In „Black Wind Blowing”, Howard lays it on so thick I half suspected he was trying to do a spoof on the genre. But then, his normal storytelling was always full of bizarre images, hyperactive violence and heavy use of adjectives so this story is probably just an extreme example. It helps too, that „Black Wind Blowing” has enough wild premises to build at least two or three effective horror stories on. If you’re not moved by what’s going on at the moment, by the next page the story has shifted gears in a weirder direction.
Anthology of Cthulhu Mythos by H. P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard (25 Books). Illustrated
H. P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard
bookDig Me No Grave. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Thing on the Roof. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Fire of Asshurbanipal. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Haunter of the Ring. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Challenge from Beyond. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Shadow Kingdom. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Children of the Night. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Gods of Bal-Sagoth. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookPeople of the Dark. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookThe Black Stone. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
bookWorms of the Earth. Illustrated
Robert E. Howard
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