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At the Mountains of Madness Kindle Edition

4.0 out of 5 stars 1,934 ratings

This classic mind-shattering tale, which “ranks high among the horror stories of the English language,” plunges into the darkness of the Cthulhu mythos (Time).

In the uncharted wastes of Antarctica, an exploration party from Miskatonic University encounters a gory sight when they discover their advance team’s camp has been destroyed and its members slaughtered. There is no evidence of what happened except a series of burial mounds, six of which contain dead specimens of unknown species. Eight similar tombs are empty, but they haven’t been broken into—they’ve been broken
out of.
 
What began as a search for knowledge soon becomes a terrifying confrontation with the true nature of the world and the universe in all its stark blackness and unyielding oblivion. For mankind is not—and never has been—the bright light of creation. It’s all a mistake, an insignificant stain of existence, forgotten by an unwitting and indifferent creator . . . until now.
 
This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Howard Phillips Lovecraft was an American author of fantasy, horror and science fiction. He is notable for blending elements of science fiction and horror; and for popularizing "cosmic horror": the notion that some concepts, entities or experiences are barely comprehensible to human minds, and those who delve into such risk their sanity. Lovecraft has become a cult figure in the horror genre and is noted as creator of the "Cthulhu Mythos," a series of loosely interconnected fictions featuring a "pantheon" of nonhuman creatures, as well as the famed Necronomicon, a grimoire of magical rites and forbidden lore. His works typically had a tone of "cosmic pessimism," regarding mankind as insignificant and powerless in the universe. Lovecraft's readership was limited during his life, and his works, particularly early in his career, have been criticized as occasionally ponderous, and for their uneven quality. Nevertheless, Lovecraft's reputation has grown tremendously over the decades, and he is now commonly regarded as one of the most important horror writers of the 20th Century, exerting an influence that is widespread, though often indirect.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B06Y688HHG
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open Road Media Sci-Fi & Fantasy (May 2, 2017)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 2, 2017
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.9 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 53 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars 1,934 ratings

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Customer reviews

4 out of 5 stars
1,934 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book's story compelling, describing it as a true-life great adventure, and appreciate its fascinating ideas and interesting developments. The book is well-written with vividly rendered world-building, though some find it boring, and while the language is poetic in its verbosity, others find it verbose. The printing quality receives negative feedback, with multiple customers reporting incorrect printing issues.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

87 customers mention "Story quality"74 positive13 negative

Customers find the story compelling and suspenseful, describing it as a true life great adventure, with one customer noting it as a classic Cthulhu tale.

"...He utilizes a carefully constructed mythology of his own creation, using such myths as the Cthulhu, the Necronomicon, and stories of the Elders and..." Read more

"...This is a novella and could be read fairly quickly if one could stay awake." Read more

"...other facets of the skills the characters have which makes for a believable story...." Read more

""The Mountains of Madness" is a fine work of Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos. It is also his longest, being a novella rather than a short story...." Read more

23 customers mention "Interest"19 positive4 negative

Customers find the book intriguing with fascinating concepts and interesting developments throughout.

"...The climax was a somewhat singular event that was frightening and gratifying at the same time.}..." Read more

"...It's fairly readable for a scholarly piece, and offers some interesting insight into his work, but it will still be of limited interest to the..." Read more

"Interesting to say the least. I was trying to find something to read a bit outside of my usual genre (fantasy)...." Read more

"One of Lovecraft's best, full of interesting developments, and heavy on the dark and otherworldly descriptions, while not as over the top on..." Read more

12 customers mention "Enthralling"9 positive3 negative

Customers find the book enthralling, with one review highlighting its amazing descriptions and another noting how it keeps the reader's mind racing ahead.

"...The logic was sound in how the story progressed and how the characters acted and reacted. The pacing was moderate and kept an even clip throughout.}..." Read more

"...The kindle version seems fine, coming with an interesting overview of Lovecraft's life and career and a typical navigable table of contents, but..." Read more

"...But the fact is that this is the longest, most boring, complicated, overdone book I've ever read...." Read more

"...Ultimately, this is a nice edition, which features an excellent introduction...." Read more

6 customers mention "Value for money"6 positive0 negative

Customers find the book worth its price, with one mentioning that the Kindle edition was particularly inexpensive.

"...out, since "Mountains" is barely 100 pages long, making the cost of the book worth it." Read more

"...as stilted, but if you let it unfold at its deliberate pace, it is worth it...." Read more

"...and while I finished the book wanting something more, the kindle edition was so cheap I would recommend giving it a try...." Read more

"...It's a great audiobook at a great price." Read more

59 customers mention "Readability"20 positive39 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability, with some finding it well written and readable, while others describe it as boring.

"...The hook was slow and methodical, yet it managed to tug just enough to keep me wondering about the rest of the book...." Read more

"...The more understandable and accessible nature of the Elder Things makes the ideas in the story more easier to digest than the truly alien designs..." Read more

"...to as they endure the horrors of the city, Lovecraft never allows dialogue to take place. He uses Dyer to narrate any communication they have...." Read more

"...snow bound super city we again have repetitive description after description of how the the place looks and feels...." Read more

32 customers mention "Visual quality"15 positive17 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the visual quality of the book, with some finding the world vividly rendered and nice illustrations, while others find it completely boring.

"...insight into his work, but it will still be of limited interest to the general reader...." Read more

"...His stories have a surreal and dreamlike (or nightmarish!) quality to them. "..." Read more

"...Lovecraft is such an excellent writer. Technically, though, nothing really takes place...." Read more

"...The world was vividly rendered and creatively crafted by the use of plausible places imagined to exist in locations that are remote and desolate.}..." Read more

14 customers mention "Language"5 positive9 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the language of the book, with some appreciating its poetic verbosity while others find it verbose and note occasional grammatical errors.

"...one as overwrought, with absurd names like Yog-Sothoth, over-used words like mad/ness (34 times in this novella), horror/s (31), strange/ness/ly (29)..." Read more

"...'s best, full of interesting developments, and heavy on the dark and otherworldly descriptions, while not as over the top on thesaurus-busting..." Read more

"...Only reason it didn't get 5 stars was because it was a clumsy read at some points, a little too repetitive, and slow...." Read more

"...(As in, this would not likely get published today.) The word usage (and over-usage) and pacing may strike some as stilted, but if you let it..." Read more

4 customers mention "Printing quality"0 positive4 negative

Customers report issues with the book's printing, noting that it is misprinted.

"Great stories, but a horrible printing...." Read more

"As others have mentioned, the book is misprinted. At about Chapter 6, the book descends into computer code and a completely unrelated play...." Read more

"...the paperback came with some chapters in the beginning but is misprinted with a bunch of nonsense computer formatting for a play or something for..." Read more

"Incorrect Printing..." Read more

Let's Talk a Bit About Lovecraft
4 out of 5 stars
Let's Talk a Bit About Lovecraft
I suppose it was about fifty years ago that I "met" H.P. Lovecraft and fell in love. YES, he's annoyingly verbose, but the man had an imagination so outre that his subjects would've loved to have him as their biographer. I was working a bookkeeping job in Birmingham, Alabama, and had a full hour off for lunch every weekday. There was a shopping center near my work, so I would ramble, and on one of those rambles found books by H.P. Lovecraft. My eyes being significantly better then, yes, I could read a paperback, and did read every one of his that I could find. Readers who really wish Lovecraft would quit beating around the bush, and just get to the point, might be happier reading the works of August Derleth. To me, his works are more frightening than Lovecraft's, but deal with the same Elder Gods and Great Old Ones. The attached photo is the PRIZE of my face jug collection, and was sold as a "kiln accident." The very talented Michael Ball told me that these pieces had fused in the old-style kiln he used, and that normally when removed, they would crack apart. These didn't. Both of us were seriously worried, but Mike had packed the item very carefully, and it arrived in perfect condition. To me, the little guy is obviously The Devil. Big deal. Lots of face jugs are devils. BUT the big guy, and I'm still not sure what Mike intended him to be, is just totally obviously Cthulhu. Sorry for getting off the subject there, but I really love that jug! So . . . this novella of Lovecraft's has its moments, but the word "decadent" has to appear a gazillion times. Enough already! I will always love Lovecraft and the pantheon he created, but find Derleth easier reading. Enjoy!!!
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2007
    H. P. Lovecraft is the father of modern horror. His stories are infused with more style and substance that many modern horror novels of 300+ pages - and most of his stories are short, in the tens of pages. Lovecraft is the master of the eerie and foreboding. A constant sense of dread, uncertainty, and fear of an unknown, unnameable, and indescribable ancient, primordial evil fills the pages of his books. He utilizes a carefully constructed mythology of his own creation, using such myths as the Cthulhu, the Necronomicon, and stories of the Elders and Old Ones. His stories have a surreal and dreamlike (or nightmarish!) quality to them.

    "At the Mountains of Madness" contains four stories - one of some length, over one 100 pages, and three much smaller works.

    The story of the same name as the book is a story of an arctic expedition that discovers the remains of a yet unknown, intelligent extraterrestrial civilization that predates human life on earth. The survivors of this expedition have to face unknown evils lurking below the arctic surface. This is a good story set in a great location. I am a fan of the movie "The Thing" (based on Cambell's "Who Goes There?"), and I love the foreboding setting of the arctic environment. The story is good, but there are better ones.

    "The Shunned House" is a story of an old shunned house with a hidden evil in the basement and a secret past. The story is of one man's efforts to unravel the mystery and put to rest the evil presence that dwells there. This is another good story, and creepier than some of the other stories in this book.

    "The Dreams of the Witch-house" is a story clearly inspired by Goethe's "Faust" - even mentions witches, a character like Mephistopheles, and Walpurgis Nacht. It's a story about unbridled knowledge and witchcraft - much like "Faust." It tells of an odd room with unusual mathematical and geometric properties that enable the user to travel to other dimensions involving witchcraft. Btw, there is an episode of Showtime's Masters of Horror series based based on this story.

    "The Statement of Randolph Carter" is the shortest story in the book, but one of the scariest. True to Lovecraft's style, the evil entity is never really revealed. Your own mind has to imagine the true nature of the horror. The story is about the investigation into a sepulcher by two men in an effort to discover undead beings still living there.

    Overall this is a great Lovecraft book, not to be missed by those that love horror and especially Lovecraft fans.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2016
    Review of {AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS}, by {H.P. Lovecraft}

    Review Title: {A Strange Story of Terrifying Tragedy}

    A comprehensive review by John Adams Theibert Jr.

    Review Method: This is a comprehensive review of the classic novel {AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS} by {H.P. Lovecraft}. In this review I will use a 10 element system that I developed to assign a star amount to this story out of a total of five stars. Each element has 2 components that are each worth 0.25 stars. Each element is worth a total of 0.5 stars. There are 5 primary elements and 5 secondary elements. There are 3 subtotal stars in the primary elements, obtained by adding the primary elements and rounding up. There are 2 subtotal stars in the secondary elements, obtained by adding the secondary elements and rounding down.

    Stars Given: [4] stars out of 5 stars /****- / / * = star - = no star/

    The Primary Elements: Idea, Plot, Characters, Setting, & Theme

    The Idea – hook and world: {The idea of the story was unique and engaging yet lacked immediate pulling power. The hook was slow and methodical, yet it managed to tug just enough to keep me wondering about the rest of the book. The world was vividly rendered and creatively crafted by the use of plausible places imagined to exist in locations that are remote and desolate.} Stars for the idea: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Plot – conflict and climax: {The plot was plodding yet had a somewhat satisfying end. The conflict seed to be implied more than experienced. The climax was a somewhat singular event that was frightening and gratifying at the same time.} Stars for the plot: [0.25] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Characters – development and dimension: {There seemed to be only one character that was prominently portrayed in the story. The main character did not change much in the course of the story, because his emphasis was always the same, in which he used a warning tone throughout the story. Dimensionally, however, the main character was well rounded, in that he was realized in a complex and involved way, making him seem intelligent, wise, and brave, yet still approachable and human.} Stars for the characters: [0.25] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Setting – scenes and senses: {The setting was dazzling and chilling. The Scenes were described in abundant detail and had significant gravity to them. The scenes used in the story were fairly well rounded, exploring sight, sound, and smell for the most part, lacking somewhat in touch and taste.} Stars for the setting: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Theme – lesson and epiphany: {The theme of the story was a kind of warning to not venture into the regions described in the story. The lesson of the story was that some discoveries are too dangerous to make. The epiphany was that there are, in fact, wonders in the world to dark and terrible to fathom.} Stars for the theme: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    Subtotal stars for the Primary Elements (always rounding up), [2] stars out of 3 stars.

    The Secondary Elements: Style, Substance, Grammar, Essence, & Impression.

    The Style – logic and pacing: {The style of the story was a strong point. The logic was sound in how the story progressed and how the characters acted and reacted. The pacing was moderate and kept an even clip throughout.} Stars for the style: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Substance – skeleton and teeth: {The structure of the story was well founded with its parts fitted together smoothly and sensibly. The skeleton was solid and held the weight of the story well. The story’s teeth were razor sharp in that the story had a great premise that ancient advanced and extremely strange life forms could have lived on Earth millions of years ago and died out.} Stars for the substance: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Grammar – sentence structure and word usage: {The grammar of the story did not have any obvious problems. The sentence structure seemed solid and correct, and the word usage was accurate and clear.} Stars for grammar: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Essence – emotion and memory: {The essence of the story was intense. The emotions of fear and wonder were the most prominent in the story. The most memorable part of the story was the climax, in which the main characters were chased by an ancient creature.} Stars for the essence: [0.5] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    The Impression – opinion and talent: {My impression of this story is good. In my opinion it has a lot of strong elements, however, some of its elements are not thoroughly utilized.} Stars for the impression: [0.25] stars out of 0.5 stars.

    Subtotal stars for the Secondary Elements (always rounding down) [2] stars out of 2 stars.

    Conclusion: {In conclusion, this story is great from a conceptual stand point, however, it lacks stellar execution. This story was intriguing and had a lot of nagging unanswered questions.}

    Grand total stars for the story – primary elements and secondary elements: [4] stars out of 5 stars.
    3 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Cliente Kindle
    5.0 out of 5 stars Splendido e inquietante
    Reviewed in Italy on March 10, 2019
    Un vero capolavoro, perfino più dei racconti. Pieno di colpi di scena e situazioni al limite.
    Report
  • Someone
    5.0 out of 5 stars Good read.
    Reviewed in Canada on November 2, 2024
    A very imaginative story written in the prose of the day. It is easy to see how this work has influenced many authors that came after H. P.
  • Bruno de Oliveira Moreira
    5.0 out of 5 stars very good, despise having poor characters
    Reviewed in Brazil on October 16, 2014
    very good, despise having poor characters. You can see old ones and the lost city with your mind, but Wendy comes to people, you cant connect with them.
  • Hipster Klaus
    5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr gute Erzählung
    Reviewed in Germany on January 8, 2017
    Die relativ kurze Geschichte von lovecraft schafft es problemlos, den Spannungsbogen bis zum Schluss zu erhalten.
    Wer gutes Englisch beherrscht sollte kein Problem mit den ausführlichen Beschreibungen haben. Die Sprache ist dennoch etwas älter, woran man sich jedoch gewöhnt.

    Für jeden Horror/Mystery Fan ein muss.
  • J. T. Atkinson
    5.0 out of 5 stars perhaps the 5 stars is a little generous as this is not Lovecraft's best and is fatally flawed in its strange meandering structu
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 17, 2014
    All right, perhaps the 5 stars is a little generous as this is not Lovecraft's best and is fatally flawed in its strange meandering structure that demands everything stop for an extended history lesson halfway through, but the imagination on display is nothing short of astonishing. The references to other texts and the attempt to weave the disparate parts of the mythology he had created into a unifying whole make this essential for fans. And that is the driving force behind this review. All I can add is that Naxos have done their usual top-notch job and William Roberts's intense reading perfectly compliments the insanity so often writ large by Lovecraft. If you are a fan, you will love this. And if you are not, you won't be reading this review anyway.

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