Eraserhead Press on Amazon

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Tomorrow's Cthulhu: Stories at the Dawn of Posthumanity

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These stories detail a near future sci-fi world, each taking place within the next fifty years or so. Together, they outline the beginning of... whatever it is that's next. This is a playbook for the coming apocalypse.

Also in hardcover with a delightfully velvety feel.

Ride the Star Wind: Cthulhu, Space Opera, and the Cosmic Weird

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Space madness! Fly away with us to the deeps of space for action and adventure, alien intrigue and bloody surprises. Join us out here where all things alien and weird flow freely. Dive headlong into spaceships and monsters, tentacles and insanity, determined struggle and starborne terror. Whether sprawling across civilizations or tightly focused and personal, these tales paint a psychedelic vision of strange proportions and wondrous possibility.

Also in hardcover with a delightfully velvety feel.

It Came from Miskatonic University: Weirdly Fantastical Tales of Campus Life

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Come visit this fascinating New England university—where science and magic, tradition and experimentation go hand in hand—and the quiet, secretive locals on which it relies.

Includes "My Miskatonic," which presents some of those strange people you might bump into on the streets of Arkham.​

Also in hardcover with a delightfully velvety feel.

Children of the Fang and Other Genealogies by John Langan

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John Langan, author of the Bram Stoker Award-winning novel The Fisherman, returns with a new book of stories.

Stonefish by Scott R. Jones

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A missing tech mogul…
…a jaded reporter…
…a damaged AI returned from a horrifying reality…
…and something lurking in the woods.

When journalist Den Secord is tasked with locating enigmatic tech guru Gregor Makarios, he soon finds his understanding of reality under threat. At the edge of the world, surrounded by primeval forests, in the paradisiacal environs of Gregor’s hi-tech hermitage, Den learns of the true nature of our Universe.

This is the way the world ends.

A Spectral Hue by Craig Laurance Gidney

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For generations, the marsh-surrounded town of Shimmer, Maryland has played host to a loose movement of African-American artists, all working in different media, but all utilizing the same haunting color. Landscape paintings, trompe l’oeil quilts, decorated dolls, mixed-media assemblages, and more, all featuring the same peculiar hue, a shifting pigment somewhere between purple and pink, the color of the saltmarsh orchid, a rare and indigenous flower.

H. P. Lovecraft: Letters to Family and Family Friends

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H. P. Lovecraft is not usually thought of as a “family man,” but he was in fact very close to his mother (until her death in 1921) and especially to his two aunts, Lillian D. Clark and Annie E. P. Gamwell, with whom he shared living quarters for much of his adult life. This volume includes, for the first time, the complete and unabridged correspondence—amounting to more than 450,000 words—written by Lovecraft to his mother and aunts. It provides unprecedented glimpses into the most minute details of his daily life and is therefore unlike any other letters Lovecraft ever wrote.

Clark Ashton Smith: The Emperor of Dreams (Documentary)

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Clark Ashton Smith was a poet, fantasist, sculptor, and painter. While mostly remembered today for his pioneering work in 1930s pulp magazines alongside H. P. Lovecraft, he is considered by many to be the last great Romantic poet and a unique visual artist with a large range of work in the outsider vein.

I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H. P. Lovecraft

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In 1996, S. T. Joshi's H. P. Lovecraft: A Life was published to universal acclaim. Joyce Carol Oates called it the "definitive" biography, and it won the British Fantasy Award and the Horror Write Sers Association Award. But that 1996 edition was abridged from the manuscript that Joshi wrote in 1993-95; in all, more than 150,000 words were cut for space reasons.

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