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Dark Tales from the Secret War

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Dark Tales is a collection of 13 stories set in Modiphius' Achtung! Cthulhu universe, a world which mixes the terrors of HP Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythos with mankind's darkest yet finest hour, the second world war.

13 unhallowed stories await within it's covers, which range from the wilds of the South Pacific, to the dark depths of the Black Forest, to the icy wastes of Norway, and they come from a stellar cast of writers including David J Rodger, Destiny The Taken King and Fable: The Journey writer Martin Korda, Splinter Cell's Richard Dansky and the strange mind of horror master Patrick Garratt!

Inside you'll find dark tales involving the nefarious Black Sun, Nachtwolfe and their Nazi masters, who are opposed by the heroic Allied forces of Section M and Majestic. Expanding and exploring the Achtung! Cthulhu universe in bold, new narrative-led ways, Dark Tales can be enjoyed purely on its own as a collection of thrilling stories, but it will also serve as an inspiration for many more adventures in the Achtung! Cthulhu universe.

Dark Tales From the Secret War

Shadow of the Black Sun - David J Rodger
Bloodborn in Sarandë - Patrick Garratt
Der Alptraum - JE Bryant
Terror of Tribeč - Martin Korda
Shadows of the 603rd - Richard Dansky
The King in Waiting - Dan Griliopoulos
Servant of the Dark - John Houlihan
The Heart of the Sea - Mick Gall
Danger Nazi UXO - Will Salmon
In the Flesh - Josh Vogt
Amid the Sands of Deepest Time - Jason Brick
Concerning Rudolf Hess, Mr Buckle and the Book- Paul Cunliffe
The Curse of Cthulhu - Jake Webb

317 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 13, 2015

17 people are currently reading
41 people want to read

About the author

John Houlihan

33 books17 followers
John Houlihan is a novelist and short story writer publishing many works including The Seraph Chronicles and Mon Dieu Cthulhu! series, The Cricket Dictionary and the BSFA-award nominated The Constellation of Alarion. He has also appeared in numerous sci-fi and fantasy short story collections including Signals, Near Future Fictions, When Shadows Creep, Corridors, Forgotten Sidekicks, Musketeers vs Cthulhu and many more.

He currently works for Modiphius Entertainment as an ENNIE-award winning game designer, creative lead and narrative director and works for many other TTRPG companies including Wizards of the Coast, Need Games and Monolith. He was also editor-in-chief of Dragon+. Before that he was a journalist and broadcaster for over thirty years, working in news, sport and especially videogames. He worked for The Times, Sunday Times and Cricinfo and is the former editor-in-chief of Computer and Video Games.com. He still works as a video game consultant and script writer.

Away from the written word he has an unnatural fondness for cricket, football, snowboarding, cycling, music, playing guitar and all forms of sci-fi, fantasy and horror. He has an unnatural dread about writing about himself in the third person and currently lives in his home town of Watford in the UK, because, well frankly, someone has to.

Find him at www.john-houlihan.net and @johnh259 on X.com

Contact: jollybigpublishing AT gmail DOT COM

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
82 reviews
May 23, 2016
It seems to be a standard trope that whenever a story involves the Third Reich and any form of technology, contact or lifeforms that are fantasy or horror-based, it is inevitable that the Nazi regime begins to Meddle With Things It Should Not Meddle With. (I’ve never seen a story that posits the Nazis digging up something forbidden/alien/fantastical and deciding that it’s probably better to leave it alone; although now that I think about it, I really want to read something like that.) To an extent this is understandable, as in reality the leadership of the Third Reich dabbled extensively in esoteric, arcane and generally dubious occult areas before and during the Second World War: the SS expedition to Tibet, the Thule Society, and Himmler’s interest in racial purity and related mysticism are all generally well-known and provide sufficiently fertile soil to generate a distinctive and popular sub-genre of stories.

The flip side of the above coin is that the Nazi Meddling must be opposed by the Allies in some form; usually by a small group of agents from an official yet shady/mysterious agency within one of the Allied governments. This is fine, as it’s an integral part of the sub-genre, but my greatest issue with this is the fact that the Allies are usually portrayed as the good guys. I know that this follows the general historical narrative, and in a sub-genre rife with fantastical objects and Lovecraftian horrors it might seem ridiculous to use the phrase ‘realistic’; but to me it seems unrealistic in portraying the Allies as paragons of virtue, fighting the good fight against the Nazi menace with only a Thompson and a stubble-covered chin. Indiana Jones is an excellent example of this, and the only counter-point I can think of is Charles Stross’ brilliant The Laundry Files series, which hints that Her Majesty’s Government engaged in repeated attempts to harness Lovecraftian horrors to its own advantage.

I therefore had the above in mind when I picked up a copy of Achtung! Cthulhu: Dark Tales from the Secret War, an anthology edited by John Houlihan, author of The Trellborg Monstrosities, The Crystal Void and The Tomb of the Aeons. As with the previous titles I’ve reviewed, the anthology is based in the world of the Achtung Cthulhu! RPG, and the marketing blurb on the back cover initially seems to play into the standard trope, pitching the villainous Nazi Black Sun and their rival organisation Nachtwolfe against “…the heroic Allied forces of Section M and Majestic.” However, as you progress throughout the anthology, it quickly becomes apparent that the Allies (and particularly the British War Office) are no better than the Third Reich in terms of their attempts to use occult means to win the war.

Usually when I read an anthology, I find a handful of stories that stand out as excellent, with the rest ranging from decent to good. However, with Dark Tales, John Houlihan has excelled in curating a collection of stories that are of a unanimously high standard. It would take too long to review each story in detail, but there are a particular few tales within the anthology that I think need to be highlighted due to how well-written and enjoyable they were.

David J Rodger’s Shadow of the Black Sun is an excellent introduction to the anthology, taking a grunt-eye level of occult warfare through the eyes of a bored and fractious Wehrmacht squad guarding an isolated section of Norwegian coastline, who soon realise that the Black Sun is far more of a danger to them than the Allies could ever be. Shadows of the 603rd by Richard Dansky is based around the oft-neglected activities of battlefield deception, and sees a specialist group of American engineers, artists and designers challenged with constructing what initially appears to be a film set under battlefield conditions. They rapidly realise, however, that not all is as it seems, and that their eye for

detail may actually be the only way to save the entire war effort. The King in Waiting by Dan Griliopoulos and Concerning Rudolf Hess, Mr Buckle and the Book by Paul Cunliffw are perhaps the best tales in the anthology, and both are focused on the lengths that elements of the British government will go to in order to win the war. In particular, Griliopoulos’ tale of Nazi and British agents fighting to control Sir Oswald Mosely depicts a British establishment that not only wants to use occult experiments to triumph in the war against the Third Reich, but will also go to extreme and disturbing lengths to preserve the British Empire as well. Finally, John Houlihan’s Servant of the Dark poses the intriguing question of which is worse: men who use evil actions to further a cause they believe in, or men who try and benefit from those evil actions without sharing that conviction.

In conclusion, this is an action-packed anthology full of well-written and –paced stories that deserves to be on the shelf of any horror or Lovecraft fan. I hope to see a sequel to it in the future, one which would hopefully focus more on the neglected Eastern and Pacific Fronts; despite the huge impact these fronts had on the Second World War, and the huge amounts of Russian and Japanese mythology available to tap into, these countries are very rarely featured in this sub-genre.John Houlihan
610 reviews2 followers
January 30, 2016
A GRAND BAG OF TALES OF THE OLD ONES IT IS...

Hello, this was a fine bunch of short stories. I don't know why, but stories about the old ones and the Nazis are almost always good. A lot of these stories deserve a full length novel. Thanks.
18 reviews
June 11, 2017
Fun collection. Some better than others but I still enjoyed them all.
Profile Image for The Smoog.
521 reviews2 followers
July 1, 2025
Below-average collection of stories. I love the Cthulhu Mythos and military horror, but there’s nothing here worth recommending. There were a handful of good ideas, but the lack of any kind of horror (no building of tension/feeling of fear, more telling us how "it were 'orrible. I dropped me chips" kind of thing) was enough to sink those. The book is in desperate need of some proper editing too, it’s absolutely drowning in spelling and grammar mistakes and so many inconsistencies (2 stories where characters' names change part way through, and in one of those TWO characters get renamed), all of which just compounds the flaws of the book. There are far better Lovecraftian anthologies out there, I’d suggest searching out any of those instead.
6 reviews
February 7, 2021
Missing something

The book is ok. But it left me wanting more from it. The second to last story was a great one. Made the book worth it for me. But I felt I could have given more of a show for us. Considering it is based in ww2 I found it lacking. Not using enough of the war as a great spring board.
Profile Image for jzthompson.
454 reviews5 followers
March 19, 2025
This being an anthology by multiple different authors dragged me through it for longer than it really deserved... The thought that the next one might deliver on the promise of the premise. But in the end I realised I was probably never going back to this and struggled to remember the stories I'd read to date. Hopefully fun for the contributing authors but a miss for me.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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