T.E.D. Klein published two books in the 1980s and then, for all
practical purposes, stopped. The Ceremonies arrived in 1984.
Dark Gods followed in 1985. A thin collection of shorter pieces,
Reassuring Tales, surfaced in 2006 in a limited run of 600
copies that sold out immediately. And that, give or take an
expanded reissue, is the complete output of a writer Stephen King
once called the most exciting voice in horror fiction.
Four novellas. That's what Dark Gods contains. "Children of the
Kingdom," "Petey," "Black Man with a Horn," and "Nadelman's
God." The last of these won the World Fantasy Award. The
collection has been out of print more often than not, commanding
serious prices on the secondhand market, and a
2024 Chiroptera Press edition
with a new introduction by S.T. Joshi confirms what collectors
already knew: this book refuses to go away.
I wrote briefly about Dark Gods
a decade ago and didn't say nearly enough. The collection
deserves more than a paragraph and a quote from Joshi, however
accurate that quote remains. Klein's achievement towers over his
more prolific contemporaries not despite the small body of work
but, I think, because of it. Every sentence in Dark Gods earns
its place. There's no filler. No coasting.
What separates Klein from most horror writers is where he finds
the dread. His settings are aggressively mundane: a nursing home
during the 1977 New York blackout, an airport departure lounge,
a bungalow colony in the rural northeast. The protagonists are
educated, self-absorbed men who think too much and notice too
little. When the supernatural arrives, it doesn't crash through
windows. It accumulates in the periphery, in details that read
as benign on first pass and become unbearable in retrospect.
Simon Strantzas
identified this technique precisely
: individual phrases that seem harmless in isolation weave into
a horrible tapestry by each tale's climax. That skill separates
the experts from the pretenders, and Klein is an expert.
"Black Man with a Horn" is the one that gets the most critical
attention, and rightly so. The narrator is modeled on Frank
Belknap Long, a real horror writer who knew Lovecraft personally
and spent decades working in his shadow. Klein uses this to do
something extraordinary: he writes a Cthulhu Mythos story that
is simultaneously a meditation on what it means to write
Lovecraftian fiction at all. The cosmic horror is genuine, but
so is the inquiry into Lovecraft's racism, the narrator's own
prejudices, the way inherited literary traditions carry inherited
blind spots.
Reactor's analysis
remains the best piece written about this novella, and it's
worth reading alongside the story itself.
Klein's acknowledged masters are Arthur Machen, M.R. James,
Algernon Blackwood, Walter de la Mare. The lineage shows. His
horror is atmospheric and restrained, closer to
Robert Aickman's
unsettling ambiguity than to the explicit violence that
dominated 1980s horror publishing. Where Aickman leaves you
uncertain about what happened, Klein leaves you certain that
something terrible happened and uncertain about its full scope.
The effect is different but the discipline is the same:
withholding is a form of generosity toward the reader's
imagination.
He edited Rod Serling's Twilight Zone Magazine for its first 37
issues, discovering Dan Simmons and Lois McMaster Bujold along
the way. He resigned specifically to write a second novel,
Nighttown, described as a paranoid horror novel set in New York
City. Viking announced it for 1989. Then 1995. In a
2008 Cemetery Dance interview,
Klein admitted he'd sold the book without knowing how to execute
it. In 2016, following his retirement from Condé Nast, there
were reports he'd finally finish it. As of 2026, it hasn't
appeared.
I find his silence more interesting than frustrating at this
point. There's a version of Klein's career where Nighttown
arrives in 1989, he publishes steadily through the nineties, and
Dark Gods becomes one strong collection among several. In the
version we actually got, four novellas carry the entire weight.
They have to be extraordinary, and they are. The scarcity
creates a pressure that makes every re-reading feel loaded with
consequence.
Thomas Ligotti is the writer Klein gets compared to most often,
and the comparison is instructive for how little they share
beyond seriousness. Ligotti is abstract, nihilistic, reaching
for the philosophical void. Klein is grounded in specific places
and social textures. You remember the nursing home in "Children
of the Kingdom" as a physical space: the smell, the fluorescent
lighting, the particular embarrassment of being the youngest
person in the room. Ligotti would never write that scene.
Klein's horror lives in the ordinary, in airport lounges and
suburban kitchens, and that's exactly why it follows you home.
Alan Moore's Providence
attempted something adjacent a few decades later, reinventing
Lovecraft through literary self-awareness and graphic novel
form. Moore succeeded on his own terms, but Klein got there
first in prose, with less machinery and more precision.
Chiroptera Press's 2024 edition runs to 312 pages with new
critical apparatus: Joshi's introduction, Dejan Ognjanovic's
essay, Paul Romano's cover art. It's the kind of treatment
usually reserved for writers with ten times the bibliography.
Klein's middle name is Eibon, a deliberate Lovecraftian
reference, and the care lavished on this edition suggests the
mythology is working in both directions now. The books create
the legend. The legend preserves the books.
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