The story is a strange one – there are pod-like creatures with foul-smelling green blood, and giant, eye-less, waddling penguins – but losing yourself in it is pure pleasure. Happily, however, one can now experience his eccentricities, his pessimism, and his daring without having to wade through his prose: Lovecraft's 1936 work, At The Mountains of Madness, has just been published in the form of a graphic novel, written and drawn by INJ Culbard, whose adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes story, The Sign of the Four, I raved about earlier this year. Lovecraft isn't easy to read his language is archaic and convoluted, and you might not know half the time what he is going on about. Many of his books feature a grimoire (my favourite word ever) called the Necronomican, which was written eons ago by a man called Abdul al-Hazred in Sana'a, Yemen. A writer of horror and science fiction, Lovecraft's guiding principle was that the universe is incomprehensible and terrifyingly alien, and that there somewhere exists an abyss which, should we have the misfortune to gaze into it, will rob us for ever of our sanity. T he American writer HP Lovecraft, who died in 1937, has been called "the man who scares Stephen King".
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