MAD MOON OF DREAMS
the THIRD "Dreams" cycle novel
by BRIAN LUMLEY
first edition trade paperback (1500 copy print-run)
profusely illustrated by
DAVE CARSON

W. PAUL GANLEY: PUBLISHER (1987)


This book was published in an illustrated first-edition trade paperback edition with the same dust jacket and interior illustrations as the hard cover edition.   And now it can be told!  This is the TRUE first edition; it was published about a month before the hard cover version, and way in advance of all the others... and it is still in print.  (Why still in print?  Because I may have been an excellent editor/publisher, but I was a lousy tenth-rate businessman.)

To try to put it in one succinct sentence, the Lumley "Dreams" books can be described as delicious, thrilling, shuddersome, and sometimes humorous, Swords and Sorcery adventures, in which the "sorcery" is based on the works of H. P. Lovecraft.

About the book:

David Hero is an Edinburgh artist who has odd snatches of memory that seem to come from another world--- the world of dreams. But DREAMLAND is real, located in a parallel dimension of the multiverse, created by the dreams of mankind... and by the dreams of others, including Cthulhu. When he met his friend Eldin the Wanderer in Dreamland, and then encountered him again in Edinburgh, there was a crisis... and both ended up in Dreamland together as adventurers, with only vague memories of the waking world.

Dreamland was invented by H P Lovecraft, and most extensively utilized in his short novel, "The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath," which is as close as HPL could get to a sword-and-sorcery story (his hero, Randolph Carter, did carry a sword at one point but it didn't do him much good). When I looked back at HPL's story after reading Lumley's, I was vastly impressed by Lumley's detailed knowledge of the "Dream-Quest!" Lumley's "dreams" novels are swords-and-sorcery stories too, with some nasty horrors encountered on the way. But whereas HPL wrote in the style of the 19th century (which he naturally inbibed as a child from reading the old books in his grandfather's library), Lumley is a modern storyteller.

Let me repeat my comment on these Dreams novels... These novels are not intended to be taken too seriously (which does NOT mean that there are no moments of sheer horror through these novels). Elsewhere, Brian Lumley tells us that what he had in mind while writing them was Bing Crosby and Bob Hope in their old "Road" movies. So just enjoy them as they are! (And anyway, how serious was H P Lovecraft when he took Randolph Carter back from Dreamland's moon in a "great leap of cats.")  In any case, I enjoyed them so much that I decided to publish them.

In HERO OF DREAMS we met night-gaunts, Thinistor Udd and Yibb-Tstll, the Great Tree, the Eidolon Lathi and her noxious hive, Thalarion, the First Ones who settled in Theem'hdra, and the Mad First One who worshipped Cthulhu and sought to release him from his age-old imprisonment in R'lyeh.  In SHIP OF DREAMS we encounter King Kuranes, Zura the zombie queen, the mysterious Curator, and have lots of fun with flying armadas from the sky-city of Serannian.


Now, in MAD MOON OF DREAMS, the whole world is turned about: former enemies become allies against two Great Old Ones, Mnomquah (in his moon prison) and Oorn (on Dreamland's earth). Baleful yellow beams strike earth and suck up people and animals to be used as fodder in an evil plot to destroy the Dreamlands (and with them, the Waking World). ... And Hero and Eldin suffer a curious fate there on the moon...

Warning from me: If you hate S&S, fantasy adventure, and you want horror stories like CALL OF CTHULHU and the other noir tales of H P L and his followers... you won't like this.  If you like Leiber's Grey Mouser tales (as an example) then you are very likely to enjoy these stories.  (Of course Lumley wrote darker horror tales as well!)  Thus on Goodreads, this book averaged nearly 4 (out of 5) asterisks even though some folks hated it.  And yet horror abounds, too, even in these books!

 BRIAN LUMLEY was awarded the World Fantasy Life Achievement Award in 2010.

Some reviews from Goodreads: 

•••   The whole Dreamland Series by Brian Lumley is super creative, intelligent, and fun. I would recommend it for anyone age 8 and up, and I think these are some of the most wonderful stories along the lines of fantasy and fairy-tale I've ever read.

ˆˆˆ  While there are Lovecraftian horrors in a few places and some back & forth into the real world, the majority of it occurs in the Dreamlands so it plays out like a Conan/Elric/Grey Mouser tale with familiar and more difficult to pronounce place names. If you're looking for Lovecraft or Mythos writing style, forget it. This is mostly Sword & Sorcery writing style, occasionally delving into some of Lovecraft's writing that's more Lord Dunsany, not much.
But, if you enjoy that era of Sword & Sorcery books and like the Lovecraft references, it's worth reading and is short...
•••   A Lovecraftian novel taking place in dreamland as full of adventure and fun as the first 2.  



First edition (first printing) book published at $7.50 by W. Paul Ganley: Publisher in 1987.  It features excellent artwork including the dust jacket and lots of interior art.  (I show examples in the photographs... 

Even if you have read one or more of these in the Tor mass market paperback editions, or others, you might well want my first editions also — if only for the artwork!  They are "as new" — right out of the original box sent from the printer — and would certainly be suitable as gifts, too.  All three "Dreams" trade paperbacks are now in my store individually; or get all three at once and save.  Some of the hard cover copies are also still in print.  If they aren't in my store yet, ask me about them!



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