Abraham Merritt - The Face In The Abyss (4/9) The White Llama
Автор: Literary Guide: Volume One
Загружено: 2025-11-24
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THE FACE IN THE ABYSS.....
Our narrator tells us of the time he met Nicholas Graydon in a small village in the Peruvian uplands of the Andean mountains, feverish and at death's door. While nursing Graydon back to health, our narrator is told of an incredible adventure Graydon experienced. Of the treacherous band of journeyman of which he found himself in the company. Of the beautiful and mysterious ivory-skinned woman Suarra and her claims of a hidden civilization filled with untold jewels and gold. Of The Snake Mother who haunts his dreams and presides over the lost world of Yu-Atlanchi with the blue and yellow-cowled Two Lords. Of that dreaded Face in the Abyss which he must resist or forever be consumed!
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY.....
Abraham Grace Merritt (January 20, 1884 – August 21, 1943) was an American editor and author of works of fantastic fiction. Born in Beverly, New Jersey, he moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1894. Originally trained in law, he turned to journalism, first as a correspondent and later as editor. He was assistant editor of The American Weekly from 1912 to 1937 under Morrill Goddard, then its editor from 1937 until his death. As editor, he hired the unheralded new artists Virgil Finlay and Hannes Bok and promoted the work done on polio by Sister Elizabeth Kenny.
His fiction was only a sideline to his journalism career, which might explain his relatively low output. One of the best-paid journalists of his era, Merritt made $25,000 per year by 1919, and at the end of his life was earning $100,000 yearly exceptional sums for the period. His financial success allowed him to pursue world travel he invested in real estate in Jamaica and Ecuador and exotic hobbies, like cultivating orchids and plants linked to witchcraft, magic (monkshood, wolfbane, blue datura, peyote, and cannabis). Merritt married twice, once in the 1910s to Eleanore Ratcliffe, with whom he raised an adopted daughter, and again in the 1930s to Eleanor H. Johnson. He maintained an estate in Hollis Park Gardens on Long Island, where he accumulated collections of weapons, carvings, and primitive masks from his travels, as well as a library of occult literature that reportedly exceeded five thousand volumes. He died suddenly of a heart attack, at his winter home in Indian Rocks Beach, Florida, in 1943.
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