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Mythos Audio Library: Call of CthulhuWell, it took about five more hours than I really wanted it to, but I finally managed to wrestle DriveThru and Lulu into submission. It looks like they’ll behave themselves now as far as Mythos Audio Library: Call of Cthulhu is concerned. You can now purchase a version of the audio book in MP3 and listen to a sample.

After many travails, I have finally managed to get Mythos Audio Library: Call of Cthulhu published through CafePress as an audiobook on CD. I’m hoping to have MP3 files available for purchase shortly, but I’m running into delays trying to get the files uploaded to both DriveThru and Lulu. I’ll post an announcement here as soon as that happens.

The delay in getting the MP3 files up is also delaying my ability to get a direct download link to a sample of the audiobook. But if you click through to CafePress, they have several samples available for you to listen to.

Mythos Audio Library - Call of Cthulhu

THAT IS NOT DEAD WHICH CAN ETERNAL LIE,
AND WITH STRANGE AEONS EVEN DEATH MAY DIE…

On February 28th, 1925, a terrible cataclysm wracked the Pacific Ocean. On March 22nd of the same year, the world nearly came to an end.

But humanity lived through it all on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity. And perhaps it was merciful that it should be so, for if those who had in their possession the disparate clues which might have pieced out the truth of it had ever had a chance to compare notes a true panic would have broken loose.

Such secrets should remain buried… and more than buried.

“In his house at R’lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming.”

Buy CD Buy MP3
72 minutes – Sample Audio

“Of such great powers or beings there may be conceivably a survival… a survival of a hugely remote period when… consciousness was manifested, perhaps, in shapes and forms long since withdrawn before the tide of advancing humanity… forms of which poetry and legend alone have caught a flying memory and called them gods, monsters, mythical beings of all sorts and kinds…”

– Algernon Blackwood

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