The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers (1895)
A collection of stories linked by a mysterious play called "The King in Yellow" — anyone who reads Act II goes insane. Carcosa, the Yellow Sign, and the Pallid Mask created a mythology of cosmic horror that influenced H.P. Lovecraft and inspired HBO's True Detective.
Historical Significance:
Robert W. Chambers published The King in Yellow in 1895, drawing on Ambrose Bierce's story "An Inhabitant of Carcosa" (1893). The first four stories are interconnected weird fiction; the remaining stories are more conventional. Chambers never returned to horror, becoming instead a bestselling romance novelist — but these early stories became foundational texts of cosmic horror. H.P. Lovecraft incorporated Chambers' mythology into his own Cthulhu Mythos. The book experienced a massive revival in 2014 when HBO's True Detective Season 1 referenced Carcosa, the Yellow King, and other elements, sending the book to the top of Amazon's bestseller list over a century after publication.
This public domain classic was originally published in 1895. Free to read and share.
Read the first chapter free — experience the full reader
Free BoingyBooks account required