Wapitikev Wrote:Quest for Cthulhu (published 2000) by Derleth has both those titles in one paperback volume. It is still available in print from Amazon...but is probably available for less money used.
For those who don't know...Derleth reduced the cosmic terror of The Great Old Ones (Derleth's name for Cthulhu, etc) by making them, simply, the evil guys that rebelled against and were cast "outside" by the good guys...the Elder Gods...who can always come back and kick their butts again.
The Otherness kicks Cthulhu butt (either version) because the Otherness is a bunch of the Great Old Ones all at once. Cthulhu is just, well, Cthulhu.
On the other hand, because there is an Ally, the Otherness has more in common with Derleth's Mythos than Lovecraft's.
-Wapitikev
That is a good representation of Derleth's work. He had a sort of Dualism angle going, being a good Christian and all. In Lovecraft we have mention of Elder Gods but only Nodens is named. I believe, as I'm sure most afficionados of Lovecraft do, that the Elder Gods were not good guys in Lovecraft's eyes just less inimical than the Great Old Ones and the Outer Gods. Cthulhu has acted as a conduit for millenia, whereby sensitive people are privy to his dreams and thus touch the Otherness if you will.
Cthulhu is also seen to be the "High Priest" of the Outer Gods in that he is a herald of their return. Cthulhu in that sense is not so bad per se, but if he is risen then you have no hope because worse is coming if not already here.
I think if Lovecraft had developed this idea further he would have relegated all of humanity's Gods to the Dreamlands where he had some of them dwelling, where they had immortality and some power but were under the control of the inimical cosmic forces that rule all of reality.
The connection with the Otherness of the AC/RJ arc is quite clear, to me at least. The Otherness is no single entity of this mythos but instead is the influence of the alternate reality, or "spaces between" as Lovecraft would have said, as a whole, the machinations of the grand cycle and wheel of destiny, or doom if you prefer. The Ally can probably be represented as the influence of the Elder Gods which are less inimical but by no means friendly to man. They each have their own agenda. In the end man loses either way. That's my take on it anyway.