Robert Bloch Egyptian Tales--Episode 3: "The Brood of Bubastis" (Narrated By Jeffrey LeBlanc)

3 years ago
81

Welcome to Dweller of the Dark!

We are a channel honoring the yellowed and blackened bones of many prominent authors. We will be digging up several obscure, strange, and forgotten authors who influenced many of the great horror, science fiction, and fantasy writer’s today.

Comment below if you like. If you have authors that you’d like to see recognized list them in the comments or contact our author page.

Authors always looking for fresh blood. Subscribe and contact us for more information.

Subscribe for more tales of the horrifying, obscure, strange, and forgotten. We’ll have quite a collection climbing out of the tombs. If you like any of our tales, crush or cut the like button below.
Check out our other stories on YouTube and our websites:
Rumble/Bitchute/ YouTube--(Dweller of the Dark)

Facebook: Jeffrey LeBlanc Horror Writer
Official Website: http://jeffreyleblanc.com/
Amazon/ Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/Jeffrey-LeBlanc/e/B00GQXNA3O%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share
Parler/Instagram/Twitter: Dweller of the Dark
Suppoert us on Patreon and BandCamp

A terrified son tries to save his hypnotized father from the god Anubis. The curse of Scarabaeus crawls out for a reckoning on a mummy thief. And in Cornwall, a young man has dinner with the Egyptian god Bubastis, as we continue a series of Egyptian tales from Robert Bloch. The Egyptian gods invite you to chew the fat with them on this one.

Our third episode is “The Brood of Bubastis”. This horrific tale was published in the March 1937 issue of Weird Tales and continues our Robert Bloch Egyptian series. This was the last Bloch story Howard Phillips Lovecraft saw his young pupil write before his untimely death.

As stated by Weird Tales:
A shuddery story of a ghastly charnel crypt in a weird cave in the hills of Cornwall!

The story concerns our narrator’s visit to his friend Malcolm Kent in Cornwall. Malcolm has become obsessed with a lost Egyptian cult in England.

What dark mystery will our narrator learn in the crypt of Cornwall from Malcolm Kent? Can our suicidal narrator solve this Egyptian puzzle in time to feed his cat? --JL

Loading comments...