
Dragon Moon
In the ancient kingdom of Cyrena, something stirs in the darkness beyond the world. Karkora, the Pallid One, has awakened from its slumber in the Outside, a presence so vast and so terrible that the very altar fires whispered warnings of its coming. Now this cosmic abomination reaches toward the souls of kings, promising power to those desperate enough to summon it, and damnation to all who stand in its shadow. Henry Kuttner weaves a tale of creeping dread where the boundary between our world and the void beyond grows thin, and ancient things wait with patient hunger for the moment when humanity forgets to fear the dark. The horror here is not monsters in the night, but the realization that the universe contains forces utterly indifferent to human suffering, entities that exist beyond our concepts of good and evil, yet shape the fates of empires. Dragon Moon is cosmic horror at its finest: a story that understands the deepest terror is not death, but the knowledge that we are utterly alone in an infinite darkness filled with things that mean us harm.





















