English;
Daniel Harms, 1998; 1d6/2d6 Sanity Loss; Cthulhu Mythos +9%; Occult +1%; 7
weeks to read and comprehend.
Spells:
None. Carrying it openly results in a -5% penalty to most Communications
skills, but it makes an excellent short-term lighting source (burns for 1-6
rounds) and emergency weapon (attack roll 20%, 1-2 damage, 3 HP).
*****
I’m
sorry to have made light of the Hippocratic Oath as the title of this essay,
and it would seem to be an injunction against the person of whom I’m about to
speak. To be frank I just took advantage of an obvious joke and hopefully, it
will not cause offence. If it does, mea culpa; my bad; I apologise.
I
want to talk about The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana by Daniel Harms (ah, you see
where the feeble joke comes in now!). My copy is the second edition, published by
Chaosium in 1998. As you can see from the image, it’s a well-thumbed copy with
the lacquer of the front wrapper detaching itself slowly with every perusal.
This authoritative volume commands my attention every time I start forth on yet
another sojourn amongst entities Lovecraftian; it’s always my first port of
call. I urgently encourage anyone gaming with the Cthulhu Mythos to acquire a
copy of this book and to utilise it as a mainstay of their tale-telling.
That
being said, I now offer a few caveats.
From
having read this volume many times, I’m aware that the author tries very hard
to not let any cats out of any bags. This is only fair. If the Encyclopedia
baldly stated the crucial elements of every Mythos tales it dissects, then there
would be no reason for fans to search out and explore the writings of the many
authors which the tome encompasses. It is, and I have found it to be so, a
great encouragement to seek out the original stories of the writers which it
talks about and so I have used it, to great effect. Having done so, however, I
begin to see the shortcomings of the Encyclopedia itself.
Not
only does Harms promote the ‘Devil’s Reef’ fallacy, he misses the point on
several other issues and, after a while, it starts to look as though Harms was
only skimming the source material and missing some salient points in the hurry
to meet a deadline. Time pressure affects us all, but this is the second
edition of this work and you would reasonably expect that any glaring errors
from the first release would have been addressed.
Take
one entry as an example. I was working on gathering together all of the entries
regarding strange Mythos stones and other carvings when I stumbled across the ‘Sixtystone’
or ‘Ixaxar’. This led me to a reference about Pomponius Mela and his
geographical work “De Situ Orbis”. Having tracked this volume down and studying
the publishing history concerning it, I discovered that it had nothing to do
with any Mythos concepts. The title appears in a piece by Arthur Machen
entitled “The Black Seal”; in that work, the information surrounding the ‘Sixtystone’
emerges from another text that is bound together into an edition of Mela’s work:
“Now, however, in desperation, I began to
re-examine the musty sheepskin and calf bindings, and found, much to my
delight, a fine old quarto printed by the Stephani, containing the three books
of Pomponius Mela, De Situ Orbis, and other of the ancient geographers. I knew
enough of Latin to steer my way through an ordinary sentence, and I soon became
absorbed in the odd mixture of fact and fancy - light shining on a little of
the space of the world, and beyond, mist and shadow and awful forms. Glancing
over the clear-printed pages, my attention was caught by the heading of a
chapter in Solinus, and I read the words:
‘MIRA DE INTIMIS GENTIBUS LIBYAE. DE
LAPIDE HEXECONTALITHO,’
'The wonders of the people that inhabit
the inner parts of Libya, and of the stone called Sixtystone...'”
-Arthur
Machen, “The Novel of the Black Seal”
So,
it is an entry on Solinus which is required, not one on Mela. The author could
have saved himself a painful night’s cross-referencing if he had only surmised
this fact.
I
guess the automatic response to a situation like this is to say, “get off your
high horse; it’s only a roleplaying game.” Yes; that’s right – it is just a
roleplaying game. But it also stems from a body of work from which people are
making money and gaining tertiary educational qualifications. As I’ve said
before, if something’s worth doing, then it’s worth getting it right. The
quality of the work released is what gains the author kudos and respect; a work
that’s flawed only opens the instigator up to ridicule.
So,
how about a third edition of The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana? Surely it’s about
time that a new re-working hit the market? As I’ve already stated, this is an
invaluable resource and it should be updated to keep pace with everything that
the market produces. And after all, a lot of ichor has flowed under the bridge
since 1998...
Hello. Just to mention that there IS a recent, expanded edition titled Encyclopedia of the Cthulhu Mythos, by a different publisher.
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