![]() ![]() First, there is the reprint of Nameless Horrors. Some or all of us have been involved with two recent publications from Chaosium. ![]() The Blasphemous Tome is the fully licenced Call of Cthulhu fanzine we produce for Patreon backers of the podcast. If you have a short article, poem or piece of flash fiction of up to 500 words, or some artwork (black and white or colour) that you think we’d like, we’d love to see it! You can send them to for this issue will be open until the end of April 2023. While the next issue of The Blasphemous Tome is still a few months away, we’re currently open for submissions. News Submissions for The Blasphemous Tome issue 11 Both are unusual deities, however, and we find plenty to say about them. The parentage of Byatis is more complicated, however, originating as a passing mention from Robert Bloch before being fleshed out by a young Ramsey Campbell. Cyäegha comes from the work of Belgian weird fiction author Eddy Bertin, remaining Bertin’s best-known creation. ![]() Rather than focusing on the creations of a specific writer, we’ve chosen this episode’s pairing for their connections to specific places. We have devoted previous episodes to Dagon, Shub-Niggurath, Yog-Sothoth, Nyarlathotep, Hastur, Azathoth, Nodens, Ubbo-Sathla and Mordiggian, Ithaqua, Cthulhu, Daoloth and Eihort, Gla’aki, Y’golonac, and Tsathoggua, Atlach-Nacha and Abhoth. This episode is our latest exploration of the deities of the Cthulhu Mythos. Even that is a small price to pay for such lustrous facial, um, hair. The only real downside is the way we can be pulled away without notice whenever someone strokes an effigy of us. Still, it’s hard to argue with the results. The Byatis beard care regimen is a strange one and requires a little more anthropophagy than we normally indulge in. We’re back and we’re stroking our chin serpents. ![]()
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