A Colder War by Charles Stross. Lovecraftian horror in which the Soviets, Americans, and lesser players in the Cold War try to harness cosmic horrors. This is an unofficial prequel to his Laundry Files book series in which British spies and computer nerds try to prevent people from summoning cosmic horrors etc - Colder War is less tongue in cheek than the Laundry Files.
The Game of Rat and Dragon by Paul Linebarger under the pseudonym Cordwainer Smith. This is part of Linebarger's Rediscovery of Man short story collection which follows the development of mankind from post-apocalyptic stone age to galaxy-spanning empire. This story takes place at a time when mankind has recently discovered faster-than-light interstellar travel and found that there are cosmic horrors waiting between the stars - psychic humans are able to destroy these creatures using "pinlighting" (where the blast of a nuclear weapon is focused into a beam weapon) but don't have the reflexes needed to aim the weapons, so they team up with psychic cats who have the reflexes to aim the weapons but not the intellect to detonate them. The humans perceive the cosmic horrors as "dragons" while the cats perceive them as "rats," hence the name of the story.
Than Curse the Darkness by David Drake. Lovecraftian horror set during the nadir of the Congo Free State, the story tries to answer the question of what could bring a human to want to summon a cosmic horror in the first place. Like almost all David Drake novels / short stories, this one is more than a bit brutal.
The Game of Rat and Dragon by Paul Linebarger under the pseudonym Cordwainer Smith. This is part of Linebarger's Rediscovery of Man short story collection which follows the development of mankind from post-apocalyptic stone age to galaxy-spanning empire. This story takes place at a time when mankind has recently discovered faster-than-light interstellar travel and found that there are cosmic horrors waiting between the stars - psychic humans are able to destroy these creatures using "pinlighting" (where the blast of a nuclear weapon is focused into a beam weapon) but don't have the reflexes needed to aim the weapons, so they team up with psychic cats who have the reflexes to aim the weapons but not the intellect to detonate them. The humans perceive the cosmic horrors as "dragons" while the cats perceive them as "rats," hence the name of the story.
Than Curse the Darkness by David Drake. Lovecraftian horror set during the nadir of the Congo Free State, the story tries to answer the question of what could bring a human to want to summon a cosmic horror in the first place. Like almost all David Drake novels / short stories, this one is more than a bit brutal.
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