This image is the cover for the book Moon Pool

Moon Pool

A. Merritt’s landmark classic of lost world fiction. The tome that influenced H.P. Lovecraft’s Call of Cthulhu. Two princesses, one of temptation, power, and naked deceit; one of mercy, trust, and blind truth. Both bound to serve supernatural beings unto death. Both in love with the same man. What do you get when you combine the action of Conan the Barbarian and the lyrical vision of The Martian Chronicles? The Mool Pool recounts the story of a group of adventurers who stumble through a portal into a lost, underground world. A world of incredible science and sublime magic. A world on the brink of war. The adventurers tip it over the edge. Can they save themselves? Can they save the world? One of the first stories of its kind, A. Merritt’s The Moon Pool will dazzle you until the final page.

A. Merritt, James A. Owen

Abraham Merritt, who wrote as A. Meritt, edited The American Weekly from 1912 to 1937, and was reportedly one of the highest paid journalists of his day, earning over $100,000/year by retirement. As editor, he discovered and promoted many young writers and artists, most importantly Hannes Bok, whose illustrations went on to grace more than 50 covers of Weird Tales and two of Merritt’s own novels. A. Merritt possessed a never-ceasing curiosity. While he lived in various cities along America’s eastern seaboard, he traveled the world and invested in such places as Jamaica and Ecuador. He collected and played exotic musical instruments, and had a library filled with thousands of volumes of occult literature. He also grew plants such as monkshood, datura, cannabis and peyote, plants said to promote occult power. “In all his stories,” A. Merritt wrote of himself, “Merritt weaves much of what he has seen, heard, and read of strange rites, of superstitions, of science, of religion. They are fantastic, but they are accurate and they are very unusual.” He wrote about metal monsters, satanic cults, krakens, dwarves, witches and lost civilizations. His most famous work is The Ship of Ishtar. While both The Moon Pool and The Ship of Ishtar recount exciting adventures, both go deeper than what is typically called ‘pulp fiction.’ The Moon Pool explores the relationship between cosmic forces of good and evil, where love—manifest through ultimate sacrifice—is the only power strong enough to overcome evil’s corruptive twins power and temptation. The Ship of Ishtar, on the other hand, explores man’s tenuous relationship with reality and the abstract. Inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 1999, A. Merritt’s fiction heavily influenced contemporary H. P. Lovecraft, as well as modern authors such as Michael Moorcock, James Cawthorn, Robert Bloch, and Dungeons & Dragons© co-creator Gary Gygax.

WordFire Press