Spores of Doom: Dank Tales of the Fungal Weird [Worth, Aaron (ed.)]
From the fungus-webbed House of Usher to the maddening, fungus-like wallpaper of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s classic tale of madness, and Ray Bradbury’s account of insidious mushroom dispersal via the U.S. postal system, weird fiction has harbored a thriving culture of fungal horrors throughout the past two centuries. With stories of mycological possession alongside dark, pulpy science fiction monstrous fruiting bodies run amok, this new anthology collects the classic with the lost and obscure to trace our fascination with a spore-infested branch of British and American fiction
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Spores of Doom: Dank Tales of the Fungal Weird [Worth, Aaron (ed.)]
Spores of Doom: Dank Tales of the Fungal Weird [Worth, Aaron (ed.)]
From the fungus-webbed House of Usher to the maddening, fungus-like wallpaper of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s classic tale of madness, and Ray Bradbury’s account of insidious mushroom dispersal via the U.S. postal system, weird fiction has harbored a thriving culture of fungal horrors throughout the past two centuries. With stories of mycological possession alongside dark, pulpy science fiction monstrous fruiting bodies run amok, this new anthology collects the classic with the lost and obscure to trace our fascination with a spore-infested branch of British and American fiction
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From the fungus-webbed House of Usher to the maddening, fungus-like wallpaper of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s classic tale of madness, and Ray Bradbury’s account of insidious mushroom dispersal via the U.S. postal system, weird fiction has harbored a thriving culture of fungal horrors throughout the past two centuries. With stories of mycological possession alongside dark, pulpy science fiction monstrous fruiting bodies run amok, this new anthology collects the classic with the lost and obscure to trace our fascination with a spore-infested branch of British and American fiction











