Robert W. Chambers' collection of short stories may not have gained a wide readership when it was first published in 1895, but there were a few people who found its stories of a horror that drove people mad fascinating. H. P. Lovecraft based his Cthulhu mythos on this idea of a nameless horror that infects people's minds. The creators of the television show True Detective similarly found inspiration in its pages. If you're a fan of the weird, the horrific, stories whose terror hides at the back of the mind, this is the issue for you. Have you seen the yellow sign?
Robert W. Chambers' collection of short stories may not have gained a wide readership when it was first published in 1895, but there were a few people who found its stories of a horror that drove people mad fascinating. H. P. Lovecraft based his Cthulhu mythos on this idea of a nameless horror that infects people's minds. The creators of the television show True Detective similarly found inspiration in its pages. If you're a fan of the weird, the horrific, stories whose terror hides at the back of the mind, this is the issue for you. Have you seen the yellow sign?