Necroscope by Brian Lumley, cover by Bob Eggleton, interior by Dennis Nolan (1988)
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The occultic detective, professional numerologist and white magician is here at your service and ready to answer your questions…
Titus Crow
Crow is made by @aeternal-nightmare
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A moving and amazing review of Codex Sohrakia: The Gifted Dark. My heart is full! https://www.amazon.com/Codex-Sohrakia-Gifted-KM-Taylor-ebook/dp/B0CLJ5TVVD/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?crid=C0MOX0ALHQMK&keywords=codex+sohrakia+the+gifted+dark&qid=1698775873&sprefix=codex+soh%2Caps%2C71&sr=8-1
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New used books!
I sold one book this month. That I can't find. So I'm in the red until they refund my shipping label.
I updated my used book store!
You can buy these (and more!) here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/talesresold
Thanks for looking!
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Brian Lumley - The Horror at Oakdeene and Others. (Arkham House, 1977)
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I love that neither of our heroes fit the Cliche Hysterical Lovecraft Protagonist mold so far, and that they do it in very different ways
Henri-Laurent de Merigny, Human With A Functioning Brain who knows he’s in a Cthulhu Mythos story and can see the fucking warning signs: Look dude we know the Cthonians are coming back for their monster eggs, so let’s save our skins and deny them their prize by throwing them in the damn sea and think no more about it
Titus Crow, Certified Baller: Or, y’know, we could use the eggs as bait
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I’m at my grandmas and there’s barely any kind of a good pencil
That’s my Titus Crow from the book lol
Not a big fan of Lumley, but this guy is kinda funny
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Fiction has given us a whole host of Harrys. There's been Harry Lime, as played by Orson Welles, Dirty Harry Callahan, as played Clint Eastwood, and a certain amount of 'Trouble with Harry' too! There's been superspy Harry Palmer, played Michael Caine; but most recently and notably there's been the phenomenally successful Harry Potter and his marvellous adventures at Hogwarts school for magicians, in the bestselling books and smash-hit movies that have left every other modern fiction novelist flounder, if not washed up, in J.K. Rowling's wake.
Myself, I'm delighted with Harry Potter! Not only has he entertained millions the world over - young people mainly, for whom he was designed for, but adults also - Harry has introduced many of them for the first time to the weird, wonderful worlds of fantasy fiction. And as everyone knows, children grow up and tastes change. Right now they are obsessed with this young man, with their Harry, and rightly so. But tomorrow and tomorrow?
Well, while the future is a devious thing, I think it only fair to say there's a darker Harry out there and far more adult magicks waiting. Already, ever more frequently, I'm getting letters from young readers whose elders have introduced them to my Harry, to Harry Keogh, Necroscope.
Brian Lumley, 2007
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