For those who enjoy the illustrations. I can strongly recommend you Gou Tanabe's lovecraftian Comics. His style, somewhat similar to Juni Ito, nails the dark and morbid atmosphere in HP's stories perfect!
I disagree....Junji's style is more grotesque and visually nightmareish... Gou art style is more cleaner yet very dark and eerie. Both however will not leave your brains for days. They're so freakin good at showing what "horrors" the characters are going through, through their art and expressions. Best read their stuff at midnight, when the surroundings are still and quiet.
Nicolas thank you for the critiques getting a good word on this stuff is hard. First time going through lovecrafts stuff. Illustrations make these incredible.
@@cypresswillow2591 After reading The colour out of Space from Tanabe, i have to say that his style can be very grotesque, too. The slow descent into the madness, the malformation of the animals and family... One of the few manga that truly terrify me.
Guy: Finds a highly detailed and obviously literal pictorial history of a race of IRL Lizard People in an IRL Lizard People City. Also Guy: "Ah yes, religious/allegorical representations of humans!"
Even better, he finds the mumified remains of the creatures before the murals. I love Lovecraft's protagonists, they're incredibly bigoted and full of themselves while being preciously sheltered and naive.
@@kiryukazuma8089 read the stories, understand the words and then read up on Lovecraft himself. But short answer: bigoted towards anyone that isn't themselves, be they of the same race or another race, country, state, town, neighborhood, social standing education level time. The only group to ever be described as positive by any of his characters were aliens that switched bodies with other races and had a fascist society.
My god, this is the first time I'm discovering H.P. Lovecraft... All the wasted years... The illustrations and sound effects are awesome by the way! It really adds to the narration.
Lovecraft wasn't allowed on Reddit for a reason. Or, for you - "His comment was too horrible to describe. (I paused - hence the little *.* symbol and the capitalized letter of my next phrase or sentence. In that pause, I shuddered and decided to try and describe the ridiculous comment.) "It had no eyes. No hands. It had no tentacles nor a belly. It was just a comment. An empty comment. A hollow set of words that no one cared about from that moment on. And then I turned. And left the page. And left the page there, with that hollow comment and commenter pondering about the vast hopelessness of their existence."
That is called leaving an impression of it. He does the same with the horrible hybrids of THE FESTIVAL. You get to picture them anyway you can from it.
Josh I agree with you. Hpl had his limitations, but still I enjoy it for what it is because not everything has to be at the level of Kafka or Lautremont. And he's still way better than most sxxx coming out of Hollywood. Have you ever read Thomas Ligotti? Or comedy-horror stuff like "Dead clown barbecue" by Jeff Strand? Awesome stuff.
Thanks for posting. I learned to write suspense and horror by studying HP Lovecraft stories, and this one was particularly instructive. Listening to it in bed during a story brought back so many memories of my days as a creative writing student.
Lovecraft's masterful usage of English transports his writing above and beyond the ordinary; in the first sentence or two, the reader has already wandered far beyond familiar ground...
even though the detail is mushy and lack of any specification the MERE FACT that he tried to put anything remotely baroque or artistic on that ceiling mirror amazes me, the amount of time he must of spend making that big ceiling leaves me in awe, this man is truly a marvel of an artist
I found lovecraft decades ago, in darkened forgotten cellars beneath my collegel ibrary, an isolate spot in New England- and no i'm not making that up seriously I was in such a creepy place to read this stuff-but this is the first I've heard of this story. probably because it falls outside the usual Cthulhu mythos.
This story made me feel cold curious and cautious all at once. I felt like I could see everything he saw when I first read it. This was wonderfully illustrated!!!!
This was always one of my favorites. I have found myself rereading it, along with a few dozen others, over the years. I enjoyed your narration and the artwork. It was interesting to compare what I see in my mind eye to the renderings presented here. Thank you.
Exceedingly well done. I didn't look at the pics, just listened. The reader infused Lovecraft's prose with a poetry like I've never heard. Great stuff.
I love how the illustrator managed to interpret something that at times appears seal, crocodile, bull dog, cat. Much like a human with a large dome head, no nose and jaw like an alligator. I mean how the fuck do you interpret that?
Awesome. edit that's a really interesting interpretation of the city inhabitants; this has always been one of the few descriptions in HPL stories that I can never get a proper mental image of as it's just too obscure and disjointed, like the byakhee in 'the Festival'.
I just recently read this story and from my understanding the protagonist doesn't survive. From the last paragraphs I understood that the door closed behind him, ceiling the protagonist with the lizard people. Is my understanding wrong? Great illustrations, helped me visual the story better.
I wonder if Lovecraft is somewhere--maybe a spirit--and realizes posthumously how much his literature affected the world. I hope so. No great artist deserves to miss the impact his work creates.
In a way he never wished to become famous or leave an impact. He felt greatly art should be made for arts sake. Indeed he would hate how comercial and profitable his IPs have become. Moreso that Cthulhu is a sort of mascot and that merchantdice exists. However I do think he would like the fact that he is remembered, for he once wrote that he was certain he'd died and and writings would fade from the world leaving no impact whatsoever ever.
@@trapscancreate5760 No artist hates his art inspiring great amounts of people, artists hate the idea of catering their art to be palatable to the masses not their art being enjoyed by many. If something I believe in is being shared and appreciated it would make me happy, if I dilluted my art to become a greyblob to please everyone that is where I would feel hurt. Don't confuse despising populism with despising the populace.
I always wondered if I'd see an illustration of HP Lovecraft's nameless city, for I read it several times. These illustrations are great. If only they were in color, but I'm not complaining- it's a great video.
I have begun this video only 30 seconds ago... Or was it two days.. I no longer know.. but.. but this strange feeling.. this strange feeling tells me that this narrator has been the voice in my head this whole time..
Probably not the best thing to listen to while going for a walk in the night. Outstanding work though. I have always thought there had been hyper advanced civilizations prior to us
I find it helps to go read a summary of the story and then reread it with the summary in mind. It’ll highlight the stuff you missed the first time. Also Lovecraft has a lot of lore to untangle before you fully get his impact. He very often gave really veiled references to his other works.
This is going to serve as inspiration for my next D&D campaign: the adventurers discovering the ancient civilization of the kobolds. And likely not too dissimilar from their reactions, if they're like the sterotypical set of murder-hobos. Edit: No, even better! The players get to *be* the kobolds, living in a simple hunter-gatherer lifestyle while just trying to survive in a desperately hostile world. Then they come across the Ruin, and with this world-shattering revelation of their past, and of a future destiny that might yet be, the entire theme of the campaign changes.
The ancient ruins of Carthage are even more mysterious in aeons earlier than the Phoenician era. Something about what existed as life other than we can discover in fossils.
Lovecraft was a master of that unspeakable horror so beyond mere human ability to deal with it. Whatever his faults of racism, which is true and does appear in his writings though obliquely. When it confirmed how racist he was, it seemed the news that water was wet. I love how he could describe creatures which look at humans as nothing more ants. We barely register in their thoughts and we meet humans crumble in our insignificance and go insane. Lovecraft was the master of horror and otherworldly creatures. He always found a way to make it seem real and possible.
@Terry Summers You embarrass me, to think that anyone would hear anything you might say as representative of what a white man is truly like is just fucking disgraceful. You boy, are not worthy of calling yourself a white man; for you are pathetic & ignorant as all nine hells... If a true southern gentleman ever hears you spew some dumbass shit such as this in the real world you are very likely to get bitch slapped before you can even finish speaking, fool. Do yourself a favor and either find some enlightenment or shut all the way fucking up... Because,it is simply just a well known fact that an ignorant, punk-ass douchebag such as yourself, they should always know their role; and if they don't already know it then they must be taught the hard way that it definitely ain't for you to ever actually speak, at all.
The Sem'k are now immortal. The man was able to escape through the bronze door before it was closed and locked by the horned reptiles when they returned.
I have a name for the city considering it’s location and inhabitants “madinat altanin” that’s Arabic for City 🌃 Of Dragons 🐉 and for the cities inhabitants “sukkan altinin” or Dragon Dwellers rather fitting if you think about it (course it may also be The Iram Of Pillars)
@@deadeye9439 Do you mean that they worship the ancient Egyptian goddess Isis? Or do you mean that they're lizards who joined the ISIS that is the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria?
I can’t add a comment, so I’m writing here. This is of Lovecraft’s stories that go on and on and on describing weird stuff with no actual story or climax. Then it just peters out. The reader was very good though. Too bad he didn’t have something happening. The illustrator didn’t have much to work either.
I still don't understand is he stuck down there with the reptiles or did he get out and the door clack behind him also who could the reptiles traded with if they were so far from other civilization near the end also how did they find this deep cave some one please explain also what is he deep meaning of the story I know all the story have one like the rats in the wall been about early humanity and the facts that some things in life are best left buried , what am trying to guess is whats the meaning of the story am lost
The horned crocodilians (Sem'k) were enamored of endless life which at first they did with biology and at the end by making themselves living ghosts forever in that form. Certain similarities between THE NAMELESS CITY & AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS.
"AND DON'T COME BACK"-nameless reptiles
And that’s when he wakes up at night and sees them looking at him through the window.
I thiiiink the comment here is imitating what Lovecraft sounds like to be a parody not to agree with him.
@@darthparallax5207 Most likely. I do wonder if he mellowed later in life as I've heard he has though.
Made me laugh
Hannibal Hyde you shut up, you racist scumbag
For those who enjoy the illustrations.
I can strongly recommend you Gou Tanabe's lovecraftian Comics.
His style, somewhat similar to Juni Ito, nails the dark and morbid atmosphere in HP's stories perfect!
Check out my beats. There chill.
I disagree....Junji's style is more grotesque and visually nightmareish... Gou art style is more cleaner yet very dark and eerie.
Both however will not leave your brains for days. They're so freakin good at showing what "horrors" the characters are going through, through their art and expressions.
Best read their stuff at midnight, when the surroundings are still and quiet.
Thanx. Stuff to look for. Anything else in the same vein?
Nicolas thank you for the critiques getting a good word on this stuff is hard. First time going through lovecrafts stuff. Illustrations make these incredible.
@@cypresswillow2591 After reading The colour out of Space from Tanabe, i have to say that his style can be very grotesque, too.
The slow descent into the madness, the malformation of the animals and family...
One of the few manga that truly terrify me.
Guy: Finds a highly detailed and obviously literal pictorial history of a race of IRL Lizard People in an IRL Lizard People City.
Also Guy: "Ah yes, religious/allegorical representations of humans!"
Even better, he finds the mumified remains of the creatures before the murals. I love Lovecraft's protagonists, they're incredibly bigoted and full of themselves while being preciously sheltered and naive.
@@siegfriedmeyke6631 Bigoted towards there own race? lol
@@kiryukazuma8089 read the stories, understand the words and then read up on Lovecraft himself.
But short answer: bigoted towards anyone that isn't themselves, be they of the same race or another race, country, state, town, neighborhood, social standing education level time.
The only group to ever be described as positive by any of his characters were aliens that switched bodies with other races and had a fascist society.
@@siegfriedmeyke6631 so, lovecraft.
@@siegfriedmeyke6631 And they are so obviously wrong, even in the context of the story. It's almost like he was lampooning his own close-mindedness.
This seriously deserves more views
Quality over quantity, anon... =)
All of these stories do , these are fantastic !
I can see the influence this story had on Dark Souls and Bloodborne.
My god, this is the first time I'm discovering H.P. Lovecraft... All the wasted years...
The illustrations and sound effects are awesome by the way! It really adds to the narration.
Read Shadow Over Innsmouth. Such a great story, and an opportunity to experience Lovecraft's excellence.
Julien Bongars The Randolf Carter series is my favorite. Highly recommend. Horrorbabble has done a narration of the complete work.
Driving my empty Uber cab around this Coronae induced deserted streets, scaring myself even more with Lovecraftian madnesses.
Try Richard Matheson "I am a legend"
r u sure you're not driving on the road of sunken city?
do any of your riders ask you to keep it going?
H.P. Lovecraft Greg city
@@AcheLone Good one
“Too horrible to describe “, then proceeds to describe them
In case you didn't know, it's a story.
Thats Lovecraft for you🤭
Lovecraft wasn't allowed on Reddit for a reason. Or, for you - "His comment was too horrible to describe. (I paused - hence the little *.* symbol and the capitalized letter of my next phrase or sentence. In that pause, I shuddered and decided to try and describe the ridiculous comment.)
"It had no eyes. No hands. It had no tentacles nor a belly. It was just a comment. An empty comment. A hollow set of words that no one cared about from that moment on. And then I turned. And left the page. And left the page there, with that hollow comment and commenter pondering about the vast hopelessness of their existence."
That is called leaving an impression of it. He does the same with the horrible hybrids of THE FESTIVAL. You get to picture them anyway you can from it.
Everytime lovecraft needs to describe something imaginative, it's always "beyond description."
ah yea....he was such a hack writer. Just go back to your Marvel and DC literature.
@@GrumblingGrognard hey come on marvel and dc seriously have some clever writing.
theQuestion626 😂🤣
@Karl Bush ....you’re going to start in with that MGTOW bullshit any minute aren’t you?
Josh I agree with you. Hpl had his limitations, but still I enjoy it for what it is because not everything has to be at the level of Kafka or Lautremont. And he's still way better than most sxxx coming out of Hollywood. Have you ever read Thomas Ligotti? Or comedy-horror stuff like "Dead clown barbecue" by Jeff Strand? Awesome stuff.
This is a damn near perfect reading, the ambience really enhances it!
The nameless City is talked of around campfires! I wanna be around that fire!!
Yo based pfp
I've heard great things about Lovecraft and I'm happy to discover the stories in this way.
Thanks for posting. I learned to write suspense and horror by studying HP Lovecraft stories, and this one was particularly instructive. Listening to it in bed during a story brought back so many memories of my days as a creative writing student.
Lovecraft's masterful usage of English transports his writing above and beyond the ordinary; in the first sentence or two, the reader has already wandered far beyond familiar ground...
even though the detail is mushy and lack of any specification the MERE FACT that he tried to put anything remotely baroque or artistic on that ceiling mirror amazes me, the amount of time he must of spend making that big ceiling leaves me in awe, this man is truly a marvel of an artist
I found lovecraft decades ago, in darkened forgotten cellars beneath my collegel ibrary, an isolate spot in New England- and no i'm not making that up seriously I was in such a creepy place to read this stuff-but this is the first I've heard of this story. probably because it falls outside the usual Cthulhu mythos.
The quote is from the Necronomicon itself.
This story made me feel cold curious and cautious all at once. I felt like I could see everything he saw when I first read it. This was wonderfully illustrated!!!!
Excellent narrator.
Great reading of lovecraft! Thanks. I live with in 10 minutes walk of 2 of the addresses in Providence where he lived/grew up. Great stories
This was always one of my favorites. I have found myself rereading it, along with a few dozen others, over the years. I enjoyed your narration and the artwork. It was interesting to compare what I see in my mind eye to the renderings presented here. Thank you.
Hope to see a lot more of these. Thank you!
They built this city on rock...
This was a great telling of the tale. Thank you
..... and roll
phenomenal work, deserves more exposure...
~I cannot imagine lovecraft wanting his material portrayed any other way than this.~
These videos are works of art. Thank you.
....Superb artistry...Colossal writer....
Exceedingly well done. I didn't look at the pics, just listened. The reader infused Lovecraft's prose with a poetry like I've never heard. Great stuff.
This and the Pyrmid story with Houdini are awesome.
I’ve named the city Greg.
Hail Micky Lord of Greg. I bring you tidings from the holy city known as Dave
Well I came from Philies
Old Greg!
Hi, Greg
No! It's nameless!
Excellent narration, excellent illustration. A really formidable tribute to the man. Well done.
Same as everyone else. This is fantastic! Thank you.
this is awesome
Terry Summers Trying to hard.
Well done 👍. Love it, thanks for your show.
I love how the illustrator managed to interpret something that at times appears seal, crocodile, bull dog, cat. Much like a human with a large dome head, no nose and jaw like an alligator. I mean how the fuck do you interpret that?
He gives you the impression and each reader can picture it themselves.
Even death may die great narration
I love all the metallic music happening in this nameless city
Thank you for the Gou Tanabe illustrations. Just got his translated graphic novel "The Hound and Other Stories". Very enjoyable.
All Lovecraft fans should see these videos
Awesome. edit that's a really interesting interpretation of the city inhabitants; this has always been one of the few descriptions in HPL stories that I can never get a proper mental image of as it's just too obscure and disjointed, like the byakhee in 'the Festival'.
Very well done! Thank you so much. A huge fan. 🦑♾🤘
Excellent lovecraft video dude!!!!! 10/10!!!!!!!!😃👍
I just recently read this story and from my understanding the protagonist doesn't survive. From the last paragraphs I understood that the door closed behind him, ceiling the protagonist with the lizard people. Is my understanding wrong? Great illustrations, helped me visual the story better.
Outstanding! Your productions are extremely satisfying.
I would love to see the dreams of unknown Qadathe
Excellent reading, thank you!
Simply incredible stuff.
I wonder if Lovecraft is somewhere--maybe a spirit--and realizes posthumously how much his literature affected the world. I hope so. No great artist deserves to miss the impact his work creates.
In a way he never wished to become famous or leave an impact. He felt greatly art should be made for arts sake. Indeed he would hate how comercial and profitable his IPs have become. Moreso that Cthulhu is a sort of mascot and that merchantdice exists. However I do think he would like the fact that he is remembered, for he once wrote that he was certain he'd died and and writings would fade from the world leaving no impact whatsoever ever.
@@trapscancreate5760 No artist hates his art inspiring great amounts of people, artists hate the idea of catering their art to be palatable to the masses not their art being enjoyed by many. If something I believe in is being shared and appreciated it would make me happy, if I dilluted my art to become a greyblob to please everyone that is where I would feel hurt. Don't confuse despising populism with despising the populace.
Great read - thank you. What an extraordinary visionary Lovecraft was for his time.
Thank you
I always wondered if I'd see an illustration of HP Lovecraft's nameless city, for I read it several times. These illustrations are great. If only they were in color, but I'm not complaining- it's a great video.
March 28 2020 -- not mad from isolation yet.
But when he said sandstorm I thought of Darude.
Dudududu dududuudu dudududu
I look forward to the illustrations of the display cases
I just figured I had missed to exit the freeway while listening to your story
This is wonderful ,thank you..
Boccaccio, Poe, Lovecraft, Camus.....Great tales for these bleak, virus days.....
Boccaccio? I'll check it out. Never heard of him b4. Have you read Thomas Ligotti? Masterful suspense and horror, if you're interested.
Lemme guess? You've been reading "The Plague"?
boccacio's Decameron and Poe's curse of the red death have pretty similar storylines and are thematic for our times.
I would love to see Lovecraft’s In the Walls of Eryx done this way.
The Nameless City is one of my favorite chapters.
Nicely done.
Thank you so much.. so damn good!
"It was... completely indescribable" *draws picture*
I have begun this video only 30 seconds ago... Or was it two days.. I no longer know.. but.. but this strange feeling.. this strange feeling tells me that this narrator has been the voice in my head this whole time..
Well done!!!
Fear the Old Blood
Probably not the best thing to listen to while going for a walk in the night. Outstanding work though. I have always thought there had been hyper advanced civilizations prior to us
I love these please make more! 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
i wish my highschool English was good enough to understand it on first listen
You'll get there!
Start off with The Rats in the Walls. Best book by far for first time readers of HP Lovecraft.
I find it helps to go read a summary of the story and then reread it with the summary in mind. It’ll highlight the stuff you missed the first time. Also Lovecraft has a lot of lore to untangle before you fully get his impact. He very often gave really veiled references to his other works.
@@MarxistLasagnaist420 how can i find the summary?
@@edenhazard452 usually the Wikipedia entry on a book will have a good summary of the book
Was not the narrator of this tale appears again in another Lovecraft tale? His name and the nameless city get mentioned.
the voice is really good in this one :)
You should listen to his reading of "Pickman's Model."
This would be even better if the archeologist was Imbiamba Jombes.
This is going to serve as inspiration for my next D&D campaign: the adventurers discovering the ancient civilization of the kobolds. And likely not too dissimilar from their reactions, if they're like the sterotypical set of murder-hobos.
Edit: No, even better! The players get to *be* the kobolds, living in a simple hunter-gatherer lifestyle while just trying to survive in a desperately hostile world. Then they come across the Ruin, and with this world-shattering revelation of their past, and of a future destiny that might yet be, the entire theme of the campaign changes.
Amazing
The ancient ruins of Carthage are even more mysterious in aeons earlier than the Phoenician era. Something about what existed as life other than we can discover in fossils.
Anyone who enjoys this would love the story called " The cursed sands", read by Dr. Creepen. Seems like that story got its inspiration from here.
Lovecraft was a master of that unspeakable horror so beyond mere human ability to deal with it. Whatever his faults of racism, which is true and does appear in his writings though obliquely. When it confirmed how racist he was, it seemed the news that water was wet. I love how he could describe creatures which look at humans as nothing more ants. We barely register in their thoughts and we meet humans crumble in our insignificance and go insane. Lovecraft was the master of horror and otherworldly creatures. He always found a way to make it seem real and possible.
@Terry Summers america is not a white country you fragile little boy
@Terry Summers You embarrass me, to think that anyone would hear anything you might say as representative of what a white man is truly like is just fucking disgraceful.
You boy, are not worthy of calling yourself a white man; for you are pathetic & ignorant as all nine hells... If a true southern gentleman ever hears you spew some dumbass shit such as this in the real world you are very likely to get bitch slapped before you can even finish speaking, fool. Do yourself a favor and either find some enlightenment or shut all the way fucking up...
Because,it is simply just a well known fact that an ignorant, punk-ass douchebag such as yourself, they should always know their role; and if they don't already know it then they must be taught the hard way that it definitely ain't for you to ever actually speak, at all.
I hope you do the same for other writers not just him.
Man this channel should do the mound next
Tekeli-li! Tekeli-li!
Arthur gordon pym? Or mountain madness?
@@alessandrocampos6083 YES
Something happens to the video at about 4:10, and it seems that the audio and video go out of sync after that.
Supreme 😊
Maybe my favourite among his stories :)
Like the game: The town with no name.
"Come back Shane!". "Mah name is not Shane kid". *pew*
Superb
Lovecraft rhymes like crazy XD
I don't understand the ending can someone help explain??
The Sem'k are now immortal. The man was able to escape through the bronze door before it was closed and locked by the horned reptiles when they returned.
I have a name for the city considering it’s location and inhabitants “madinat altanin” that’s Arabic for City 🌃 Of Dragons 🐉 and for the cities inhabitants “sukkan altinin” or Dragon Dwellers rather fitting if you think about it (course it may also be The Iram Of Pillars)
cool
Islamist lizards
ISIS lizards
@@deadeye9439
Do you mean that they worship the ancient Egyptian goddess Isis? Or do you mean that they're lizards who joined the ISIS that is the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria?
Good one J Double C! How do you say "Omega Mechanic" in your language?
10:40
This is the part where i would've nope'd the fuck out.
NO WAY i'm going down there.
Nice😊
Completed
I can’t add a comment, so I’m writing here. This is of Lovecraft’s stories that go on and on and on describing weird stuff with no actual story or climax. Then it just peters out.
The reader was very good though. Too bad he didn’t have something happening. The illustrator didn’t have much to work either.
@@feralbluee discover of a prehuman ruins is boring to you?
Music by Kammarheit at the background.
I still don't understand is he stuck down there with the reptiles or did he get out and the door clack behind him also who could the reptiles traded with if they were so far from other civilization near the end also how did they find this deep cave some one please explain also what is he deep meaning of the story I know all the story have one like the rats in the wall been about early humanity and the facts that some things in life are best left buried , what am trying to guess is whats the meaning of the story am lost
Maybe the reptiles traded with each other.
@@covenawhite4855 yeah possibly there where more cities like it
I do think he was able to escape.
@@TheZombieman87 am leading in that direction too cause other wise how would he be able to tell us his story
@@raymundoserna3449 Thats what I thought too.
Fuck Gou Tanabes comics are too good gonna have to buy them all as physical copies, rip my wallet.
The city name is IRAM !
IRAM dat al 3IMAD !
I think the exploring parts of the ruins, are direct reference to the Chalice Dungeon in Bloodborne.
COVID-19, giving me time to finally explore Lovecraft... Trying to stay sane by exploring insanity!
Were these things the ones ripped Andul Al-Hazrad into pieces? Do you think the man depicted in the mural was him?
No what killed him was invisible and everyone saw him die. Might have been YOG-SOTHOTH who can guess?
The ilustrations are a little bit disconected...
@Terry Summers
Chill my dude.
@Terry Summers "Terry"
You’d prefer sock-puppets? ;-)
@Terry Summers lol
They are excerpts from Tanabe's manga.
I just can't believe this guy die in poverty...
Just like Nikola Tesla...
So the lizard people still alive ?
Yes and no. They exist but not biological anymore. I call them "living ghosts" reading "THE MOUND" you will see what I mean.
The horned crocodilians (Sem'k) were enamored of endless life which at first they did with biology and at the end by making themselves living ghosts forever in that form.
Certain similarities between THE NAMELESS CITY & AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS.
He sounds like a videgame NPC
Fuck it, I’m falling asleep to this tonight.
Agree classic stories new sub share everything I watch