One trend running on full speed lately in the speculative
fiction is the Lovecraftian one. Myhtos, cosmic horror and forbidden knowledge
are some of the themes of H.P. Lovecraft
that inspired and influenced many new authors and editors in putting the basis
of an entire sub-genre, Lovecraftian horror. Of course, the trend isn’t new but
it is on the rise at the moment. However, unlike other trends, such as the
zombie or vampire ones, Lovecraftian horror didn’t end on heavily beaten paths,
managed to avoid becoming entirely stereotypical and brought into attention in
the last few years some original stories and some very strong writers inspired
by H.P. Lovecraft and his works.
One such new story comes from Spain, written by Jesús Cañadas, and it has a twist. “Los nombres muertos” (The Dead Names) not only has the
familiar elements of the Lovecraftian fiction, but its main protagonist is H.P.
Lovecraft himself. It isn’t the singular such apparition on its pages, along
H.P. Lovecraft’s adventure in search of the Necronomicon he meets other
mythical figures of speculative fiction such as Frank Belknap Long, Robert E.
Howard, J.R.R. Tolkien, Arthur Machen or Aleister Crowley. “Los nombres muertos”
is Jesús Cañadas’ second novel, after “El
baile de los secretos” (The Dance of
Secrets) published in 2011, and was released on October by Editorial Fantascy, an imprint of Random House Mondadori. And Jesús Cañadas’ “Los nombres
muertos” (The Dead Names) doesn’t come only in a beautiful tome, with an
evoking cover, but also with a very good book trailer. Not many book trailers
can be as effective as a good book cover, usually I watch them long after I
have already decided that I would like to buy and read that particular book and
therefore these trailers rarely get a reaction from me. But over time I’ve seen
a few that were very well made and stuck to my memory. Fortunately for Jesús Cañadas
and his “Los nombre muertos” (The Dead Names) this is one such case, the book
trailer is excellent, a very short film in itself that does wonders in stirring
further my interest and desire to see what lies between the covers of this
novel.
In
1919, the American writer Howard Phillips Lovecraft wrote the short story “The
Hound”. On its pages was mentioned for the first time the Necronomicon, a
grimoire of black magic surrounded by a sinister legend.
Twelve
years later, the widow of a New York multimillionaire convinces H.P. Lovecraft
to lead an expedition for finding the supposed cursed book.
Accompanied
by the writers Frank Belknap Long (The Hounds of Tindalos) and Robert Erwin
Howard (Conan), Lovecraft embarks on a quest from his natal Providence, to the
dying Golden Dawn society in London or the interwar Berlin, passing by the
Portuguese deadly cliffs or the ruins buried beneath the city of Damascus.
In
the web of secrets that surrounds the Necronomicon, Lovecraft and his
colleagues face deadly dangers, secret societies and forgotten cults prepared
to kill in order to find the truth about of this book. His expedition becomes
an exciting adventure in which he intersects with characters such as Aleister
Crowley, Arthur Machen or a young J.R.R. Tolkien.
Jesús
Cañadas recovers the mystery of the classic Weird Tales in a politically incorrect novel and with an end that nobody expects.
Jesús Cañadas was born in Cádiz in 1980. Always linked
with the genre literature, his short stories were published in magazines such
as Asimov Magazine, Lovecraft Magazine, Miasma or Aurora Bitzine; or in the
anthologies “Visiones 2008” (Visions 2008), “Errores de Percepción” (Errors of
Perception), “Calabazas en el Trastero” (Pumpkins in the Shed), “Ácronos”, “Fantasmagoría”
or the recent “Charco Negro” (Black Puddle). In 2011 he published his first
novel, “El baile de los secretos” (The Dance of Secrets), in the Excalibur
collection of the Grupo AJEC publishing house, novel nominated for the Best
Novel category of Scifiworld Awards. “Los nombres muertos” is his second novel.
Tireless traveler, Jesús Cañadas lived in more than thirteen cities in the last
ten years. Now he lives in Germany, where he combines the genre literature with
his work at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
2 comments:
Also, the book is really good. I really enjoyed it.
I've started too, but my Spanish still needs improving so I am going slow at the moment. And in this rhythm it might take a while to finish the novel too, but I am not giving up. Especially since I am enjoying it quite a lot. :)
Post a Comment