T.E.D. Klein – Dark Gods Softcover Limited Edition Chiroptera Press
$52.85
*** Pre Order – Ships approx July 2025. Please Note if ordered with any other items all items will ship together when stock arrives ***
This is a limited first edition of 500 x Softcover copies.
Section sewn binding, offset printed on acid free papers. This paperback edition includes all of the extras as seen in our sold out hardcover edition.
* New Introduction by S. T. Joshi
* Essay by Dejan Ognjanovic
* jacket art by Paul Romano
* Interior art by Jonathan Dennison
* Offset printed on acid-free archival paper
IN STOCK
Chiroptera Press proudly presents the weird fiction masterpiece Dark Gods by T.E.D. Klein. Our deluxe edition includes a new introduction by S. T. Joshi and an extensive essay written by Dejan Ognjanovic. Jacket art by Paul Romano and interior art by Jonathan Dennison. Text has been revised from the original Viking edition. Our production has been closely overseen by the author, and no detail has been missed to assure an absolute edition.
Synopsis:
It is difficult to overestimate the impact these tales made as they appeared one by one in anthologies, starting in 1979 and culminating in the novella that capped the collection in 1985. Taking the merest hints from Machen and Lovecraft, Klein develops realms of inexorable, insidious threat, which his cast of otherwise ordinary people either never suspected or fail to recognize until it is too late.
Imagine: attempting to reach a loved one during the chaos of the 1977 New York Blackout and suddenly encountering the thrice-cursed “Children of the Kingdom” . . . following the Tarot cards that counterpoint the irony-laden chitchat of the people who displaced a raving old man from the cryptic “Petey”. . . living with the nightmarish truth behind your mentor’s fiction as you await the “Black Man with a Horn” . . . or discovering, in “Nadelman’s God,” that the nihilistic deity you committed to paper decades ago in a fit of adolescent pique has found a zealous new acolyte.
Klein’s supple, deceptively simple prose is as capable of wit as it is of dread as he gradually lifts the veil separating his meticulously described contemporary world from the dark worlds of uncertainty and horror that impinge upon it.