"Carnacki: Recorder of Things Strange" A graphic novel adaptation and continuation of the story of Thomas Carnacki called "Carnacki: Recorder of Things Strange" is currently in the works, fully inspired by the original stories written by William Hope Hodgson. The adventures of Thomas Carnacki will be told in short story format steeped in weird fiction, folklore, ghost stories, mythology and symbolism. The graphic novel is written and illustrated by M. S. Corley.
472 Cheyne Walk The book
No. 472 Cheyne Walk: Carnacki, the Untold Stories by A. F. Kidd and
Rick Kennett collects twelve stories written about the further adventures of Carnacki. Four of these stories were originally published as a 32-page booklet of the same title in 1992. The book version was printed in a limited edition of 500 copies. Many of these stories are inspired by off-hand references to other cases of hauntings that Carnacki makes in his stories, which were never explained further in the original story series. In their introduction to the 1992 booklet the authors describe these stories as
pastiche, in the sense of respectful imitation or homage, as opposed to
parody, which mocks the original (either with respectful humour, or more viciously). The authors suggest that Hodgson, by having Carnacki casually drop references to other cases which he himself did not write about, "invited" his readers to enter the "shared universe" and pick up where he left off. Readers may decide for themselves whether to consider these stories "canon" or a legitimate part of the Carnacki story arc; they closely follow not only the basic framework structure of the Carnacki original stories but also Hodgson's style and vocabulary.
"The Darkness" In "The Gateway of the Monster" and "The Horse of the Invisible", Carnacki makes passing references to the "Black Veil case", in which a man named Aster died because he did not accept the necessity of staying inside the protective pentacle. In "The Darkness", Aster is a reporter who accompanies Carnacki on his investigation of a haunted room. An apparition of a mysterious woman can be seen in the window and a rotting black veil is found inside a secret compartment in a window-seat. Carnacki burns the veil inside a pentacle in the hopes of ending the haunting. However, as night falls, Aster will not enter the pentacle, believing this to be superstitious nonsense. Both men lose the power of sight as the apparition manifests, and Carnacki must listen helplessly from inside the pentacle as Aster is driven into screaming madness and death. No option remains to end the haunting but to destroy the house itself.
"Matheson's Inheritance" In "The Gateway of the Monster" Carnacki makes reference to the "Noving Fur" case. It is unclear if this is a typographical error and Hodgson intended "Moving Fur" instead; the
Collected Fiction edition and the
Project Gutenberg electronic text show this correction. "Matheson's Inheritance" covers both bases by including moving fur and placing the haunting in Noving House in Wales. Matheson has inherited a baroque mansion. Local legend says the house was once occupied by a
dewi (wizard) and his familiar an
afanc. One room in the house emanates dread. Carnacki and Matheson can find no natural explanation, and so Carnacki spends the night in the room, inside his protective
pentacle. In the middle of his vigil his candle flames suddenly turn black, and the floor becomes a heaving carpet of fur, as if the pentacle was upon the back of a giant animal. It is clear that the protective barrier has failed utterly. As in "The Whistling Room", a second powerful entity intervenes and the candle flames turn blue; Carnacki is given a moment to escape the room, and does so, although his pantlegs are torn and his legs covered with cuts. In daylight, strange, ancient bones are found under the floorboards of the room; before the room can be demolished, that wing of the mansion burns. The blue candle flames point Carnacki back to references to the protective powers of colours in the Sigsand manuscript, suggesting the origin of the coloured tubes that appear in Hodgson's Carnacki story "The Hog". The afanc is described as having a horse-like head; this description does not match the Welsh myth, and so may be a reference to "The Horse of the Invisible".
Motifs: a legend; a protective pentacle; a supernatural manifestation; protection from one supernatural entity by another, more powerful one; a creature or creatures unknown to science; a vigil.
"Doctor Who: Foreign Devils" In 2002, an
Andrew Cartmel novella appeared as one of
a series based upon
Doctor Who.
Foreign Devils featured Carnacki alongside the
Second Doctor as his
companion.
Doctor Who: The Doctor and Carnacki In 2024, Big Finish Productions announced a box set of three full-cast audio dramas featuring Dan Starkey reprising his role as Carnacki alongside
Sylvester McCoy as the
Seventh Doctor, who appears intermittently throughout Carnacki's life. The dramas are entitled "The Haunter of the Shore" by AK Benedict, "The House" by Georgia Cook, and "The Institute of Forgotten Souls" by
Jonathan Barnes. Starkey has appeared prominently in
Doctor Who in audio for Big Finish and on television, notably as
Strax and other characters of the
Sontaran race. The set is to be released in November of that year.
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen In 2007 a graphic novel entitled
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier was released, written by
Alan Moore and illustrated by
Kevin O'Neill. It is part of
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen series, and is the first to feature Thomas Carnacki. Carnacki is a member of the 1910s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, with
Wilhelmina Murray,
Allan Quatermain,
Orlando, and
A. J. Raffles. The
Black Dossier is filled with non-comic pieces, taking the form of prose stories, letters, maps, guidebooks, magazines and even a lost Shakespeare folio. Carnacki features most prominently in a short story "What Ho, Gods of the Abyss" and concerns a visit by
Jeeves and
Bertie Wooster (by
P. G. Wodehouse) to Wooster's
Aunt Dahlia wherein they encounter an
Elder Thing, along with a
Mi-go and a
Cthulhu cult. Carnacki is described as being "an older man...who seemed to be regarded by the others as an expert on the sort of business going on within my aunt's estate". After questioning Wooster closely he performs a ritual banishing of the Elder Thing with the help of his team. In another section of the
Black Dossier entitled "The Sincerest Form of Flattery" it is mentioned that Carnacki "had encounters with some form of spirit that allowed him brief, fragmentary visions of the future" regarding an attempt to derail the coronation of King
George V. Due to ill health following his visions of World War I, Carnacki did not participate in the League's battle with
Les Hommes Mysterieux, and had by 1937 retired from active duty. Released in 2009, Part I of
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume III: Century entitled "What Keeps Mankind Alive" features Carnacki as a main character. Set in 1910, following his visions of a black cabal, Carnacki brings Mina Harker, Allan Quatermain, Orlando, and A.J. Raffles to an occult club which is populated by a range of fictional occult detectives looking for clues as to the cabal. This leads them to investigate and confront the cabal led by
W. Somerset Maugham's
Aleister Crowley analogue, Oliver Haddo. Carnacki suspects that they are trying to end the world by creating a
Moonchild.
Audience with the Ghost Finder Audience with the Ghost Finder, a stage play by M. J. Starling, features Carnacki and Dodgson as main characters. Though the story is original, the play is an explicit homage to Hodgson's stories, several of which are directly referenced by the characters – most notably
The Horse of the Invisible, the events of which form part of the backstory. The play also borrows imagery from H. P. Lovecraft's story
The Dreams in the Witch-House.
Audience with the Ghost Finder was first performed by Blackshaw Theatre in May 2013, at the Wandsworth Arts Festival and Fringe. It was revived in October 2013 as part of the London Horror Festival.
The Diogenes Club Kim Newman has written a number of short stories about
the Diogenes Club, as originally from the
Sherlock Holmes stories of
Arthur Conan Doyle. In Newman's setting, the Club investigates paranormal and occult matters for British intelligence and police agencies. In the stories "The Man Who Got Off The Ghost Train" and "Swellhead", it is mentioned that Carnacki was a member of the Diogenes Club as a special occult investigator; when he retired, his position was taken by Newman's character
Richard Jeperson. Carnacki is also mentioned as having investigated several cases alongside
Sherlock Holmes.
Carnacki in the Cthulhu Mythos Barbara Hambly's short story "The Adventure of the Antiquarian's Niece" (from
Shadows Over Baker Street) and A. F. Kidd's short story "The Grantchester Grimoire" (from
Gaslight Grimoire) both also feature Carnacki aiding Sherlock Holmes in an investigation of an occult matter.
"A Forgotten Caudetan Incident" Spanish author
Alberto López Aroca wrote the short story "
Un olvidado episodio caudetano" ("A Forgotten Caudetan Incident"), included in the book
Los Espectros Conjurados (), featuring Carnacki in a Spanish village,
Caudete; and by the same author, "
Algunos derivados del alquitrán" ("Some Coal-tar Derivatives"), included in the volume
Sherlock Holmes y lo Outré -Publisher: Academia de Mitología Creativa Jules Verne de Albacete, 2007-, with Carnacki visiting a retired
Sherlock Holmes in
Fulworth. Carnacki appears as an old man in another work by López Aroca,
Necronomicón Z (Ediciones Dolmen, 2012; ), a
Cthulhu Mythos novel.
Gravel In 2008, the comic publisher
Avatar started serialising
Gravel, the ongoing adventures of
Warren Ellis' and
Mike Wolfer's combat magician William Gravel (previously told in the
Strange Kisses,
Stranger Kisses and the
Strange Killings mini-series). In the first storyline of the ongoing
Gravel comic, Ellis and Wolfer had the "Sigsand manuscript", split in parts for each of the "Minor Seven" (Britain's occult detectives). In his quest for revenge for having been ousted from the group, Gravel must collect each magician's piece of the manuscript, but spends most of the third issue hearing about Thomas Carnacki (including an extended homage to "The Whistling Room" and the particular writing style Hodgson used when writing the Carnacki stories). Previously, Warren Ellis had included the Sigsand Manuscript in the 13th issue of his ongoing
Planetary series. It is picked up by
Elijah Snow from Sherlock Holmes' book shelf. Carnacki himself is referenced as a member of the Conspiracy, a shadowy cabal among whose number also includes Sherlock Holmes, Count Dracula, Victor Frankenstein, and the Invisible Man, who a young Snow investigates.
Sherlock Holmes: The Breath of God In 2012, a
Sherlock Holmes pastiche novel by
Guy Adams was published that featured Carnacki.
Parodies David Langford's 1988 parody collection ''
The Dragonhiker's Guide to Battlefield Covenant at Dune's Edge: Odyssey Two'' contains a parody of "The Gateway of the Monster", in which the creature manifests not as a human hand, but as another body part entirely.
Rick Kennett has also written a parody of "The Whistling Room" called "The Sniffling Room", published in
The Goblin Muse, April 2000. In this brief story, rather than receiving an invitation and then eagerly attending Carnacki's storytelling evenings, the attending gentlemen are instead kidnapped, dragged to Carnacki's home, and forced to listen against their will to a tale told by a man they consider to be a raving lunatic. It thus mocks primarily the common
framework of the Carnacki stories, rather than Carnacki's actual investigation. The French writer Gérard Dôle has published a volume of parodies of Carnacki, in which he encounters the likes of
Sherlock Holmes and
Sâr Dubnotal while two other French writers, Fabrice Colin and André-François Ruaud have given to Thomas Carnacki a nephew, William Carnacki, reporting to his uncle the life in a parallel world where most monsters do exist (children book
Le Livre des monstres—Chroniques du monde noir, 2008).
Anton LaVey, founder and High Priest of the
Church of Satan, named his son "Satan Xerxes Carnacki LaVey".
The Adventure of the Haunted Library August Derleth, whose
Arkham House publishing firm issued the first American (and first expanded edition) of
Carnacki, the Ghost-Finder, pays affectionate tribute to the character in one of his
Solar Pons stories. While Carnacki does not actually appear in the story, it is mentioned several times in "The Adventure of the Haunted Library" (which appears in
The Casebook of Solar Pons (1965)) that Carnacki was called in to investigate the case, but having been unable to solve it, thereafter referred it to Solar Pons. ==See also==