Wednesday, 23 January 2013
Lynn Willis
Here are what several key contributors to the Call of Cthulhu role-playing game, which Lynn directed for many decades, had to say about him:
“He was incredibly smart, astonishingly widely read, detail oriented, and capable. He is largely responsible for the high quality, playability, and popularity of the leading horror RPG in our field.” – Charlie Krank, President of Chaosium Inc.
“Lynn was always a great guy to work for, an all around good guy, and I'm very sorry to hear of his passing.” – Brian M. Sammons, author of Secrets and editor of Atomic Age Cthulhu, Steampunk Cthulhu and Eldritch Chrome.
“Lynn very graciously bought the first book I ever pitched, right out of college. And by the time he put it out (12 years later), we'd developed a real(ly weird) friendship. I'll truly miss (arguing with) him.” – Cody Goodfellow, author of Secrets of San Francisco.
“He was a gentleman and a scholar; I learned so much from him - indeed, I honestly would not be the writer I am today were it not for Lynn's guiding hand.” – Richard Watts, author of “Love’s Lonely Children”, “Tatterdemallion” and “Behold the Mother”
“Lynn was the editor of the 1991 edition of Horror on the Orient Express (and many other Chaosium books besides), and every page is rich with his love of history and detail. We miss him, and do our best to honour the work he left behind.” – Mark Morrison, author of Terror Australis and Horror on the Orient Express.
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
The House of R'lyeh Announced
The House of R’lyeh contains five scenarios that closely follow the events of H.P. Lovecraft stories. They are set in Boston, Providence, the British Isles, continental Europe and the Middle East. None of the scenarios need to be played at set dates or in a set order, but they could be run in the order presented to form a loose campaign using optional links between scenarios to draw investigators from one to the other.
Alternatively, the scenarios may be used to supplement classic Call of Cthulhu campaigns such as The Shadows of Yog-Sothoth and The Fungi from Yuggoth, the latter currently in print as The Day of the Beast, both of which suggest their component scenarios should be interspersed with others.
The first scenario in this book, “The Art of Madness” (Brian Courtemanche) follows on from the events of the Lovecraft tale “Pickman’s Model”. Artist of the macabre, Richard Upton Pickman, is now a ghoul living a subterranean netherworld beneath Boston creating a new school of art. There are several ways that player characters might be drawn into investigating his macabre activities and, while dangerous, Pickman’s intent is not particularly lethal. The difficulty for investigators will be to resolve the situation without becoming compromised.
While in New England, the investigators discover “The Crystal of Chaos” (Peter Gilham with David Conyers), a retelling of the events of Lovecraft’s “The Haunter of the Dark”. Hired by professors of Miskatonic University, the investigator seek out a fabled crystal with origins in Ancient Egypt, but they soon find a far greater evil lurks in an abandoned church in Providence. This scenario originally appeared in Different Worlds issue 34, May/June 1984, and has been expanded and revised in this publication.
“The Return of the Hound” (Glyn White) draws investigators an auction in Yorkshire, in England, where a rare edition of the Necronomicon is going to be sold. The previous owners, the decadent occultists from Lovecraft’s “The Hound”, are dead, as that tale recounts, but what they unearthed in ‘a Holland churchyard’ has grown strong, and has schemes of its own to fulfill. The amount of danger the investigators face is dependent on how determined they are not to let this Necronomicon fall into the wrong hands.
“The Jermyn Horror” (David Conyers) takes place in Britain, beginning in London and then moving to Huntingdon with the investigators seeking a rare edition of Regnum Congo, reputedly to be found in the crumbling estate of the deceased Jermyn family as described in Lovecraft’s “Arthur Jermyn”. The search is imperiled by a creature that a Jermyn brought back from the Congo some three hundred years ago that haunts the mansion seeking a human vessel for its escape.
“Nameless City, Nameless Terrors” (Brian M. Sammons) concludes this collection with an expedition into the heart of Arabia’s Empty Quarter in search of Irem as described in Lovecraft’s “The Nameless City”. This scenario requires investigators to risk their bodies and their minds as, in the midst of the desolate ruins of Irem, the investigators learn something of the nature of the Great Old Ones, and perhaps forestall the rising of Cthulhu from his watery grave.
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
Undead & Unbound Cover Art by Paul Mudie
The anthology, edited by Brian M. Sammons and myself shall be released by Chaosium Inc. later this year. The illustration features elements from the included stories "I Am Legion", "Thunder in Old Kilpatrick", "Descanse En Paz", "Mother Blood" and "In the House of a Million Years".
Monday, 20 February 2012
Eldritch Chrome featuring "Playgrounds of Angolaland"
Here is the table of contents, in no particular order:
Eldritch Chrome
- “Playgrounds of Angolaland” by David Conyers
- “The Blowfly Manifesto” by Tim Curran
- “SymbiOS” by William Meikle
- “Obsolete, Absolute” by Robert M. Price
- “Open Minded” by Jeffrey Thomas
- “The Battle of Arkham” by Peter Rawlik
- “The Wurms in the Grid” by Nickolas Cook
- “Of Fractals, Fantomes, Frederic and Filrodj” by John Shirley
- “The Gauntlet” by Glynn Barrass and Brian M. Sammons
- “Indifference” by CJ Henderson
- “Dreams of Death” by Lois Gresh
- “Inlibration” by Michael Tice
- “Immune” by Terrie Leigh Relf
- “Hope Abandoned” by Tom Lynch
- “Sonar City” by Sam Stone
- “The Place that Cannot Be” by D.L. Snell
- “Flesh and Scales” by Ran Cartwright
- “Real Gone” by David Dunwoody
- “CL3ANS3” by Carrie Cuinn
Tuesday, 31 January 2012
Coming Soon: Undead & Unbound
Unbound: from the jungles of South America to the gold fields of the Wild West, in occupied Europe and along the banks of the Nile, to the ice fields of the North Pole and the wastelands of Mars, nowhere is safe from undead infestation.
Undead & Unbound: A collection of nineteen new horror stories by twenty leading horror authors from across the globe.
- “Blind Item” by Cody Goodfellow
- “Dead Baby Keychain Blues” by Gary McMahon
- “A Personal Apocalypse” by Mercedes M. Yardley
- “The Unexpected” by Mark Allan Gunnells
- “Incarnate” by David Dunwoody
- “Marionettes” by Robert Neilson
- “Undead Night of the Undeadest Undead” by C.J. Henderson
- “I Am Legion” by Robert M. Price
- “When Dark Things Sleep” by Damien Walters Grintalis
- “Descanse En Paz” by William Meikle
- “Thunder in Old Kilpatrick” by Gustavo Bondoni
- “Phallus Incarnate” by Glynn Owen Barrass
- “Wreckers” by Tom Lynch
- “Scavenger” by Oscar Rios
- “In the House of Millions of Years” by John Goodrich
- “Romero 2.0” by Brian M. Sammons and David Conyers
- “Mother Blood” by Scott David Aniolowski
- “The Unforgiving Court” by David Schembri
- “North of the Arctic Circle” by Peter Rawlik
Sunday, 11 December 2011
New Anthology Submission Guidelines from Chaosium
- Extreme Planets edited by David Conyers, David Kernot and Jeff Harris (science fiction)
- The Edge of Sundown edited by Brian M. Sammons and Kevin Ross (western horror)
- Mark of the Beast edited by Scott David Aniolowski (werewolf horror)
Saturday, 10 December 2011
Submissions Sought: Extreme Planets
Wednesday, 22 July 2009
Been Away

Quick updates, I've appeared in Midnight Echo #2 edited by Shane Jiraiya Cummings and Angela Challis for the Australian Horror Writer's Association, with my award winning short story "Homo Canis".
I've got reviews appearing in Albedo One where I've now been made a contributing editor (thanks guys!). Those reviews incidentally are Year's Best Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy Vol. 4 edited by Bill Congreve and Michelle Marquardt, Matter by Iain M. Banks, Angel Rising by Dirk Flinthart, and The Second Black Book of Horror edited by Charles Black.
My Call of Cthulhu gaming scenario "The Burning Stars" appeared in Terrors from Beyond from Chaosium. Although there were some layout and editing problems, the book otherwise looks impressive. It got a pretty good review from Pookie on Game Cryer. Here is an extract:
Terrors From Beyond saves its best for last. David Conyers’ “The Burning Stars” is the highlight of the collection, managing to meet the book’s lofty claims with aplomb. ... Another pleasure of reading this scenario is discovering how much of it is tied into earlier Call of Cthulhu scenarios and campaigns, the author taking the time to make it as much part of Call of Cthulhu canon as no other author does. It is refreshing to see an author acknowledge the history of the game in this fashion and it would be fantastic to see the author carry this into a full campaign – which David Conyers should be allowed to write…
I attended Conjecture where I didn't win a Ditmar, met some really familiar faces including D.M Cornish, Sean Williams and Jeff Harris, and met some new writers and editors I'd only previously known through email or reputation including Jason Fischer, Pat McNamara, Dirk Flinthardt, Jason Nahrung, Peter M. Ball, Kirstyn McDermott, Alisia Krasnostein and many others. Nice to finally put faces to so many names.
I've had some interesting developments behind the scenes too, interviewing one of Australia's most prominent science fiction authors which will appear in a future issue of Albedo One. And a couple of projects in the works in the United States which are looking very promising. More news on that later.
Wednesday, 29 April 2009
New Cover for Cthulhu’s Dark Cults

I really like this cover, not that I didn’t like the previous cover, but Steve’s work really encapsulates thematically what the collection is about. Is it a scene from a specific story? No, but that doesn’t matter. Like a said, Steve’s image says everything it needs to. The silhouetted figures dancing in a naked frenzy around a materialising Cthulhuoid god in a dark and uninviting wood says it all. These are what the stories are about. I’m glad Steve came on board.
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Cthulhu's Dark Cults Officially Announced
Here is the blurb from the Chaosium website:
Cthulhu's Dark Cults
Schemes of the Secret Masters
CHA 6044
$14.95
ISBN 1-56882-235-9
Edited by David Conyers
Fiction Anthology
Call of Cthulhu Fiction Anthology
Journey across the globe to witness the numerous and diverse cults that worship Cthulhu and the Great Old Ones. Lead by powerful sorcerers and fanatical necromancers, their followers are mad and deranged slaves. The ancient and alien gods whom they willingly devote themselves are truly terrifying. These cults control real power, for they are the real secret masters of our world. Chaosium's Call of Cthulhu is an endless source of imagination of all things dark and mysterious.
This book is part of an expanding collection of Cthulhu Mythos horror fiction and related topics. Call of Cthulhu fiction focuses on single entities, concepts, or authors significant to readers and fans of H.P. Lovecraft.This collection of ten stories features the cults which first appeared in classic Call of Cthulhu gaming supplements such as The Masks of Nyarlathotep, The Day of the Beast, Horror on the Orient Express, Shadows of Yog-Sothoth and others.
- "The Eternal Chinaman" by John Sunseri
- "Captains of Industry" by John Goodrich
- "Perfect Skin" by David Witteveen
- "Covenant of Darkness" by William Jones
- "The Whisper of Ancient Secrets" by Penelope Love
- "Old Ghost" by Peter A. Worthy
- "The Nature of Faith" by Oscar Rios
- "The Devil's Diamonds" by Cody Goodfellow
- "Requiem for the Burning God" by Shane Jiraiya Cummings
- "Sister of the Sands" by David Conyers
Saturday, 14 March 2009
Keith Herber (1949-2009)
Tuesday, 10 March 2009
Terrors From Beyond Out Soon
Terrors from Beyond
Terrors From Beyond is a collection of 1920s adventures for Chaosium's Call of Cthulhu, designed for play with pre-generated characters. The book provides fine opportunities for an impromptu game or tournament play and – because the characters are intimately connected with the plot – roleplaying challenges not normally available in most published material. An excellent adventure collection for new and veteran Call of Cthulhu players alike.
GHOST LIGHT – Gary Sumpter
The keepers of a remote Scottish lighthouse have vanished. What fate awaits those who come to investigate the disappearances?
GRAVE SECRETS – Brian Courtemanche
The people of Stafford, Rhode Island, live much the same as their colonial forbears, making only gradual concessions to the encroaching tread of progress. Now, a fate both formless and awful has befallen a family in town. One by one, the children succumb to a newly arrived yet ancient menace.
THE DIG – Brian Sammons
Miskatonic University students on an excavation at nearby Dunlow Woods uncover ancient secrets, murder and horrors from the past.
A METHOD TO MADNESS – John A. Almack
The investigators have been committed to a private asylum. Are they really insane? Is their impending cure now worse than their derangements?
DEATH BY MISADVENTURE – Glyn White
Evidence suggests that Charles Stanhope was killed by the accidental discharge of a faulty shotgun at his home in the Lincolnshire Fens. The Coroner's verdict is death by misadventure – but is there a suggestion of something far more sinister?
THE BURNING STARS – David Conyers
The investigators recover in a US Military hospital in Haiti suffering from ongoing and prolonged blackouts. The last seven days of their lives have vanished from their minds. Can they not remember, or can’t they bear to?