- The Gods of
Pegāna is the
first book by Anglo-Irish
writer Lord Dunsany,
published in 1905. The
fantasy book was
reviewed favourably but as an unusual...
-
following is a
partial list
compiled from
various sources. The Gods of
Pegāna (1905) Time and the Gods (1906) The
Sword of
Welleran and
Other Stories...
-
fantasy novel The King of Elfland's Daughter, and his
first book, The Gods of
Pegāna,
which depicts a
fictional pantheon. Many
critics feel his
early work laid...
-
inspiration for
Azathoth in Lord Dunsany's Mana-Yood-Sushai, from The Gods of
Pegana, a
creator deity "who made the gods and
thereafter rested." In Dunsany's...
- admired. Alhireth-Hotep, a
false prophet,
appears in Dunsany's The Gods of
Pegana, and Mynarthitep, a god
described as "angry",
appears in Dunsany's "The...
- book of
short stories, The Gods of
Pegana, is
linked by Dunsany's
invented pantheon of
deities who
dwell in
Pegāna. It was
followed by Time and the Gods...
- that
Lovecraft admired the work of Lord Dunsany, who
wrote The Gods of
Pegana (1905),
which depicts a god
constantly lulled to
sleep to
avoid the consequences...
- Doom That Came To
Sarnath public domain audiobook at
LibriVox The Gods of
Pegāna public domain audiobook at
LibriVox Time and the Gods
public domain audiobook...
-
means "half man"; the
character is a
personification of the
force of
habit Hobith The name of one of the "home gods" in The Gods of
Pegāna by Lord Dunsany...
- Yoharneth-Lahai, a
fictional deity in Lord Dunsany's The Gods of
Pegana, who "sendeth
little dreams out of
Pegana to
please the
people of Earth"—a
precursor to Lovecraft's...