book cover of The Thing From HR
 

The Thing From HR

(2022)
(The first book in the Cthulhu Amalgamated series)
A novel by

 
 
What's a nice Shoggoth like him doing in a dump like this?

Narg was content working as a Damnation Services-10 in HR. Sure, he was related to one of the Elder Gods, but a little nepotism never hurt any Thing. His life was just wailing and gibbering, right up until his Uncle needed a small favor from his nephew.

All Narg had to do was go down among the humans...and pretend to be one of
them.

These are not your Grandfather's tales of Eldritch Horror: this is the untold story of the ghastly, unappreciated (and entirely expendable) minor monstrosities that support the Inscrutable Plans Of Dark Gods And Elder Things Beyond The Knowledge Of Men.

The
Cthulhu Amalgamated series is a comic romp full of action and mystery, including, of course, Sanity-Shattering Horror––and that’s just the paperwork. Even H.P. could not conceive of the Corporate Terrors that await The Thing from HR.

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The author does a number of very difficult things in this book and makes them look easy. What’s more, many of them–Lovecraft inspired horror/comedy, an inhuman narrator, historical fiction, metaphysical fiction–are things that often have been done very badly.

I was hesitant, in fact, to pick up this book because of what my publisher refers to as “Cthulolz”. There is a lot of uninspired pastiche that attempts to ride on Lovecraft’s coattails by namedropping elder gods into an otherwise flaccid story.

What sets The Thing From HR apart is the voice of the main character. Narg is a likeable shoggoth. From his own perspective he is very ordinary, working his job, flirting with his secretary, Bug, spending his days in obscurity. He has a delightful lack of comprehension regarding the human world, despite being in the office of Human Restraint which handles the paperwork for humans who meddle in Things Man Was Not Meant To Know Or Even Guess At.

The story begins with Narg being sent on assignment to the human world. There things start to go south as soon as he arrives. He is shoehorned into a human body and given the soul of a dead human as a native guide. Unfortunately, neither Narg nor the former human, Murph, have any idea what the assignment is or how to accomplish it.

What follows is a comedy of errors. Narg and Murph blunder from one awkward situation to another, encountering cultists, murderers, Nazi spies, and a femme fatale who is both more and less than she seems.

Throughout the novel Griffis maintains an affection for his characters and for the work of Lovecraft than inspired them. We are invited to laugh with the absurdities of the conceit, not laugh at it. For all of its horrors this is a novel with a gentle and compassionate heart. We want Narg to succeed at his enigmatic mission and along the way we meet other quirky and likable characters.

The voice acting of Magnus Carlssen is perfect for the feel of the novel. He makes the characters very real and manages a number of accents (including the shoggoth language) naturally.

Highly recommended.

- from a review by Misha Burnett

Genre: Young Adult Fantasy

Used availability for Roy M Griffis's The Thing From HR


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