Subject: I can rave about that.
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Posted on: 2018-07-08 04:12:00 UTC

Caves of Qud is bloody great and it has great lore. It's probably what got me into New Weird, to be honest.
Hell, one of the lore books was written by a sentient plant called Baccata Yewtarch. For his sources, he cites sentient fungus that have travelled across the world, attached to travelling camel-guy merchants. The weirdest part is really the fact that Baccata overlooked the seeming speciesism between plants and fungi enough to source them in his books. Good on him!
It's so cool.

I recently finished rereading another kinda surreal weirdo story - The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, Lovecraft's outright longest story. It's the fantasy novella that sorta defined my own tastes in speculative fiction and worldbuilding - there's a dreamy surrealism to the whole thing, that feels almost fairy tale-like, that I'm absolutely in love with. Hell, the start of the story just offhandedly describes that a specific tree in a forest was grown from a seed that fell from the moon, and later on in the story, it's revealed that you can just kinda - just sail right up to the moon!
Here's what it has for 'races':

- Humans (of course)

- Zoogs (vaguely human-eating sapient rodents who live in a glowing fungus forest and make wine out of that moon tree.)

- Cats (sapient and basically the 'hero' race, who are all kinda honourable and good and who help the main character out.)

- Ghouls (loathsome corpse-eaters who dwell above a massive pit of bones of every thing they've eaten, who have access to every graveyard of the waking world, and are actually pretty reasonable guys, who outright help the main character out and beat up monsters with giant tombstones.)

- Moonbeasts (frog-looking amorphous silvery things, who are implied to buy and eat slaves and who sail about from the moon and the Dreamlands. They're the Orcs but squishier, I suppose.)

And probably heaps more, because the Dream Cycle is wild.
It's an awesome bloody setting, and that story is an awesome bloody story that has an insane ending, and one that's surprisingly tender and personal, considering how weird and cosmic the story is. It's real good. Probably my favourite Lovecraft story, to be honest.

The only real shame I have with it is, well, it's hard to get as connected to it as I want to, knowing how horrid of a person Lovecraft was, y'know? There are themes in that story that resound a whole lot with me but also, er, he was racist.

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