![]() ![]() Chambers got his start in weird fiction, and while his name isn’t as well known as Lovecraft’s, it’s not difficult to see how one built on what the other created.Ĭhambers’ horror tales aren’t tentacley like Lovecraft’s, but the emphasis on the unknowable and the madness it inspires is definitely there. Turn-of-the-century American author Robert W. Lovecraft’s tales, and with “The King in Yellow”, he goes one step further and adapts the work of one of Lovecraft’s forebears. Culbard brings to life a thrilling tale of horror that will make readers laugh and cry and tremble with fright. In this dangerously unputdownable graphic-novel adaptation, I.N.J. ![]() Lovecraft to Neil Gaiman, The King in Yellow is one of the most important works of American supernatural fiction. It’s a book that draws readers in with an irresistible yet innocent opening act, then drives them insane with the poisonous words of Act 2. Chambers’s classic piece of weird fiction are tied together by a play that brings madness to all who read it: The King in Yellow. ![]() The supernatural stories that make up Robert W. ![]()
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