The King in Yellow (Heathen Edition)
Robert William Chambers (1865-1933) was an American illustrator and writer, best known for The King in Yellow, his influential and odd collection of ten macabre and French short stories first published in 1895. The title refers to a fictional play featured in four of the stories, and to a mysterious and malevolent supernatural entity within that play who may very well exist outside of it . . . It is whispered that the play leaves only insanity and sorrow in its wake; it tempts those who read it, bringing upon them hallucinations and madness . . .
Influencing the works of H.P. Lovecraft, Raymond Chandler, George R.R. Martin, Neil Gaiman, and Nic Pizzolato (creator of HBO's True Detective), and described by critics as a classic in the field of the supernatural, The King in Yellow - with its dashes of fantasy, mystery, mythology, romance, and science fiction - is a staple of the early gothic and Victorian horror genres.
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Become an affiliateRobert W. Chambers (1865-1933) was an illustrator, novelist, and short-story writer. His best-known book, The King in Yellow, is regarded as one of the most important works of American supernatural fiction. He also wrote historical fiction, several bestselling romance novels, and war and adventure stories.
"Very genuine is the strain of horror in the early work of Robert W. Chambers. The King in Yellow, a series of vaguely connected short stories having as a background a monstrous and suppressed book whose perusal brings fright, madness, and spectral tragedy, really achieves notable heights of cosmic fear . . . The most powerful of its tales, perhaps, is 'The Yellow Sign.'" -H.P. Lovecraft
"The King in Yellow remains today a masterpiece of its kind, and with the work of Edgar Allen Poe and Ambrose Bierce, shares the distinction of having contributed to the famed Cthulhu mythos of H.P.Lovecraft." -August Derleth
"The King in Yellow and his legendary city of Carcosa may be the most famous character and setting you've never heard of . . . It should not be surprising that Lovecraft incorporated Chambers' The King in Yellow into his overarching Cthulhu mythos." -Michael M. Hughes, io9.com
"Chambers' King in Yellow is the more successful precursor to Lovecraft's Cthulu. He's a being who makes the reader shudder not because of how he looks or what he does, but because he inspires such eloquently expressed terror in the characters who encounter him." -Etelka Lehoczky, NPR
"It is a masterpiece . . . I have read many portions several times, captivated by the unapproachable tints of the painting. None but a genius of the highest order could do such work." -Edward Ellis
"The most eccentric little volume of its day, The King in Yellow is subtly fascinating, and compels attention for its style, and its wealth of strange imaginative force." -Times Herald
"Every story of The King in Yellow has something riveting about it . . . so perfectly realized, they became the model for much of twentieth-century horror/fantasy. The horror comes from character, superbly rendered detail, and an uncanny ability to suggest rather than declaim. 'The Repairer of Reputations' is one of the finest stories in the English language." -New York Press
"Authors like Chambers were restrained in defining every detail of the universes they created, while taking pains to suggest that there is just so much more happening beneath the surface . . . It's the very indirectness of the way he references The King in Yellow, these little drops of the hat, that has caused later writers to be so fascinated by what he explicitly left unsaid." -S.T. Joshi
"Although The King in Yellow has been an obscure reference indeed for most of the last hundred years, it was truly ahead of its time. It is one of the first fictional meta-books, a literary device that has been used since by authors as diverse as Agatha Christie, Franz Kafka, H.P. Lovecraft, and Vladimir Nabokov . . . It also happens to echo the best principles of great modern design: It's what isn't there that makes it so appealing." -John Brownlee, Fast Co.