I very much enjoyed listening to this collection! Did so for many weeks almost every night, re-listening to some when I had doubts because I might have fallen asleep or simply out of curiosity. Overall a very enjoyable experience. Some quick thoughts:
+, +, + Lovecraft has this great grasp of our very human fear of the unknown
+, +, + I very much enjoyed the perspective from another time, and words which are not filtered through modern values, revealing perspectives that would be hard to find expressed today even in the realm of fiction. Even in the stories that were more boring the trivia of 1920s life/conceptions or even centuries before brought a breath of fresh air.
+, +, - each story is quite different from the others, in themes, perspectives and even styles. This is
mostly good, but there's also a few which are duds IMO, or too wishy-washy
- particularly from the dream travel narratives which at times felt disjointed to me because they lacked the anchoring.
+,+,+ in the best ones i thought the mixture of strong historical anchoring, either in early 20th century or more likely on 19th or even earlier centuries, the mixture of historical or pseudo-historical grounding makes then the supernatural elements particularly interesting. I think Lovecraft is at his best when you can really feel the historical research
Memories from some of my favorite stories/ideas slightly sorted by how much I enjoyed them:
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The Rats in the Walls: possibly my favorite story in the whole book, mixing historical elements, anchoring, American and European history... and a generally interesting narrative flow. For some reason I always imagined the described architecture like that in the game A Plague Tale, which I never finished so I can't confirm my suspicion of weather there's any relationship.
Herbert West, Reanimator: found this to be quite an interesting story, with good historical anchoring and creepy twists.
Facts Concerning the late Arthur German and his family: made a reinforced impression on me through the visuals and story in the game "The Sinking City"
Cool Air: great little fiction story with a sciency/thriller twist
The Horror at Red Hook: feels like a great film noir historic movie, unfortunately one of the type unlikely to be made today as it could risk too much criticism, but exactly in that it's nice to read historical or even old books for views from other I won't say less but differently filtered times.
In the Vault: great little small town/thriller/draculla's village feeling story with an interesting relatable morality undertone
Pickman's Model: great story with good grounding and one that has been resonated in many games, I can't help but remember the references in the Fallout universe games, but the story here is so much deeper on the cultural elements and nature of humans, their interests and their censorships
The Statement of Randolph Carter: for some reason this one stuck with me. With it's interesting realistic grounding I somehow associate it with a mixture of visual memories from the great games "The Sinking City" and "Bloodborne"
The Temple: very impressive perspective narrative with a memorable narrator (again one which might be a bit taboo in our times despite it making for an interesting story)
The outsider: interesting twist. I had hoped it relates somehow to the brilliant games in the Dishonored series... in the end I don't think so but it was a quite interesting surreal dark story.
The Shunned House: great historical "modern" anchoring and down to earth feeling story
The Lurking Fear: interesting one with a good historical construction
Old Bugs: nice little tale and an unexpected morality element of the kind you wouldn't here nowadays. Impressed a memory into me.
The Terrible Old Man: nice twist!
From Beyond: a bit too dreamlike for my taste but still also nice anchoring at times
The Picture in the House: interesting twist. Made me think of the game Resident Evil 5 for some reason
The Music of Erich Zann: liked the presentation more than the story, but memorable in the details
What the Moon Brings: didn't remember anything, but made me think of the secret ending in the game Bloodborne...
The Cats of Ulthar: didn't love it but memorable nonetheless
The tomb: interesting
Dagon: nice in it's anchoring
The Street: what an interesting idea to think of the life of a place through time!
The Doom that came to Sarnath: a bit too fictional but still an interesting story mixing collapse of civilizations with supernatural in ways that reminded me of the Connan universe
The Other Gods: so so I found it. For a few moments it reminded me of some stories within the game Skyrim.
The Nameless City: boring at times but i imagine it as a movie with interesting Indiana Jones types elements.
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Overall it was a wonderful universe of many stories, a few too loose and disjointed but a few truly brilliant and many simply interesting twists with an interesting perspective from another time! I enjoyed it quite a lot. 23h audiobook that i might have listened to at least parts multiple times, always enjoying it. One of the best buys I got for an audible point :))