In the Antarctic, the windswept Mountains of Madness rise, hiding the gruesome city of the Great Old Ones, which was already ancient when life was born on the planet. Paranoia, terror and death lurk among their towering ice-capped peaks, forever trapped in snow.
H. P. Lovecraft was a child prodigy. He could recite poetry at the age of two and was composing complete poems by the age of six. His grandfather encouraged him to read classic works such as One Thousand and One Nights, Bulfinch’s Mythology, and children’s editions of the Iliad and the Odyssey. He also sparked the boy’s fascination with the strange and the uncanny by telling him Gothic horror stories.
Lovecraft was a frail child, and his attempts to attend school were largely unsuccessful, resulting in much of his education being conducted at home. In 1899, he began publishing his own amateur periodicals, the first of which was The Scientific Gazette.
After 1904, owing to poor financial management, his family fell into severe financial hardship and was forced to move to a much smaller and less comfortable house. Lovecraft was so deeply affected by this event that he experienced suicidal thoughts for a time. In 1908, he suffered a nervous breakdown, which prevented him from completing high school. His failure to graduate and gain admission to Brown University haunted him for the rest of his life.
As a young man, Lovecraft wrote fiction but later set it aside in favor of poetry and essays. He eventually returned to imaginative fiction in 1917. His first professional story was published in Weird Tales in 1923. His lengthy and frequent correspondence made him one of the most prolific letter writers of the twentieth century.
Lovecraft married in 1924 and moved to Brooklyn, New York—a place he never truly came to tolerate. The marriage eventually ended, and he returned to Providence, where he spent the remainder of his life. The years following his return to Providence—the final decade of his life—were also his most creative. During this period, he wrote many of his best-known stories, as well as the novels The Case of Charles Dexter Ward and At the Mountains of Madness.
Despite his literary achievements, his financial circumstances continued to deteriorate. The suicide of Robert E. Howardaffected him deeply. Lovecraft died of cancer in 1937.
All of his works are available in our editions.
The Mountains of Madness is considered by many to be H.P. Lovecraft’s greatest work, since here the nature and origin of the Great Old Ones, their descent to the newborn Earth and the creation of the human species are explained. It also explains the origins of the fearsome Yuggoth, the Mi Go, Yog-Sothoth, the inhuman Kaddath and all the elements that make Cthulhu mythology so terrifying and fascinating.
Also in this volume the reader can find two of the author’s most beautiful and characteristic short stories, the mysterious “The Horror at Red Hook” and the nightmarish “The Colour from Outer Space”.