As the writer of Death in a Gondola for Horror on the Orient Express it seems to me that everyone is picking up on the ghoulish gondolier theme. Terror in Venice is the upcoming expansion for the Call of Cthulhu card game from Fantasy Flight Games, and look what’s on the cover:
![Terror in Venice [Source: Fantasy Flight Games]](https://i0.wp.com/www.fantasyflightgames.com/ffg_content/coc/news/terror-in-venice/CT61-box-left.png)
Terror in Venice [Source: Fantasy Flight Games]
Fantasy Flight produce two games that Mark and I play at lot, Elder Signs and Mansions of Madness (although I hate it when I have to solve those stupid cardboard clues). I enjoy games involving pattern recognition but fail mightily at strategy and in chess have never really recovered from having an eight-year old beat me using Scholar’s Mate. Twice. Elder Signs to me was the game of 2013 when the nephews went from sanity dribbling utter loss to destroying Azathoth at 9 minutes to midnight on New Year’s Eve. Also Fantasy Flight always put a capable looking woman on the cover of their Cthulhu games, a reminder that unlike in Lovecraft’s stories, investigators are not always men.
Venice has not featured as often as you might think in the litany of weird tales. The only novel I can think of offhand is Wilkie Collin’s ripping supernatural detective fiction crossover, The Haunted Hotel.
![The Haunted Hotel by Wilkie Collins [Source: http://www.wilkie-collins.info/books]](https://i0.wp.com/www.wilkie-collins.info/images/books_haunted_ybcw84.jpg)
The Haunted Hotel by Wilkie Collins [Source: http://www.wilkie-collins.info]
![The Black Gondolier and Other Stories [Source: Booktopia]](https://i0.wp.com/covers.booktopia.com.au/big/9780759252790/the-black-gondolier.jpg)
The Black Gondolier and Other Stories [Source: Booktopia]
![Gondolas [Source: Europe 2013]](https://miltonandmarlowe.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/gondolas.jpg?w=500&h=374)