The longest Lovecraft I have read so far.

It felt like a much more fleshed out version of the earlier Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and his Family, which I also liked apart from the ending. Unlike its predecessor - which is written like a report about a past event where many things are by now unclear - this story is written from the retrospective of the protagonist, which adds to the vividness of the descriptions.

I enjoyed the baked-in accents, even though they took some getting used to and there were a couple places where I had to stop and decipher a word.