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19+ Works 538 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Kevin A. Ross

Works by Kevin Ross

Associated Works

Made in Goatswood (1995) — Contributor — 115 copies, 2 reviews
Blood Brothers (1990) — Contributor — 56 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1962-01-19
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

Quite good. Like many of these anthologies several stand out stories and a couple that are below par.
 
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PhilOnTheHill | 1 other review | Sep 8, 2019 |
Lets be clear, I wanted to like this, I did like a lot of it, but there was some parts that I found less quality than I would have thought. I know the amount of effort that it takes to put something like this together, and some of the short stories here are really fine examples. Scott David Aniolowski & Kevin Ross's efforts were the best of the bunch in my mind, but others just didn't hit the mark. Overall though, there was some great mythos, some good mythos, a smaller amount of indifferent mythos and few bad mythos. I would heartily recommend this & it's predecessor as well.… (more)
½
 
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aadyer | Sep 11, 2011 |
Dead But Dreaming was originally released in 2002 from Dark Tales Publication. There was an initial print run of 75 copies and then either sales were slow or the publisher tanked. I may have gotten the very last copy sold at the list price back in 2004. Until now, collectors have been paying exorbitant prices for used copies, up to $300. Now Miskatonic River Press has released a new edition of this marvelous anthology. I'll leave it to someone else to figure out what this might do to the value of the first edition copies and whether this edition will ever be a collector's item. I am ecstatic that interested mythos fans can finally see an affordable copy of what may be the finest anthology of Cthulhu mythos fiction in the modern era. I do not yet have my copy of the new book. It lists for $17.99. The new issue has a new afterward and authors' biographies. The original had 194 pages of text; cover art was a mysteriously evocative cephalopod eye; I can't figure out who created it. Editorial chores were performed by Kevin Ross and Keith Herber; they hit a homerun with this one. The book starts with an incisive essay by Kevin Ross that skewers everything wrong with run of the mill mythos pastiches and gives the underlying philosophy of the book. I found myself nodding in agreement with everything he wrote.

Epiphany: A Flying Tiger's Story by Stephen Mark Rainey - In this story a world war II pilot in the Pacific encounters an immense and unfathomable entity deep in the jungle. I believe this is the story Mr. Rainey later expanded into his novel Blue Devil Island (which is clamoring for attention in my to-be-read stack). This was a very well written story; I was pleasantly engaged.

The Aklo by Loren McLeod - Actually I found this story to be a little dull compaerd to thre rest of the book.

Bangkok Rules by Patrick Lestewka - And now with Bangkok Rules I began to get a glimmer that this was no ordinary anthology. This is a brilliant piece, compulsively readable, creepy and oozing Lovecraftian sensibilities. A hit man perhaps works for a different boss than he thinks. How I wish Mr. Lestewka would write a mythos novel.

Why We Do It by Darrell Schweitzer - I loved this one too! A sort of dorky college student brings a girl back home to observe his family's religious rites.

The Disciple by David Barr Kirtley - Three brilliant stories in a row! Please write some more mythos fiction Mr. Kirtley! At good old Miskatonic University some students come to learn arts other than the humanities.

Salt Air by Mike Minnis - I have always loved the fiction of Mike Minnis. I think there was a planned single author collection from Lindisfarne Press before that worthy company tanked. Salt Air is a wonderfully somber and evocative Yellow Sign story.

Through the Cracks by Walt Jarvis - The anthology moves from strength to strength with this cautionary tale of catching the attention of indescribable things that live in or world beyond our senses.

The Unseen Battle by Brian Scott Hiebert - In Tahiti, an escapee from the carnage of WWI is pursued to the ends of the earth b something noxious from the battlefield. Another good read.

Bayer's Tale by Adam Niswander - Adam Niswander wrote only a few mythos stories, which are in his collection of short fiction, Blurring the Edges of Dream. Bayer's Tale is the best of his work, although it does not stand out in such formidable competition. A detective investigating a strange mass murder is lead to a terrifying reality.

The Call of Cthulhu: The Motion Picture by Lisa Morton - What would happen if someone did make a motion picture The Call of Cthulhu, with an unexpected guest appearance by the title character, and it caused many more people to believe in it? This one also was pretty darned good.

Under an Invisible Shadow by David Bain - This was OK for me, at least in comparison to the stories that have come before. In this zombie apocalypse, the zombie bodies are collected by something indescribable.

The Thing Beyond the Stars by Robin Morris - For me this story worked pretty well. In the vastness of space there lurk entities that have less regard for us than we do an ant at a picnic.

Fire Breathing by Mehitobel Wilson - Another thought provoking story, where a dj finds out he is the instrument rather than the musician.

The Other Names by Ramsey Campbell (originally in Interzone Nov 98) - Wow. A simpleton finds a few copied pages of the Necronomicon when he goes into an old house on a dare. He learns how names can affect reality when spoken in the name of Daoloth. Beautifully written and it will make your flesh crawl.

Final Draft by David Annandale - How fitting that this astonishing work closes an astonishing anthology. I do not have the superlatives to do this story justice. It competes with A Colder War by Charlie Stross for the title of the finest Cthulhu mythos story of the modern era.

So, what to say? Most of these stories are brilliant, among the best of contemporary Cthulhu mythos works. All are good and worth your while. I urgently recommend this book to anyone who cares about Lovecraftian fiction and especially to those of you who are skeptical of HPL's mimics. No pastiches here; these writers have embraced Lovecraft's themes and put their own original stamp on them. You are in for a real treat with Dead But Dreaming.
… (more)
 
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carpentermt | 1 other review | Sep 21, 2010 |

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Associated Authors

Tom Lynch Author
Penny Love Author
David Barr Kirtley Contributor
David Annandale Contributor
Darrell Schweitzer Contributor
Walt Jarvis Contributor
Mike Minnis Contributor
Loren MacLeod Contributor
Robin Morris Contributor
David Bain Contributor
Ramsey Campbell Contributor
Mehitobel Wilson Contributor
Adam Niswander Contributor
Lisa Morton Contributor
Patrick Lestewka Contributor
Jason Eckhardt Cover artist
Santiago Caruso Illustrator
Lawrence Berry Contributor
Bruce L. Priddy Contributor
Jeffrey Thomas Contributor
Andrew Kelly Contributor
Ed. Erdelac Contributor
Pete Rawlik Contributor
Kelda Crich Contributor
Don Webb Contributor
Eric Red Contributor
Edward M. Erdelac Contributor
Cody Goodfellow Contributor
Christine Morgan Contributor
C. L. Werner Contributor
Sam Stone Contributor
John Shirley Contributor
John F. D. Taff Contributor
Mark Onspaugh Contributor
Earl Geier Illustrator
Lee Gibbons Cover artist
Daniele Serra Cover artist

Statistics

Works
19
Also by
2
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538
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Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
3
ISBNs
27
Languages
2

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