The Setup
Look, I'll be honest - I grabbed this during a particularly chaotic on-call week when my usual sci-fi queue had run dry and I needed something short to get me through the 6 AM train rides. Three hours of cosmic horror seemed about right. Plus, Lovecraft is basically the OG of "what if the universe is actually terrifying and incomprehensible" - which, as someone who debugs distributed systems, feels weirdly relatable.
I'd never actually read Lovecraft properly before. I know, I know. I've absorbed the Cthulhu mythos through osmosis - memes, references in games, that one coworker who has a plush eldritch horror on his desk - but never the source material. So this felt like finally reading the documentation instead of just guessing at the API.
The Stories Themselves
The collection spans Lovecraft's entire career, which is kind of fascinating from a "watch someone develop their craft" perspective. Some of these were written when he was basically a teenager, and it shows - in a charming, rough-edges kind of way. Others, like The Shunned House, weren't even published until after he died. It's an uneven ride, and I mean that descriptively, not negatively.
The earlier pieces feel more like Victorian ghost stories with Lovecraft's particular brand of purple prose layered on top. The later ones? That's where the existential dread really kicks in. The shift from "spooky house" to "incomprehensible cosmic entities that make human existence meaningless" is pretty stark when you listen to them back-to-back.
What struck me most - and maybe this is the engineer brain talking - is how systematic Lovecraft is about building his horror. It's not jump scares. It's this slow, logical escalation where each piece of information makes the situation worse. He's basically doing threat modeling, but for sanity. "Okay, so if THIS is true, then THAT must also be true, and oh no, the implications are..."
Three commutes. That's all it took. At just over 3 hours, it's perfectly sized for a week of shorter-than-usual train rides.
Phil Chenevert's Narration - The Mixed Bag
Okay, so here's where I have to be real with you. Phil Chenevert is... fine? He's got a voice that works for the material - kind of measured and a bit theatrical, which suits Lovecraft's deliberately archaic prose. The pacing is solid for building tension, and there's a clarity to the recording that made it easy to follow even when I was half-asleep and sardined between commuters.
But - and this is a real "but" - some reviewers have called his delivery monotonous, and I can see it. Lovecraft's narrators are often unnamed academics or investigators recounting their terrible discoveries, so they all kind of blend together vocally. If you're coming from audiobooks with more distinct character work, this might feel flat. It's not Ray Porter (obviously), but it's not trying to be.
The production is clean. No weird audio artifacts, no jarring transitions between stories. It's a LibriVox recording, I think, which means volunteer narrator, which means... manage your expectations accordingly? It's serviceable. It does the job. It didn't make me want to switch to reading the text instead, which is my baseline for "acceptable narration."
(I couldn't find a ton of info about Chenevert's other work, so I'm basing this purely on what I heard.)
Who This Is Actually For
Perfect for: late-night commutes, when you want something atmospheric but not too demanding. Also genuinely good for getting a quick overview of Lovecraft's range if, like me, you've somehow made it this far without actually reading him.
Skip for: anything requiring sustained attention. The prose is dense and deliberately old-fashioned, which can blur together if you're multitasking too hard. Also skip if you need strong character voices - this is very much a single-narrator, academic-tone kind of deal.
The ROI on this audiobook is pretty good purely from a "classic horror literacy" standpoint. You get seven stories, see Lovecraft's evolution as a writer, and it's short enough that you won't feel trapped if it's not your thing.
Fair Warning
Lovecraft's prose is... a lot. He never uses one adjective when he could use seventeen. Sentences run long and winding and full of semicolons and subordinate clauses that just keep going until you've forgotten what the subject of the sentence was. On audio, this can either be hypnotic or exhausting depending on your mood. I found it worked better at 1.25x - smoothed out the pacing without losing the atmosphere.
Also, and I feel like this needs saying: Lovecraft's racism is well-documented and occasionally seeps into the text in ways that'll make you wince. It's a product of its time in the worst ways. Just... be aware.
The Verdict
TL;DR: Worth your commute if you want a sampler platter of cosmic horror from the guy who basically invented the genre. The narration is serviceable rather than exceptional, but the stories themselves hold up - especially the later, weirder ones. Good for: podcast-burned brains that need a palate cleanser, horror fans who want to know where all the tropes came from, engineers who appreciate systematic worldbuilding even when that world is full of tentacles.
I finished it, I don't regret it, and I've already added The Call of Cthulhu (with a different narrator) to my queue. Mission accomplished, I guess?









