Title | : | Arkham Detective Agency: A Lovecraftian-Noir Tribute to C. J. Henderson |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | 406 |
Publication | : | First published November 29, 2017 |
This is the world created by author C.J. Henderson who gave readers such modern day pulp heroes as Jack Hagee, Teddy London, Piers Knight, and his most recent creation: Frank Nardi, former N.Y.C. detective, now head of the Arkham Detective Agency. Before C.J. Henderson’s untimely death, many weird fiction authors were invited to this book to play in his world of stoic P.I.s, beautiful dames, and horrible monsters. We are thrilled to bring you the four Frank Nardi stories C.J. finished before his death, and all new stories set in H.P. Lovecraft’s modern day witch-haunted town of Arkham.
Arkham Detective Agency: A Lovecraftian-Noir Tribute to C. J. Henderson Reviews
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A fantastic short story anthology based on the Frank Nardi character created by the late C. J. Henderson. Four of the nineteen stories were written by Henderson and the rest are a wonderful tribute by various Cthulhu mythos authors. Unlike many anthologies, there were no stories that felt like they did not belong. All of them captured the spirit and gritty style of Henderson's writing.
Kudos to everybody involved in this tribute! -
A great collocation of Lovecraftian mysteries
I was drawn into this book by the first story. The collaboration from other authors based on the same detective agency fleshed out the world.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who likes Lovecraftian Horror and P. I. stories -
I actually enjoyed C. J. Henderson's stories the most of this collection, but found the rest a mixed bag, and I never really enjoyed the lead character, much less that character and his cohorts filtered through other authors' voices. That said, it absolutely honors its premise, and if you pine for more pulp noir Lovecraft material you can do a lot worse.
Halloween Read 5/13 for 2020. -
Detective Frank Mardi and Co.
This book of short stories had me at the edge of my seat that whole time. Each story was connected to the last one in some way and each writers style was apparent in their telling of a case that Detective Mardi and the Arkham Detective Agency tackle. Very cosmic horror and very intriguing. -
This was really fun and shined the most when the stories were more noir detective (some were noir-adjacent). The last story in the book was more action/adventure but it was a fitting end to the collection.
I DNF'd one of the stories (A Walk in the Shadows by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.) that used short choppy sentences and tried to use slang that didn't seem to come naturally to the writer. -
nice