As far as Cthulhu Mythos anthologies go, this is a pretty good one, and I would recommend picking it up and giving it a read. The good stories far outweigh the single clunker in the mix.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful. Pretty Decent AMM Mythos Tales By rampageous_cuss These 14 tales (plus intro) were all pretty OK, interesting but mostly not too well structured - too often they're too long. undermining pacing which throws off any real suspense. Most of the stories are relatively faithful to the original - a few new items get invented for the mythos, and there's sometimes more sympathy between the Old Ones and the shoggoths than the original tales would support. A few pretty good stories, none I'd call duds:Beyond the Mountains of Madness - Robert M. Price's brief intro - the origins and popularity of the original, and a celebration of, er, inspiration, perhaps.The City at the Two Magnetic Poles - What if Wilbur Whateley survived the library dog and brought on the Azathoth apocalypse? Glynn Barrass gives a sort of Resident Evil spin on the idea.The Second Wave of Fear - A fascinating depiction of the mentalities of the Old Ones and shoggoths culminating in the great shoggoth uprising of the Comachian. A little long, but very inventive.Second Death - An interesting attempt to spin a horror tale off the post-expedition trauma of 1931-survivor Charles Danforth. Not as well structured as it could be - the story meanders, throwing off the pacing and undermining the suspense, a pity because the ending is pretty good.Beneath the Mountains of Madness - Nearly the best of the collection, but a trifle long. If the shoggoths are still in their pits, what are they doing there?The Continent of Madness - Nazis at the pole! Another Little-Shop-of-Horrors take on shoggoths. A little too much hardware detail for my taste, a little too long.Gedney - A man claiming to be the lost Dyer-expedition team member is found during the Starkweather-Moore expedition. Another conceptually-interesting story that takes a little too long to come to the point - where there's too much guesswork, not enough realization.The Pleasure in Madness - Set in the present, a Miskatonic University prof and his bodyguard travel to the Antarctic where they learn that a secret government base has been built within the mountains of madness - but where exactly is THAT? Again, a cleverly conceived story that takes a little too long to come to the point - yet the ending seems rushed, so to speak.A Biting Cold - Basically the same as The Continent of Madness, but better structured, with US servicemen instead of Nazis, and with a heroic ending. Heavy on the gore and some foul language, just so's you know.Garden of the Gods - My favorite of the stories, though kind of similar to the previous and a little longer than ideal. An Old One is discovered in South America, and an injured commando and his Yithian handler must take it and its minions on. Oddly, Goodfellow throws in lots of hooks, but doesn't do much with them.The Danforth Project - Another modern-tech spin on just how come no one has been able to find those sneaky Mountains of Madness!Tekeli-Li - A little too artsy and hard to follow for me, but an interesting idea; "At the Mountains of Madness" as a script for "The Twilight Zone," interspersed with the considerations of scriptwriter Chuck Beaumont.Static - A good, tight, tongue-in-cheek sci-fri of the "I mentioned to the pilot of the Sea Stallion that I got my Magic Arts degree at Yale, and it turned out so did she" school.Into the Black - I say! A British expedition sets off for the MM, but things go bloody wonky, dash it all!In Amundsen's Tent - An actual Weird Tale from a 1928 edition - ah, the old school. Leahy - I'd never heard of him before! Members of the Sutherland Expedition find a tent far from the track of Amundsen and Scott. What did the tent contain? A very good piece of horror, though the vein has perhaps been overworked since.
18 of 23 people found the following review helpful. Worth the Hike if you like Adventuring By Dave Anderson Today I review BEYOND THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS, from the still-new Celaeno Press, who also recently published a King in Yellow anthology. They've come on the scene with the type of author line-up of other top-tier specialty presses like Dark Regions or Chaosium which I find to be a very good business plan, as it's probably the only way to survive in this competitive market. Readers who seek out this type of material quickly scan and pass over inferior material and seek out the best, in this case, Mythos stories, leaving any anthology that doesn't bring its A-Game behind. There are now hundreds of Lovecraftian anthologies out there, heralding in a golden age of Mythos Fiction but also a golden age of spam.Some good anthologies would be the Black Wings series, the Cthulhu Unbound series, the Book of Cthulhu series, the Dead but Dreaming series, and independent releases from presses like Chaosium or the like, usually in a themed form (Clowns of Cthulhu, etc.). I can confidently say that this new press can be at least put on your watch-list if you enjoy top shelf fiction of this particular genre. Par for the course, it's a themed anthology, which as long as you the reader like the theme, that's fine. Themed anthologies are only troubled when the theme doesn't interest a reader, so choose the theme wisely?Everyone likes the tale AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS. There isn't a reader who has come across it that didn't like it as long as they gave it a fair chance, it's a classic piece of literature, and a truly horrifying piece of fiction. I remember on that first read for me, it blew me away. No wonder greats like King were inspired by H.P. Lovecraft.A modern legend, still living amongst us but definitely a man who has played a role in the history of 'the Mythos', edited this anthology. Robert M. Price is one of the greats, and it's a real treat to see him continue to edit and also write fiction. So, by combining the MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS THEME with Robert M. Price's editing and anthology curating abilities, this new-born book had almost fool proof odds of surviving the 'wild'. These wisely chosen genetics do indeed help bare fruit for the tome, as there are many great stories that emerge from it.One of the book's biggest strengths is that Price has a blast editing this, which is apparent given the inclusion of the obscure IN AMUNDSEN"S TENT. When I saw that story in there, I knew Price was taking an 'auteur' route, in the sense that this was a project of art and passion and he basically was going to do what he wanted. My only negative comment on the story selection was perhaps that the variety wasn't large enough in scope, but at the same time, this isn't Cthulhu Unbound. The stories kind of HAVE to be in a certain vein. Which is why I would absolutely recommend it to ATMOM fans, fans of survival extreme weather type stories, fans of isolation type stories, or any other type of weather-themed fans out there.For the general Mythos fan I would still recommend it, but with perhaps the disclaimer that you might have to take breaks with it rather than session reading it if you aren't a die-hard ATMOM fan. I'm in the middle of a die-hard fan and someone who just knows about it and casually enjoys it, and I was able to read it through at a fast pace. There's A LOT of Mountains and Madness here, and if you're down for that, it's probably impossible not to enjoy. I'd rate it 90/100 on my review-scale which earns it a 5/5 on Amazon.Loved that there was a C.J. HENDERSON story in this one. I'm glad some of his work is still filtering it's way through the system. RIP Mr. Henderson.
See all 15 customer reviews... Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin LeahyBeyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy PDF
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy iBooks
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy ePub
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy rtf
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy AZW
Beyond the Mountains of Madness, by Robert M. Price, Glynn Owen Barrass, Sr., Joseph S. Pulver, Pierre V. Comtois, Pete Rawlik, Ken Asamatsu, Laurence J. Cornford, C.J. Henderson, Brian M. Sammons, Cody Goodfellow, Stephen Mark Rainey, Edward Morris, Will Murray, William Meikle, John Martin Leahy Kindle
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