12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bravo Chaosium!, July 18, 2007
This review is from: The Spiraling Worm: Man Versus the Cthulhu Mythos (Call of Cthulhu Fiction) (Paperback)
The Spiraling Worm is the latest offering by Chaosium. It contains a series of linked stories by John Sunseri and David Conyers, talented young authors active on the mythos scene. This book is the first fiction publication from Chaosium since Arkham Tales, and it represents a shift in their philosophy. For many years, the most we could get from Chaosium were the cycle books, collections each centered on some mythos theme or entity with a diverse collection of stories (perhaps mostly selected by the mainstay series editor, Robert Price). This mostly consisted of reprints, often a story from HPL and then works either from the remote mythos past or from some of the magazines active at the time, like Crypt of Cthulhu. Results were wildly uneven, mostly mediocre, a few gems and a lot more truly dreadful dogs. Now Chaosium is aggressively publishing books of all new (well, with a few reprints) stories, paying more attention to the quality of the author and story than particular thematic elements. On the horizon we have Frontier Cthulhu, old west mythos, and hopefully a lot more books as successful as their predecessors.
I am pretty familiar with the weird fiction of David Conyers; he has been a fixture in many of the new anthologies. We had the very nifty `Outside Looking In' in Hardboiled Cthulhu, a story were perception and reality are not the same thing, `Regrowth' from Arkham Tales, which concerned the melding of disparate forms of life and `False Containment' which is here and originally appeared in Horrors Beyond. I think `A Shared Romance' was in the short-lived Cthulhu Express. Mr. Conyers has had a fair number of his other stories in magazines of weird fiction. I am a bit less familiar with the stories of John Sunseri. I recall the very fine `The Hades Project' from Horrors Beyond, and the enjoyable `A Little Job in Arkham' from Hardboiled Cthulhu.
The mythos subgenre for this collection is by now well established, that is, the action packed noir cloak-and-dagger the government-is-in-it-up-to-their-necks mythos. For years great fiction of this sort has been published in the Delta Green books from Pagan Publishing, Cody Goodfellow's Radiant Dawn and Ravenous Dusk are masterful examples and Charlie Stross has weighed in with The Atrocity Archive and The Jennifer Morgue. He has also written what may be the absolute finest modern mythos story, `A Colder War', available in his collection Toast and the upcoming Cthulhian Singularity. The Spiraling Worm fits very comfortably into this company. If this is the sort of story you like, you are in for a real treat with this book. No helpless pasty-faced recluse cowering in a garret driven mad by his special knowledge of how terribly indifferent the universe is. Red blooded action heroes throw themselves into the breech, refusing to go gentle into that good night. Some housekeeping: The publisher is Chaosium. The Spiraling Worm is a 320 page paperback listing for $15.95 but discounted to $10.85 from Amazon, and available for free shipping if you order > $25 worth of books (like preordering Frontier Cthulhu...). The cover art looks kind of cool on the website but I don't know who did it and can't say much about it. Why? This is my biggest gripe about the book. I got the special edition hardcover, and while it is a nice cloth bound book, it does not have a slipcover and, thus, no artwork! Man did that peeve me! I guess I should have noted this before I bought it. Now I am left to wonder if I should buy the soft cover too.
Here are the contents:
Introduction: CJ Henderson
Made of Meat: Conyers (Originally published in Temple of Dagon, revised)
To What Green Altar: Sunseri (new)
Impossible Object: Conyers (Originally published in Dreaming in R'lyeh #2
False Containment: Conyers (Originally published in Horrors Beyond)
Resurgence: Sunseri (new)
Weapon Grade: Conyers (new)
The Spiraling Worm: Sunseri and Conyers (new)
Afterward
About the Authors
************Spoilers may follow so stop reading if that bothers you!!*******
First of all, the Introduction and Afterward are very entertaining and also very useful in getting a handle on where the authors are coming from. Best of all, they let us now a follow on volume with the characters from this book is in the works already, and CJ Henderson will be contributing some stories!! I keep saying we are in the golden age of mythos fiction. The first three stories by Conyers were not written with this book of linked stories in mind. Instead Mr. Conyers was creating Major Harrison Peel, developing his character and stretching his wings in this particular subgenre. After Conyers ad Sunseri decided to collaborate on The Spiraling Worm the original Peel tales were ordered and perhaps slightly altered to fit into the timeline/story arc here.
In `Made of Meat' we are introduced to Major Peel, an Australian intelligence officer. Over the next few stories we get to know him quite well. Conyers doesn't write mythos stories for their own sake; the trappings are always at the service of clever plotting, believable character development, snappy dialogue and tightly written action scenes. The major is sent to look in on the Tcho Tcho people in Southeast Asia with the help of a British MI6 Agent James Figgs, a more jaded, hard bitten and enigmatic figure than the duty driven Major Peel. Someone in some government wants samples of Shub Niggurath spawn to develop into weapons.
`To What Green Altar' introduces us to NSA agent Jack Dixon. He and the ubiquitous Figgs go to Siberia on the trail of an insane cult that wants to invoke Cthugha in the middle of the Vatican. The Tunguska event from 1909 is finally explained. The aims of the cult are depressingly plausible in the modern world. The first two sections of this are my favorite prose by Sunseri.
`Impossible Object' is my favorite story by Conyers (What a wonderful dilemma to have! What is your favorite story by David Conyers?). It is the best story in the book and also, perhaps, the most Lovecraftian. The Australian government has uncovered an incredibly ancient city and found the title object in one of the rooms of this city. The Impossible Object is different to all observers, as well as mysterious and frequently deadly. Major Peel is on the scene and figures out what it must really represent. Tautly written, suspenseful and an edgy ending. Definitely worth a few rereads! I originally read it in its magazine version and am glad to have it in this collection.
`False Containment' is another winner from Conyers, probably my next favorite here. I already reviewed when I wrote about the anthology Horrors Beyond (I would rather have seen a different new story as this is already in a book we are all likely to own, but I see the appeal to having all the Major Peel stories in one collection). I think there has been a very slight modification, inclusion of a sentence or two to allow `Impossible Object' to better fit into the story arc. This was a pity, as my view in hindsight is that it lessens the power of the ending of `Impossible Object.'
After these stories we get into the main story arc of the anthology. `Resurgence' shows us some how or other, shoggoths are loose from their prison in Antarctica and are swarming to the mainland, including Australia. A few sentences are a nod toward Tim Curran's Hive and perhaps portend that Mr. Curran may be joining forces with the authors in future projects. Agent Dixon is point man against a shoggoth that is scouring Isla de los Estrados near Argentina while Major Peel must try to fend off its twin approaching Australia. What would it take for you to go nuclear? Unfortunately Major Peel is caught in the radioactive aftermath of the saving of Sydney. Also unfortunately a famous landmark (almost a world wonder...) had to be sacrificed.
`Weapon Grade' shows how the military applications of extra dimensional gates and shoggoth technology are too tempting to resist, and how far the cloak and dagger men of any government are willing to go to get an edge. Major Peel shows his true dedication to duty as well as resourcefulness as he tries to prevent the theft of shoggoth secrets while dying of radiation poisoning.
`The Spiraling Worm' brings all the players together (including Joss Plenary of the NSA). The setting is the Congo, where a grotesque band of rebels (cultists) have perhaps kidnapped a special forces Major Charles Ackerman. Figgs, Peel and Dixon (and a small army of SEALs and special forces) set out to track him down in the trackless jungle. The Spiraling Worm is one of the many names of Nyarlathotep, as ever trying to open holes in reality for Cthulhu et al to step/slither through. This was the longest story in the book and the culmination of some pretty remarkable story telling, as two talented authors combine their skills and characters. While I liked it a few details bugged me. First of all there was (a very small amount) some lecturing about the mythos pantheon, something that never jazzes me. I had some issues with a gang rape scene, although it was suitably horrific and not gratuitously specific. I cannot argue with it, but I did not like the denouement of agent Figgs. Maybe that's too harsh; rather, I liked him the way he was before the end of the story. At > 100 pages this is maybe a novella. It was necessary to have a story of some length to be able to tie all the plot threads together but it did miss some of the snap that made the other stories such corking good reads. Finally, at the very end Peel, Dixon and Plenary decide to form an agency to try to fend off mythos type threats (similar to Stross' Laundry or to Delta Green) and the way this was done...
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting ideas. Abysmally written., September 8, 2008
This review is from: The Spiraling Worm: Man Versus the Cthulhu Mythos (Call of Cthulhu Fiction) (Paperback)
This book is full of interesting ideas for "Call of Cthulhu" and particularly "Delta Green" wonks. So if you only read for the thrill of speculation and are willing to overlook mediocre prose, asinine dialog, boring characters, and lousy fiction chops in general, then you will probably enjoy it. Personally I have a hard time with that. Every ridiculously implausible plot development, every line of dialogue that sounds like a Steven Segal movie, every time the writer chooses to explain rather than evoke the story--these all stick in my craw and make it hard to take any pleasure from the text. A 5-star book, in my opinion, is one that comes as close to achieving perfection as any human work is capable, and anyone who reads this book and thinks it couldn't have been done any better has a dim view of our species indeed. The huge gulf between the book I expected (based on the glowing reviews) and the book I received made this one of the most disappointing reading experiences of my life, and left me suspicious, honestly, that the reviews here on Amazon have been padded by those with a financial or other personal stake in this book
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Extra-dimensional Read (spoilers), October 30, 2007
This review is from: The Spiraling Worm: Man Versus the Cthulhu Mythos (Call of Cthulhu Fiction) (Paperback)
Exotic locales, extra-dimensional monsters, black-ops--The Spiraling Worm is a terrifying action-packed collection from two terrific authors. In each tale, a new monster is introduced, and the heroes--Major Harrison Peel of Australia and NSA man Jack Dixon--must find a way to maintain order in an increasingly chaotic universe.
The episodic nature of the stories is reminiscent of TV shows such as X-Files, but sometimes the installments fail to resolve the way an episode should. David Conyers' story "Impossible Object," for example: one of the most interesting stories in the book--yet also the most unsatisfactory. In this one, scientists are studying a mysterious relic that appears differently to each viewer: what is a door to one is a jar to another. Most of the researchers disappear while examining the object, and no one can figure out its purpose. The idea is intriguing but the cliffhanger ending doesn't resolve the mystery and the impossible object garners only a brief mention later in the collection; it could have been used to greater effect.
Despite this falter, most of the stand-alone stories produce an awesome impact: John Sunseri's "To What Green Altar" effectively mixes terrorists, Roman Catholics, and the fire deity Cthugha, while Conyers' "False Containment" spawns a hideous monster that absorbs and infuses with humans, animals, and plant matter, growing as it goes. Nevertheless, the most memorable stories are heavily interlinked. "Resurgence" by Sunseri and "Weapon Grade" by Conyers both feature shoggathai, giant protoplasmic slaves of the Old Ones. In "Resurgence," these beasts rise from their prisons in Antarctica to devour plant, animal, and human life, and in "Weapon Grade," the fates of the shoggathai are revealed--while one of the heroes suffers the consequences of saving his homeland.
Filled with fast, action-packed stories that read like episodes of a good TV show, The Spiraling Worm is an excellent installment in the Cthulhu mythos.
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