Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths is a collection of some of
Alan Moore's previously unpublished work, as well as adaptations of his performance work by
Antony Johnston. It was released in three parts by
Avatar Press.
Publication
It was published in 3 issues and collected as a trade paperback.
Comics
The collection was originally published as a 3-part black and white monthly comic:
Issue #1. Published September 2003
- "Zaman's Hill" (with Juan Jose Ryp, an adaptation of part of a lost novel (see below), Yuggoth Cultures, which gave this series its name).
- "Nightjar" (with Bryan Talbot, scheduled to appear in Warrior)
- Nighjar script and development letter by Alan Moore and article by Bryan Talbot
Issue #2. Published October 2003
- "Litvinoff's Book" (with Mike Wolfer, a song adaptation)
- "Cold Snap" (with Bryan Talbot, a short story previously published in the benefit comic Food for Thought)
- "Itchy Peterson" (with Val Semeiks, previously published in a Chaos! Comics anthology)
- "Nativity on Ice" (with Bryan Talbot, a short story)
- "Recognition" (with Jacen Burrows, another adaptation from Yuggoth Cultures)
Issue #3. Published November 2003
Alan Moore's The Courtyard was originally scheduled for appearances in this collection but was turned into its own separate series.
Collected editions
The issues were collected into a
trade paperback:
- Yuggoth Cultures (Avatar, 196 pages, 2006 softcover, ISBN 1-59291-026-2, hardcover, ISBN 1-59291-027-0)
Spin-offs
Novel
The pages of the lost novel were left on the seat of a cab as Moore says "Unfortunately, when the texts were about half completed, I left the only copy of three or four of them in a London taxi cab. Since it was impossible to reconstruct, the work went on hold, remaining incomplete." The unpublished novel appears on a number of listings including
Yuggoth Cultures (Creation Books, 256 pages, 1997 ISBN 1-871592-31-3).
Nightjar
The Nightjar story was spun off into a four-part mini-series written by Johnston with art by
Max Fiumara. The basis was the story as seen in
Yuggoth Cultures #1 with some additional notes from Bryan Talbot, but the bulk of the story was created by Johnston.
Yuggoth Creatures
Johnston would later produce more work in the Cthulhu Mythos, for Avatar, under the title Yuggoth Creatures.
Notes
References
External links
Reviews