

While he had reportedly dabbled in fiction early on, Lovecraft became more serious about writing stories around 1917. The following year, he launched his self-published magazine The Conservative for which he wrote several essays and other pieces. Lovecraft started out as a would-be journalist, joining the United Amateur Press Association in 1914. During this time, he managed to publish some articles on astronomy in several newspapers. Lovecraft became a reclusive figure for several years, choosing to stay up late studying and reading and writing and then sleeping late into the day.

As a teenager, he did attend Hope High School, but he suffered a nervous breakdown before he could earn his diploma. Lovecraft loved the works of Edgar Allan Poe and developed a special interest in astronomy. He became an avid reader, devouring works on a variety of texts. In 1893, his father became a patient at the Butler Hospital in Providence and there he remained until his death in 1898.Ī sickly child, Lovecraft spent many of his school years at home. His traveling salesman father developed a type of mental disorder caused by untreated syphilis when he was around the age of three. Lovecraft had an unusual childhood marked by tragedy. Lovecraft was born Howard Phillips Lovecraft in 1890, in Providence, Rhode Island. He died on March 15, 1937, in Providence, Rhode Island. In his final years, he took editing and ghostwriting work to try to make ends meet. Elements of this story would reappear in other related tales. His story "The Call of Cthulhu" came out in 1928 in Weird Tales. The horror magazine Weird Tales bought some of his stories in 1923. Lovecraft was born in 1890, in Providence, Rhode Island.

Allow your imagination to dive deeply into these classic dark tales by one of the early masters of the horror genre. Lovecraft Tales of Horror is bound with vibrantly colored and embossed leather complete with gold leaf foiling, gilded page edges for moisture protection, acid-free ivory paper, a satin bookmarking ribbon sewn to the binding, as well as fully colored end-papers.

Lovecraft works titled Tales of Horror includes The Call of Cthulhu, The Shadow Over Innsmouth, and The Dunwich Horror. This leather-bound edition of more than twenty H. Lovecraft’s stories are as fascinating to new readers around the world today as they were in the early 1900s when they were first published – many authors have been inspired and influenced by the work of Lovecraft as well.
