
CROSSOVER MAP GUIDE
NUMBERED (single connections)
1) Bran Mak Morn -> Cthulhu Mythos: "Worms of the Earth" by Robert E. Howard. Reference to R'lyeh.
2) Cthulhu Mythos -> Conan: "The Shadow Out of Time" by H.P. Lovecraft. Reference is made to Crom-Ya (who was later deified as Crom).
3) Marvel Universe -> King Kull: Marvel Team-Up
#112. Spider-Man
astrally projects back to 18,000 BC and meets King Kull. This means a version of Kull exists in the Marvel Universe.
4) Conan -> King Kull: Conan the Barbarian #1. A young Conan has a vision of King Kull.
4) Conan -> King Kull: "The Thing in the Crypt" by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter, in Conan. This Conan story makes reference to King Kull.
5) Conan -> Tarzan: Conan the Barbarian #2. Young
Conan is
captured by "Ape-Men" with Mangani names.
6) Conan -> The Maltese Falcon: Conan the Barbarian
#6. Conan
meets Maldiz, who refers to a falcon he forged.
7) Conan -> Red Sonja: Conan the
Barbarian #23. Conan first meets Red Sonja.
8) Conan -> Solomon Kane: The Savage Sword of Conan
#219-220. Conan and Kane meet when both are transported to ancient
Atlantis.
9) Hadon of Ancient Opar -> She: The ancient sun god of the city of
Kor in She
and Allan was known as Rezu; Opar's Cult of the Flaming God (first
seen in the Tarzan novels) worships a being called Resu in the Hadon
of Ancient Opar books.
10) Simon of Gitta -> Kane: "The Blade of the Slayer" by
Richard L.
Tierney, in Scroll of Thoth. Simon of Gitta meets the immortal
Kane.
11) Simon of Gitta -> Conan: "The Ring of Set" by Richard L.
Tierney, in Scroll of Thoth. Simon of Gitta deals with the Ring
of Set.
12) Chronicles of Narnia -> Sherlock Holmes: The Magician's Nephew by
C.S.
Lewis. A reference is made to Sherlock Holmes still living at Baker
Street during the events of the story.
13) Bran Mak Morn -> Kull: "Kings of the Night" by Robert E.
Howard. Kull is summoned to aid Bran.
14) Marvel -> Dracula (Marvel): The Tomb of Dracula. Comic establishes the Marvel version of Dracula.
15) Dracula (Marvel) -> Solomon Kane (Marvel): Dracula Lives #3. Dracula
meets
Solomon Kane. This means a version of Solomon Kane exists in the Marvel Universe.
16) Solomon Kane -> Frankenstein: The Savage Sword of Conan
#22. Solomon Kane visits Castle Frankenstein.
17) The Phantom -> Don Quixote: The Phantom #1037 (Frew
Publications, Australia). The second Phantom is drawn into the events of Don
Quixote.
18) Roger Brook -> The Scarlet Pimpernel: The Man Who
Killed the
King by Dennis Wheatley. Refers to Sir Percy Blakeney and the
League.
19) Frankenstein <-> Dracula: The Frankenstein/Dracula War
mini-series. Dracula vs. the Frankenstein Monster.
20) Roger Brook -> Brigadier Gerard: The Wanton Princess by Dennis Wheatley. Brigadier Gerard is mentioned.
20) Roger Brook -> Brigadier Gerard: Evil in a Mask by Dennis Wheatley. Brigadier Gerard is mentioned.
21) The Three Musketeers -> Zorro: "The Three Musketeers"
(episode
of Zorro (1991)). Zorro meets the descendants of Athos,
Porthos, Aramis and D'Artagnan.
22) Dracula <-> Zorro: Dracula vs. Zorro mini-series. Zorro
battles Dracula.
23) Richard Sharpe -> Pride and Prejudice: Sharpe's Justice
(TV movie). Major Richard Sharpe meets George Wickham.
24) Highlander -> Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Blooded by
Nancy
Holder (BtVS novel). Lord Byron (implied to be the immortal version from Highlander,
judging by the Slayer Justine's sensing strangeness about him) meets
the Watcher Claire Silver.
25) Arthur Gordon Pym -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: "The
Sphinx
of the Ice Fields" by Jules Verne. The story is a sequel to The
Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym; a footnote makes reference to
Captain Nemo's "conquest" of the South Pole.
26) Dracula -> She: The Revenge of Dracula by Peter
Tremayne. References Dr. Hugh Strickland (from The Vengeance of She by
Tremayne).
27) 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea -> Journey to the Center of the Earth: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. Reference made to events of Journey.
28) The Land of Furs -> The Adventures of Captain Hatteras: The
Land of Furs by Jules Verne. A reference is made to Captain Hatteras.
29) The Floating Outfit -> Ole Devil Hardin: Ole Devil Hardin is the uncle of Dusty Fog of the Floating Outfit.
29) The Floating Outfit -> Ole Devil Hardin: The "Civil War" series by J.T. Edson. Features Ole Devil Hardin and the Floating Outfit's adventures during the Civil War.
30) The Floating Outfit -> Cheyenne: The Ysabel Kid by
J.T.
Edson. The Floating Outfit meets Cheyenne Bodie.
31) The Floating Outfit -> Gunsmoke: Decision for Dusty Fog
by
J.T. Edson. A reference is made to Matt Dillon.
32) The Floating Outfit -> The Lost World: Diamonds,
Emeralds,
Cards and Colts by J.T. Edson. The Floating Outfit meets Lord James
Roxton, father of Lord John Roxton (from The Lost World).
33) The Floating Outfit -> Maverick: Master of
Triggernometry
by J.T. Edson. Character Mark Counter is a relative of Bret Maverick;
reference is made to the Maverick episode "Holiday at Hollow Rock."
34) The Floating Outfit -> Zorro: "Comanche Blood" by J.T.
Edson, in
The Hard Riders. The Ysabel Kid, of the Outfit, meets Pedro, inheritor of the legacy
of Zorro.
35) Company Z -> The Four Just Men: You're a
Texas
Ranger, Alvin Fog by J.T. Edson. Company Z was set up based on
advice from the Three Just Men (a reference to The Four Just Men by Edgar Wallace).
36) Company Z -> David Copperfield: The Justice
of
Company Z by J.T. Edson. Alvin Fog of Company Z meets Wilfred Plan, descendant
of Uriah Heep (from Copperfield).
37) She <-> Allan Quatermain: She and Allan by
H.
Rider Haggard. Allan tracks down Ayesha.
38) Have Gun Will Travel -> Around the World in 80 Days: "Fogg
Bound" (episode of Have Gun, Will Travel). Paladin helps
Phileas Fogg and company cross a river in America during their trip.
39) Hector Servadac -> Black Indies: Hector Servadac by Jules Verne. Reference made to the events of Black Indies.
39) Black Indies -> Hector Servadac: Black Indies by Jules Verne. Reference made to the events of Hector Servadac.
40) Sherlock Holmes -> The Saint: The Great Game by
Michael
Kurlan. In this novel, Moriarty appears; the Templar family
is referred to (including a "saintly" member).
41) The Suicide Club -> The Rajah's Diamond: "The
Suicide Club" by Robert Louis Stevenson, in New Arabian Nights. Features Prince Florizel, who also appears in "The Rajah's
Diamond" (also in New Arabian Nights).
42) Sherlock Holmes -> Brigadier Ffellows: "A Father's Tale"
by
Sterling Lanier, in Sherlock Holmes Through Time and Space. Brigadier Ffellows' father meets a "Mr. Verner" (Holmes), and they
encounter a race of rat creatures near Sumatra.
43) The Lone Ranger -> Cthulhu Mythos: Lone Ranger and Tonto:
It
Crawls mini-series. A copy of the Necronomicon is given to
the Ranger and Tonto to help learn about an Aztec Mummy (a
brain-damaged extraterrestrial).
44) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde <-> Sherlock Holmes: Dr. Jekyll
and
Mr. Holmes by Loren D. Estleman. Holmes and Watson encounter Jekyll
and Hyde.
45) Raffles -> Sherlock Holmes: The Dorrington Ruby Seal
by
John Kendrick Bangs. First in a series of short stories; Holmes meets
A.J. Raffles and ultimately marries a female relation of Raffles.
45) Sherlock Holmes <-> Raffles: Sherlock Holmes i Livsfare. Raffles asks Moriarty to eliminate Holmes after Holmes captured
Raffles.
45) Sherlock Holmes -> Raffles: "The Problem of the Sore Bridge
-
Among Others" by Philip Jose Farmer, from Riverworld and Other
Stories. Holmes meets Raffles again.
46) Sherlock Holmes -> Hornblower: The Infernal
Device
by Michael Kurland. A Moriarty novel; a statue of Hornblower appears.
46) Sherlock Holmes -> Hornblower: "Holmes and the Loss of the
British Barque Sophy Anderson" by Peter Cannon, in Resurrected
Holmes. Holmes helps the great-grandson of Horatio Hornblower.
47) From the Earth to the Moon -> Around the Moon: Around the Moon by Jules Verne. A sequel to From the Earth to the Moon featuring the Baltimore Gun Club.
48) Sherlock Holmes -> Cthulhu Mythos: "The Giant Rat of
Sumatra" by
Paula Volsky, in Resurrected Holmes and Eternal Lovecraft. Holmes is retained by Professor August Belknap in a case involving the
Mythos.
49) Sherlock Holmes <-> Dracula: Sherlock Holmes vs. Dracula
by Loren D. Estleman. Self-explanatory; Sherlock Holmes up against the Count.
49) Sherlock Holmes -> Dracula: The Tangled Skein by
David
Stuart Davies. Holmes and Watson team with Abraham Van Helsing to
battle Dracula.
49) Dracula -> Sherlock Holmes: Mina: The Dracula Story
Continues
by "Marie Kiraly" (Elaine Bergstrom). Mina mentions "Detective Holmes."
49) Dracula -> Sherlock Holmes: Blood to Blood: The
Dracula
Story Continues by Elaine Bergstrom. Sherlock Holmes and the Baker
Street Irregulars are mentioned.
49) Sherlock Holmes <-> Dracula: The Holmes-Dracula File
by
Fred Saberhagen. Holmes and Dracula join forces against a plot to
spread a plague; Mina Harker is revealed to be Dracula's lover.
49) Sherlock Holmes -> Dracula: The Rook #10. Dracula
tries
and fails to revenge himself upon Holmes.
50) Sherlock Holmes -> The Maltese Falcon: "The Madness of
Colonel
Warburton" by Carole Buggé, in Resurrected Holmes. Sherlock Holmes receives the Maltese Falcon.
51) The Beautiful White Devil -> Dr. Nikola: The Beautiful
White
Devil by Guy Boothby. Benwell, from Dr. Nikola, appears.
52) In Strange Company -> Dr. Nikola: In Strange Company
by
Guy Boothby. Count de Panuroff, from the Dr. Nikola novel A Bid for
Fortune, appears.
53) Sherlock Holmes (The Seven-Percent Solution) -> Phantom of the Opera: The Canary
Trainer
by Nicholas Meyer. The Holmes from The Seven-Percent Solution, during the Great Hiatus (and under the alias "Sigerson"), deals with Erik,
the Opera Ghost. Thus, a version of the Phantom of the Opera exists in the Seven-Percent Solution universe.
54) Sherlock Holmes -> She: Sherlock Holmes on the Roof of
the
World by Leo Vincey. Holmes (under the alias of "Sigerson") meets Ludwig Horace Holly, a character
from She.
55) The Space Machine -> War of the Worlds: The Space
Machine
by Christopher Priest. The characters visit Earth during the Martian invasion.
56) Sherlock Holmes -> Alice in Wonderland: "The Case of the
Detective's Smile" by Mark Bourne, in Sherlock Holmes in Orbit. This story reveals that Sherlock Holmes visited Wonderland during the Great
Hiatus.
57) Sherlock Holmes -> The Lost World: The Scottish Ploy
by
Quinn Fawcett. Mycroft Holmes mentions Professor Challenger.
58) Flashman -> Sherlock Holmes: Flashman and the Tiger
by
G.M. Fraser. Flashman fights Colonel Moran, formerly in the employ of
Moriarty.
59) Sherlock Holmes -> Arsene Lupin: Sherlock Holmes and the
Boulevard
Assassin by John Hall. Holmes encounters "Jupin" (Arsene Lupin) in France.
59) Sherlock Holmes -> Arsene Lupin: Sherlock Holmes and the Clown
Prince of London. Holmes enlists the aid of Arsene Lupin for
a good cause.
59) Arsene Lupin -> Sherlock Holmes: "Sherlock Holmes Arrives Too
Late"/"Holmlock Shears Arrives Too Late" by Maurice Leblanc, in Arsene
Lupin, Gentleman-Cambrioleur. Holmes goes up against Lupin.
59) Arsene Lupin -> Sherlock Holmes: Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock
Sholmes
by Maurice Leblanc. Holmes vs. Lupin again.
59) Arsene Lupin -> Sherlock Holmes: Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock
Sholmes
by Maurice Leblanc. Holmes vs. Lupin again.
59) Sherlock Holmes -> Arsene Lupin: "Man of Medicine, Doctor of Despair"
by Joe Gentile, in Soul of the Dragon. Holmes vs. Lupin yet
again.
59) Arsene Lupin -> Sherlock Holmes: The Hollow Needle by
Maurice
Leblanc. Holmes vs. Lupin once more; Lupin's wife is accidentally
killed during their battle.
60) Sherlock Holmes -> The Mystery of Edwin Drood: The
Disappearance of Edwin Droodby
Peter Rowland. Holmes solves the mystery of Edwin Drood. His
presence in town causes some to think Sexton Blake is in the area, but
Watson dismisses him as fictional (thus not a true reference).
61) Sherlock Holmes -> Tarzan: "The Politician, the Lighthouse,
and
the Trained Cormorant" by Craig Shaw Gardener, from Resurrected
Holmes. Holmes mentions the Mangani, and notes that he observed
Mangani raising a human infant.
62) Sherlock Holmes -> Joseph Jorkens: "Sherlock Holmes,
Dragon-Slayer" by Darrell Schweitzer, in Resurrected Holmes.
Holmes meets James Jorkens, probable ancestor of Joseph Jorkens. (The
supposed "real author" of the tale is Lord Dunsany, who created Joseph
Jorkens.)
63) Sherlock Holmes -> The Time Machine: "The Richmond Enigma"
by
John DeChancie, in Sherlock Holmes in Orbit. Holmes
investigates the disappearance of the Time Traveller.
64) Predator -> Sherlock Holmes: Predator:
Nemesis
mini-series. A Predator stalks Victorian England; the Diogenes Club and
Mycroft Holmes appear, as does Inspector Lestrade.
65) Vampirella -> Dracula: Vampirella Magazine #19-20. Vampirella and Dracula are sent back in time, meeting Abraham and
Boris Van Helsing, as well as Mina and Jonathan Harker and a briefly
resurrected Lucy Westernra.
66) Sherlock Holmes -> Auguste Didier: "The Case of the
Faithful
Retainer" by Amy Myers, in The Mammoth Book of New Sherlock Holmes
Adventures. Holmes makes several references to Didier.
67) War of the Worlds -> Sherlock Holmes: The Second War
of the
Worlds by George H. Smith. Holmes and Watson help defeat a Martian
assault on an alternate Earth, "Annwn."
68) Orlando Innamorato -> Orlando Furioso: Orlando Furioso, by Ludovico Ariosto, is a sequel to Orlando Innamorato, by Matteo Maria Boiardo.
69) The Last Voyage of Candide -> Letters from Auspasia: La Dernier Voyage de Candide by Georges Duhamel. Auspasia, from Lettres d'Auspasie by Duhamel, is mentioned.
70) Penguin Island -> Robinson Crusoe: L'Ile des Pingouins by Anatole France. Alca (from The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Defoe) is mentioned.
71) The City of the Suicides -> The Suicide Club: La Ciudad de los Suicidas by Jose Munoz Escamez. The novel was intended as a sequel to "The Suicide Club." (In League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Suicide City was supposedly founded by remnants of London's Suicide Club.)
72) Gulliver's Travels -> The New Gulliver: Le Nouveau Gulliver, ou Voyage de Jean Gulliver, Fils du Captaine Gulliver
by Abbe Pierre Francois Guyot Desfontaines. The main character, Jean
Gulliver, is the son of Lemuel Gulliver. (The book was an unauthorized
sequel to Gulliver's Travels.)
73) Utopia, Part II -> The Discovery of a New World: Utopiae, Pars II by Joseph Hall. New Gynia is mentioned, from Hall's previous work The Discovery of a New World.
74) Gulliver's Travels -> Voyage to Locuta: Voyage to Locuta: A Fragment by Lemuel Gulliver Junior by E.S. Graham. Lemuel Gulliver Jr. is the main character.
75) Pickles -> Gulliver's Travels: Pickles, ou Recits a la Mode Anglaise by Andre Lichtenberger. Vichebolk Land is said to have been discovered by Lemuel Gulliver.
76) A Journey in Other Worlds -> Across the Zodiac: A Journey in Other Worlds by John Jacob Astor. Apergy (from Zodiac) appears.
77) A Thousand Deaths -> Across the Zodiac: "A Thousand Deaths" by Jack London. Apergy (from Zodiac) appears.
78) Gargantua and Pantagruel -> The Journey of Panurge: Le Voyage de Navigation que Fist Panurge, Disciple de Pantagruel (The Journey of Panurge, Disciple of Pantagruel). An anonymously written work which uses the same settings as the
"Gargantua and Pantagruel" novels by Francois Rabelais. (not added yet)
79) Sherlock Holmes -> A Christmas Carol: "The Adventure of the
Three Ghosts" by Loren D. Estleman, in Holmes for the Holidays. Sherlock Holmes meets Tim
Cratchit; contradicts "Christmas Ghosts" and "Rajah's Emerald."
79) Sherlock Holmes -> A Christmas Carol: "The Adventure of the Christmas
Ghosts" by Bill Crider, in Holmes for the Holidays. Sherlock Holmes meets Tim
Cratchit; contradicts "Three Ghosts" and "Rajah's Emerald."
79) Sherlock Holmes -> A Christmas Carol: "The Case of the Rajah's Emerald" by Carolyn
Wheat, in Holmes for the Holidays. Sherlock Holmes meets Tim
Cratchit; contradicts "Three Ghosts" and "Christmas Ghosts."
80) Sherlock Holmes -> Dr. Thorndyke: The Pandora Plague
by
Lee A. Matthias. Sherlock Holmes and Houdini cooperate against an evil
plot; Dr. Thorndyke appears at one point.
80) Sherlock Holmes -> Dr. Thorndyke: "The Adventure of the
Notorious Canary Trainer" by Ken Greenwald, in The Lost Adventures
of Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes mentions working with Dr. John
Thorndyke.
81) Sherlock Holmes -> Father Brown: Night Watch by
Stephen Kendrick. Holmes meets a young Father Brown.
82) Sherlock Holmes -> Oz: "Sherlock Holmes in Oz" by Ruth
Berman,
in The Game is Afoot. Sherlock Holmes and Watson are summoned
to the alternate world of Oz.
83) Sherlock Holmes -> The Invisible Man: Doctor Watson and
the
Invisible Man by Noel Downing. Watson investigates the story of the
Invisible Man.
84) The Eternal Lover -> Tarzan: The Eternal Lover by Edgar Rice Burroughs. John Clayton, alias Lord Greystoke, alias Tarzan, makes an appearance.
UNNUMBERED (multiple connections on one source)
Thongor and the Wizard of Lemuria by Lin Carter
Thongor -> Cthulhu Mythos: Reference is made to Hyperborea, Lemuria, Sssaaa (Sss'haa) and Yamath (Cthugha).
Thongor -> Kull: Reference is made to the Dragon Kings (Serpent People).
The Black Star by Lin Carter
The Black Star -> Cthulhu Mythos: Reference is made to the Book of Dzyan, Cykranosh, Hyperborea and Lemuria.
The Black Star -> Conan: Reference is made to Thuria (the Thurian continent).
The Ravagers Out of Time
Conan <-> Red Sonja <-> King Kull: All three team up (thanks to time travel).
"The Seed of the Star-God" by Richard L. Tierney
Simon of Gitta -> Cthulhu Mythos: Reference is made to Assatur (Hastur), Iadit (Yaddith) and Shupnikkurat (Shub-Niggurath).
Simon of Gitta -> Conan: Reference is made to the Hyborians.
"The Soul of Kephri" by Richard L. Tierney, in Scroll of Thoth
Simon of Gitta -> Conan: Simon of Gitta acquires Conan's
ancient sword and meets the ghost of the sage Epimetrius.
Simon of Gitta -> Cthulhu Mythos: Reference is made to Nyarlat (Nyarlathotep).
"The Scroll of Thoth" by Richard L. Tierney
Simon of Gitta -> Conan: Simon of Gitta pursues
the Book of Thoth (created by Thoth-Amon).
Simon of Gitta -> Red Sonja: Reference is made to the Pain Lords encountered by Red Sonja.
"The Temple of Abomination" by Robert E. Howard and Richard L. Tierney
Cormac Mac Art -> King Kull: Reference is made to King Kull.
Cormac Mac Art -> Cthulhu Mythos: Reference is made to the Old Ones and Shoggoths.
"Black as the Pit, From Pole to Pole" by Steven Utley and Howard
Waldrop
Frankenstein -> Arthur Gordon Pym: Arthur Gordon Pym is mentioned.
Frankenstein -> Moby Dick: Mocha Dick is mentioned.
Frankenstein -> Journey to the Center of the Earth: The Lidenbrock Sea is visited by the Frankenstein monster.
Frankenstein -> Pellucidar: Pellucidar is visited by the Frankenstein monster.
Frankenstein -> Cthulhu Mythos: The Frankenstein monster ends his journey at the Mountains of Madness.
Journey to the Center of the
Earth by Jules Verne
Journey to the Center of the Earth -> Five Weeks in a Balloon: Reference is made to the events of that story.
Journey to the Center of the Earth -> The Adventures of Captain Hatteras: Reference is made to the events of that story.
The Code
of
Dusty Fog by J.T. Edson
The Floating Outfit -> Oliver Twist: The Floating Outfit meets Edmund Fagin
(grandson to Twist's Fagin).
The Floating Outfit -> Ramage: The Floating Outfit meets Sir John Uglow Ramage
(youngest son of Sir Nicholas Ramage).
The
Quest for Bowie's Blade by J.T. Edson
The Floating Outfit -> Sherlock Holmes: Octavious Xavier "the Ox" Guilemont refers to Professor Moriarty.
The Floating Outfit -> The Maltese Falcon: Octavious Xavier "the Ox" Guilemont refers to the Maltese Falcon.
No
Finger on
the Trigger
by J.T. Edson
Waxahachie Smith -> Hornblower: Waxahachie Smith meets Lord Maidstone (son of Horatio
Hornblower).
Waxahachie Smith -> Doc Savage: Waxahachie Smith meets Donald Garfew Beech (the grandfather of Orville Garfew
"Fluency" Beech, who met Doc Savage in Red Snow by Kenneth
Robeson)
"Behind
Locked
and Bolted Door" by J.T. Edson, in More J.T.'s Ladies
Company Z -> The Ringer: Rita Yarborough of Company Z meets the Ringer (from The Ringer by Edgar Wallace).
Company Z-> James Bond: It is hinted that the Ringer is part of a precursor to the "00" section of British Intelligence.
The Company Z/J.G. Reeder Trilogy: Cap Fog, Texas Ranger meets Mr. J.G. Reeder; The
Return of Rapido Clint and Mr. J.G. Reeder; Rapido
Clint Strikes Back
Company Z -> J.G. Reeder: J.G. Reeder features (a detective created by Edgar Wallace).
Company Z -> The India Rubber Men: John Wade (from The India Rubber Men by Wallace) appears.
Company Z -> The Clue of the Silver Key: Leopold Moran (from The Clue of the Silver Key by Wallace) appears.
Company Z -> The Orator: Oliver Rater (from The Orator by Wallace) appears.
Company Z -> Underworld Nights: Albert Henry "Bert the Jump Up" Fredricks (from Underworld Nights by Charles Raven) appears.
Company Z -> Albert Campion: A reference is made to Albert Campion (a detective created by Margery Allingham).
Company Z -> Ramage: A reference is made to Nicholas Ramage.
The Other Log of Phileas Fogg
by Philip Jose Farmer
Around the World in 80 Days -> Sherlock Holmes: Professor Moriarty is the main villain.
Around the World in 80 Days -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Moriarty was posing as Captain Nemo.
Around the World in 80 Days -> The Rajah's Diamond: One of Moriarty's
aides is Vandeleur, from Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Rajah's Diamond"
in New Arabian Nights.
The Mysterious Island by Jules Verne
The Mysterious Island -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Captain Nemo appears.
The Mysterious Island -> The Children of Captain Grant: Aryon (from The Children of Captain Grant by Jules Verne) appears.
The Mysterious Island -> Five Weeks in a Balloon: Reference is made to that novel by Verne.
The Mysterious Island -> The Adventures of Captain Hatteras: Reference is made to that novel by Verne.
The Mysterious Island -> Around the Moon: Reference is made to that novel by Verne.
"The Musgrave Version"
by G.A. Effinger, in Sherlock Holmes in Orbit
Sherlock Holmes -> The Musgrave Ritual: The adventure is detailed by Reginald Musgrave
(from Doyle's "The Musgrave Ritual").
Sherlock Holmes -> Fu Manchu: Holmes meets Fu Manchu.
Sherlock Holmes -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Musgrave notes that he and Holmes later travel aboard the Nautilus.
Sherlock Holmes -> The Island of Dr. Moreau: Musgrave notes that he and Holmes later meet Dr. Moreau.
Topsy
Turvy by Jules Verne
Topsy Turvy -> From the Earth to the Moon: Features the Baltimore Gun Club from From
the Earth to the Moon.
Topsy Turvy -> The School for Robinsons: Mention of the auction of a Pacific island (from The School for Robinsons by Verne).
Topsy Turvy -> Hector Servadac: Reference is made to Hector Servadac by Verne.
Topsy Turvy -> The Adventures of Captain Hatteras: Reference is made to Captain Hatteras by Verne.
Robur the Conqueror by Jules Verne
Robur the Conqueror -> The Begum's Fortune: There are references to Franceville, Stahlstadt
and Herr Schultze's projectile (from Begum).
Robur the Conqueror -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: A reference is made to the power source of the Nautilus.
Doctor Who - All-Consuming Fire by Andy Lane
Doctor Who -> Sherlock Holmes: The Seventh Doctor and company team up with Sherlock Holmes and Watson.
Doctor Who -> Cthulhu Mythos: De Vermis Mysteriis appears, and various other Mythos entities get a mention. The main alien villain claims to be Azathoth.
Doctor Who -> The Lost World: Lord John Roxton appears, and Professor Challenger is mentioned.
Doctor Who -> Inspector Cribb: Inspector Cribb appears.
Doctor Who -> Fu Manchu: The Si-Fan organization is referred to.
Doctor Who -> Seven Stars: Charles Beauregard (the Seven Stars version, not the Anno Dracula version) appears.
Dracula: The Suicide Club mini-series
Dracula -> The Suicide Club: Dracula becomes President of the Suicide Club.
Dracula -> Sherlock Holmes: Holmes makes a cameo appearance.
"Allan and the Sundered Veil" by Alan
Moore, serialized in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 1*
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain:* Allan Quatermain is the main character.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Cthulhu Mythos: Allan
meets Randolph Carter. (He also says John Carter is his great-uncle.)
In addition, the Morlocks are linked with the Mi-Go, and the Old Ones
are referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> John Carter of Mars:* Allan meets John Carter, and Carter sees visions of Barsoom.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Time Machine: Allan meets the Time Traveller.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dracula:* Allan sees a vision of Mina.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde:* Allan sees a vision of Mr. Hyde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> War of the Worlds:* Allan sees a vision of the Martian invasion.
"Too Many Stains"
by
Marvin Kaye, in Resurrected Holmes
Sherlock Holmes -> Nero Wolfe: During the Great Hiatus,
Sherlock and Mycroft go up against Adolphus Zecchino (who later becomes
Arnold Zeck, enemy of Nero Wolfe).
Sherlock Holmes -> Raffles: Raffles makes an appearance in his "Mr. Maturin" identity.
A
Prince of Swindlers
by Guy Boothby
A Prince of Swindlers -> Monsieur Lecoq: Reference is made to "Lecocq" (Lecoq).
A Prince of Swindlers -> Sherlock Holmes: Reference is made to the "late lamented Sherlock Holmes."
A Prince of Swindlers -> Dr. Nikola: An appearance is made by the Earl of Amberley
(from the Dr. Nikola novel A Bid for Fortune).
"The
Young Lord Peter Consults Sherlock Holmes" by Dorothy L. Sayers, in Sayers
on Holmes
Lord Peter Wimsey -> Sherlock Holmes: Lord Peter Wimsey consults Sherlock Holmes.
Lord Peter Wimsey -> The Musgrave Ritual: Wimsey reveals his family is distantly related to Reginald Musgrave.
Sherlock Holmes's War of the Worlds
by Manly W. Wellman and Wade Wellman
Sherlock Holmes <-> War of the Worlds: Sherlock Holmes and company's involvement in the Martian invasion.
Sherlock Holmes <-> War of the Worlds -> The Crystal Egg: The Crystal Egg appears in the prologue.
Sherlock Holmes <-> War of the Worlds -> The Lost World: Professor Challenger and Lord John Roxton join forces with Holmes and Watson.
War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches
War of the Worlds -> John Carter of Mars: "Mars: The Home
Front"
by George Alec Effinger. John Carter's account of the war against the invading Martians on
Barsoom.
War of the Worlds -> Mowgli: "Soldier
of the Queen" by Barbara Hambly. Rudyard Kipling witnesses Mowgli (from The Jungle Book and other stories by Rudyard Kipling) battle against the Martians.
War of the Worlds -> Kim: "Soldier
of the Queen" by Barbara Hambly. Rudyard Kipling witnesses Kim's battle against the Martians.
War of the Worlds -> The Soldiers Three: "Soldier
of the Queen" by Barbara Hambly. Rudyard Kipling witnesses the Soldiers
Three (Learoyd, Mulvaney and Ortheris)'s battle against the Martians.
War of the Worlds -> Allan Quatermain: "The True Tale of
the
Final Battle of Umslopogaas the Zulu" by Janet Berliner. Winston Churchill is the main
character, but he sees Umslopogaas battling Martians.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 1**
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dracula: Mina Murray is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> James Bond: Campion Bond
is meant to be an ancestor of James Bond. "Mr. M" is referred to, and Mina initially believes him to be
Mycroft Holmes (who was M in The Authorized Biography of 007 by John Pearson).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sherlock Holmes: Mycroft Holmes is mentioned several times, and appears at the end. Moriarty also appears, as does Holmes himself (in flashback).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain: Allan Quatermain is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Captain Nemo is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Auguste Dupin: Dupin helps Quatermain and Mina capture Mr. Hyde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Les Rougon-Macquart: Anna "Nana" Coupeau (from two books in the "Rougon-Macquart" cycle by Emile Zola, L'Assommoir and Nana) was killed by Mr. Hyde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is/are member(s) of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dick Donovan: "Inspector
Donovan" (Dick Donovan) makes an appearance when the League returns to
London. Campion Bond refers to the events of the Donovan story "Who
Poisoned Hetty Duncan?" He also talks with Mr. Hyde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robur the Conqueror: Campion Bond mentions Robur.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Palliser: Campion Bond mentions Prime Minister Plantaganet Palliser, from the Palliser novels by Anthony Trollope.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> War of the Worlds:* Campion Bond mentions the observations of "incandescent gas" on Mars by the astronomer Lavell.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Barsetshire: Campion Bond mentions Reverend Septimus Harding, from the Barsetshire novels by Anthony Trollope.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Invisible Man: Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man, is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> David Copperfield: Nemo, Quatermain and Murray take a coach from "Barkas and Sons"; this is a reference to the carrier Barkis, who appears in Copperfield.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> What Katy Did: Katy Carr is one of the teachers at Rosa Coote's Correctional Academy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> She: The League's base in the British Museum contains artifacts of the Cult of Ayesha.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gulliver's Travels: The
League's base in the British Museum contains the skulls of a
Brobdingnagian and a Yahoo, as well as Lilliputians. Lemuel Gulliver
was a member of the 1787 version of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Journey to the Center of the Earth: The League's base in the British Museum contains a stuffed ichthyosaur from the Lidenbrock Sea.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The First Men in the Moon: Professor Cavor appears, and Cavorite is central to the plot.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Pirate of the Air: Captain Mors is mentioned by Campion Bond, and is known to Nemo.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Scarlet Pimpernel: "Mr. and Mrs. P. Blakeney" were members of the 1787 League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Syn: The "Reverend Dr. Syn" was a member of the 1787 League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fanny Hill: "Mistress
Hill" (Fanny Hill) was a member of the 1787 League. (A note- she should
at least be in her sixties, but the woman pictured is much younger.
Perhaps this is a daughter?)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Leatherstocking Tales: "N.
Bumppo" (Natty Bumppo) (from James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking
Tales novels) was a member of the 1787 League. (Bumppo looks too young,
but he was also unusually long-lived in the original novels, if you go
by the years they took place.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fu Manchu: The Cavorite
was stolen by Fu Manchu (who was never explicitly named for copyright
reasons). Fu Manchu also fights against Moriarty at the end.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Treasure Island: Nemo's dinner table aboard the Nautilus is inscribed with the words "Hispaniola 1760" and "Skeleton Island," suggesting it may be from the ship from Treasure Island.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Quong Lee: Quong Lee (from three books by Thomas Burke) is consulted by Mina and Griffin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ho Ling: Ho Ling (from various poems and short stories by Thomas Burke) is connected to an opium den associated with Fu Manchu.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Moby Dick: Ishmael is Nemo's first mate.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Broad Arrow Jack: Broad Arrow Jack (created by E. Harcourt Burrage) is part of Nemo's crew.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sexton Blake: Apparently one of at least three people Moriarty is investigating.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Prince of Swindlers: Klimo (alias Simon Carne) is apparently one of at least three people Moriarty is investigating.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Nikola: Apparently one of at least three people Moriarty is investigating.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wreck of the Titan: The Titan (from Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan) is mentioned on a newspaper headline.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Five Weeks in a Balloon: Nemo was given the balloon Victoria from that story.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Oliver Twist: The Artful Dodger appears.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Weary Willy and Tired Tim: Weary Willy and Tired Tim (cartoon characters from the British comic Illustrated Chips) have a cameo.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ally Sloper: Ally Sloper (a cartoon character from Judy and Ally Sloper's Half-Holiday) has a cameo.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> History of the States and Empires of the Moon: The League's base in the British Museum contains the box Cyrano de Bergerac used to travel to alien societies in his Histoire comique des Etats et Empires de la Lune.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Steam Man of the Prairies: The
League's base in the British Museum contains the "Huge Hunter" from
"The Huge Hunter, or the Steam Man of the Prairies" by Edward S. Ellis.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> From the Earth to the Moon: The capsule used by the Baltimore Gun Club is in the League's base in the British Museum.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 1 Collected Edition (bonus material)*
(Note: All of the below never actually appeared in the story, and are
really there for pure entertainment value (excepting the cover, which
is there for artistic value), but it can be assumed by their presence
in the book that the creators intended them to be in the League universe.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Picture of Dorian Gray:* "Basil
Hallward's Painting-by-Numbers No. 1: Dorian Gray." Also, on the back
cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback), a
curiously unmarred portrait of Dorian Gray can be seen. The cover also
has a picture of the Nautilus by Basil Hallward
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Cthulhu Mythos:* In the comments on the Painting-by-Numbers, the "American Richard Pickman" (from Lovecraft's "Pickman's Model") is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari: In the comments on the Painting-by-Numbers, the "Caligari Self-Assembly Cabinet" is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sherlock Holmes:* In the comments on the Painting-by-Numbers, the "Holmes 'Play in a Day' violin course."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain:* The maze game "Allan has mislaid his Taduki." One of the destinations in that game is King Solomon's Mines.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Utopia:* One of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fu Manchu:* Limehouse is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Prisoner of Zenda:* Zenda is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gulliver's Travels:* Lilliput
is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze
game. Also, a Brobdingnagian skull and a Lilliputian horse can be seen
on the back cover of the hardcover (front cover of the paperback).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Time Machine:* Morlocks are one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Flatland:* One of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Coming Race:* Vrilya (from Edward Bulmer-Lytton's The Coming Race) is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lost World:* The "curupuri" (Professor Challenger's target in The Lost World, a spirit feared by Amazonian natives) is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze game.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> She:* The Caves of Kor (from She)
is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze
game. Also, a handless and headless statue of Ayesha can be seen on the
back cover of the hardcover (front cover of the paperback).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Alice in Wonderland:* Wonderland
is one of the destinations in the "Allan has mislaid his Taduki" maze
game. Also, a reflected image of Alice can be seen on the back cover of
the hardcover (front cover of the paperback).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Steam House: On the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback), a picture of the "Steel Giant" (from Verne's The Steel House) can be seen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Blue Dwarf: On the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback), a picture of Sapathwa, the eponymous character from The Blue Dwarf by Percy B. St. John can be seen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Jack Harkaway: On the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback), a picture of Jack Harkaway can be seen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Around the World in 80 Days: On
the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback),
a picture of Phileas Fogg can be seen next to Jack Harkaway.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Varney the Vampyre: On the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback), a picture of Sir Francis Varney can be seen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robur the Conqueror:* On
the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback),
a picture of Robur can be seen next to Sir Francis Varney.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Some Words with a Mummy: On
the back cover of the hardcover (and the front cover of the paperback),
Count Allamistakeo (from "Some Words with a Mummy" by Edgar Allan Poe) can be seen.
"The Game of
Extraordinary Gentlemen" in America's
Best Comics 64-Page Giant***
(Note: All of the below never actually appeared in League, and it is just a game, but it can be assumed (since this was created by League creators Moore and O'Neill) that they were intended to be part of the League universe.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sherlock Holmes:* Square #2 - "Blackballed from the Diogenes Club." Square #56 - "Stuck in Grimpen Mire for 1 turn." Grimpen Mire featured in The Hound of the Baskervilles.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ally Sloper:* Square #3 - "Refreshments with Ally Sloper."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sexton Blake:* Square #4
- "Help Detective S. Blake solve Mystery of Edwin Drood." Square #9 -
"Fan-Chu Fang, Prince Wu-Ling and Wu Fang need a fourth for Mah Jong."
Prince Wu-Ling is the enemy of Sexton Blake.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mystery of Edwin Drood: Square #4 - "Help Detective S. Blake solve Mystery of Edwin Drood."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Nikola:* Square #6 - "Dr. Nikola has you in thrall." Square #11 - "Steal Moonstone for Dr. Nikola, or return to start."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Time Machine:* Square #7 - "Time Traveller: Throw again, but move backwards."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A New Accelerator: Square #8 - "Professor Gibberne slips you his New Accelerator." A reference to "A New Accelerator" by H.G. Wells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dixon Brett: Square #9 - "Fan-Chu Fang, Prince Wu-Ling and Wu Fang need a fourth for Mah Jong." Fan-Chu Fang is the enemy of Dixon Brett.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gunga Din: Square #10 - "Even Gunga Din's ghost is a better man than you."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Moonstone: Square
#11 - "Steal Moonstone for Dr. Nikola, or return to start." Square #30
- "If you stole Moonstone, Raffles coshes you for it."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mowgli: Square #12 - "Mowgli mistakes you for Dr. John Doolittle."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Dolittle:* Square #12 - "Mowgli mistakes you for Dr. John Doolittle."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Black Cat: Square #13 - "The Black Cat attempts to neuter you." Reference to "The Black Cat" by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Great Expectations: Square #14 - "Find Pip's fortune. Estelle seems restless."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Moby Dick:* Square #18 - "Catch Moby Dick. Return to port at square 6 and see a Doctor."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> McTeague: Square #19 - "McTeague the dentist seems distracted." A reference to McTeague by Frank Norris.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robur the Conqueror:* Square #21 - "Robur shows you his Great Eyrie."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Monster of Lake LaMetrie:* Square #22 - "Lake LaMetrie Monster stops for a chat."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Nick Carter: Square #24 - "Fail to recognize Nick Carter."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Cthulhu Mythos:* Square #25 - "Great Cthulhu wants you."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Around the World in 80 Days:* Square #27 - "Old Mr. Fogg offers you a lift."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Billy Bunter: Square #29 - "Mr. Wm. Bunter Senior sends you for pies." A reference to the Billy Bunter stories, created by Charles Hamilton.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Raffles: Square #30 - "If you stole Moonstone, Raffles coshes you for it."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Frankenstein:* Square #31 - "Meet chap with dreadful appendectomy scars, on ice floe."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Treasure Island:* Square #32 - "Jim Hawkins produces his wrinkled parchment." Square #68 - "Treasure Island welcomes offshore investors."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Carmilla: Square #33 - "At her castle in Styria, Camilla drinks your health."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Prisoner of Zenda:* Square #34 - "In Ruritania Black Michael sends you to square 36."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Varney the Vampyre:* Square #35 - "Sir Francis Varney bites you. Deuced bad show!"
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain:* Square #37 - "King Solomon's Mines: You can afford an extra turn."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court: Square #38 - "Hank Morgan from Connecticut seems disoriented." Hank Morgan is the main character from A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dracula:* Square #39 - "Meet Dr. Van Helsing. If bitten by Varney, retire from game."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gulliver's Travels:* Square
#41 - "Lilliput. Big yourself up." Square #45 - "Brobdingnag: Suffer
penile dementia. Return to 41 and regain self-esteem."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Heart of Darkness:* Square #43 - "Join Mr. Kurtz for a drink."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lost World:* Square
#44 - "Curipuri: Man-apes and giant reptiles." The curupuri is the
feared Amazonian legend being sought out by Professor Challenger.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Frank Reade:* Square #46 - "Readestown: Frank Reade Jnr. builds you a pair of steam-boots."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Legend of Sleepy Hollow:* Square #47 - "Sleepy Hollow. Rest your head for 1 turn."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> From the Earth to the Moon:* Square #49 - "Baltimore Gun Club sends you aloft."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> An Express of the Future: Square #50 - "Take TransAtlantic Pneumatic Tube." A reference to Michel Verne's "An Express of the Future."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Jack Harkaway:* Square #51 - "The Harkaway boys don't like your tan. Thrashed and sent back 6 spaces."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Melmoth the Wanderer: Square #52 - "John Melmoth recounts an anecdote. Miss five turns."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The War of the Worlds:* Square #53 - "Join sight-seers at cylinder in crater. Retire from game."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Weary Willy and Tired Tim:* Square #55 - "Willie and Tim have a question. Sadly, their speech is unfathomable."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Arsene Lupin:* Square #58 - "Robbed by Arsene Lupin."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Auguste Dupin:* Square #59 - "Rue Morgue: Assist C. August Dupin and miss a turn, or go to square 61."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Broad Arrow Jack:* Square #63 - "Broad Arrow Jack shows you the Golden Rivet, but worse things happen at sea."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Voice in the Night: Square
#66 - "Oh, no, it's Fungal Disease." The picture shows a human hand
covered in fungus. A reference to "The Voice in the Night" by William
Hope Hodgson, in which people are infected by a fungus that changes
their entire bodies.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of Dr. Moreau:* Square #67 - "Doctor Moreau will see you now. Spend rest of game on all fours."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Earth-Spirit/Pandora's Box: Square #69 - "Lulu breaks your heart." Lulu is from the plays Earth-Spirit and Pandora's Box by Frank Wedekind.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Hobson's Choice: Square #71 - "Henry Hobson says go back 1 or forward 4." Henry Hobson is from the play Hobson's Choice by Harold Brighouse.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Crystal Egg:* Square #73 - "Buy Crystal Egg from Mr. Cave." Reference to "The Crystal Egg" by H.G. Wells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Journey to the Center of the Earth:* Square #74 - "Lidenbrock Sea crossing rougher than usual."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Venus in Furs: Square #75 - "Severin's been a bad boy." Severin is the main character in Venus in Furs by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Pirate of the Air:* Square #76 - "Kapitan Mors will fly you to square 82."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> King Ubu:* Square #77 - "Pere Ubu screams abuse. Ignore him. He's Polish." Ubu is from the trilogy of plays King Ubu, Cuckold Ubu and Slave Ubu by Alfred Jarry.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Flashman: Square #78 - "Dishonored by Harry Flashman. Sting with shame for 2 missed turns."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Beetle:* Square #79 - "Bed down with exotic beauty, wake up with The Beetle. Lie back and think of England." From the novel The Beetle by Richard Marsh.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Flatland:* Square #80 - "Flatland. Perhaps a private education might help."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Purple Terror: Square #82 - "The Purple Terror is starting to grow on you." From "The Purple Terror" by Fred M. White.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> David Copperfield:* Square #83 - "A humbling experience with Mr. Heep. Feel soiled, even if you win."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wreck of the Titan:* Square #86 - "Maiden voyage of the Titan. Ghastly business."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The First Men in the Moon:* Square #87 - "Professor Cavor coats you with his special paste. The moon seems awfully big tonight."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Alice in Wonderland:* Square #88 - "Wonderland. Throw 6 to stay where you are. Otherwise, move counter in reverse."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 2****
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lieutenant Gullivar Jones: Gullivar Jones (from Lieutenant Gullivar Jones by Edwin L. Arnold) is among those on Mars leading an attack against the Wells Martians.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> John Carter of Mars: John Carter is among those on Mars leading an attack against the Wells Martians.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Warlords of Mars: Reference is made to Varnal, the Green City, and Michael Kane- these are from the trilogy Warriors of Mars, Blades of Mars and Barbarians of Mars by Michael Moorcock (writing as Edward P. Bradbury).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Space Trilogy: The Sorns, from C.S. Lewis' Out of the Silent Planet (part of his "Space Trilogy") help fight against the Wells Martians.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> War of the Worlds: The entire series focuses on the Martian invasion.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Crystal Egg: Gullivar Jones and John Carter observe the Martian counterpart to the Crystal Egg (from "The Crystal Egg" by H.G. Wells).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain:* Allan Quatermain is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea:* Captain Nemo is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde:* Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is/are member(s) of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Invisible Man:* Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man, is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dracula:* Mina Murray is a member of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> James Bond:* Campion Bond is intended to be an ancestor of James Bond. The head of his cane has the morse code for "007" on it.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Nikola:* A newspaper
headline has "Doctor Nikola" on it. In the League's base in the British
Museum, a picture of Dr. Nikola is on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Barsetshire:* Reverend
Septimus Harding (from Anthony Trollope's Barsetshire novels) is in the
party that greets- and is killed by- the initial group of Martians.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Colonel Blimp: "Major
Henry Blimp" is meant to be a younger version of British comic-strip
character Colonel Blimp, created by Sir David Alexander Cecil Low.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> An Old Man of Coblenz: In
the League's base in the British Museum, the skeleton of the Old Man of
Coblenz (from the limerick "An Old Man of Coblenz" by Edward Lear) is
on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Syn:* In the League's base in the British Museum, there is a statue of the Reverend Sr. Syn.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Picture of Dorian Gray: In the League's base in the British Museum, the portrait of Dorian Gray is being restored.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lizard: In the
League's base in the British Museum, a straight razor from "Kettlewell,
Yorkshire, Mr. W.C. Cording" is on display. This is a reference to "The
Lizard" by C.J. Cutcliffe Hyne..
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wolf of Kabul: William
Samson Sr., who works as the League's coachman, is intended to be the
father of the British comic character Bill Sampson (or Samson), the
"Wolf of Kabul." (This is according to Alan Moore himself.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Scarlet Pimpernel:* In the League's base in the British Museum, a bust of Sir Percy Blakeney is on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Beetle: In the League's base in the British Museum, the Beetle (from The Beetle by Richard Marsh) is sealed in a vacuum tube.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Tom Sawyer: In the
League's base in the British Museum, a picture of "Thomas S" (wielding
a magnifying glass) is on display. Likely, this is Tom Sawyer, who
became a detective as an adult.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Omega: Mina consults books on Mars by Doctor Omega (from Doctor Omega by Arnould Galopin).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> An Inhabitant of Planet Mars: Mina consults the book Un Habitant de la Planete Mars by Francois-Henri Peudefer de Parville.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Brushwood Boy: In
the League's base in the British Museum, a map of the shores of the Sea
of Dreams (from Rudyard Kipling's "The Brushwood Boy") is on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gulliver's Travels:* In the League's base in the British Museum, a Brobdingnagian skull is on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Broad Arrow Jack:* Broad Arrow Jack is a member of the Nautilus crew.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Iron Fish: Captain
Nemo rescues young Jimmy Grey, who wishes to build his own "metal fish"
afterward. Jimmy Grey is meant to be Professor Gray, who was the
creator of the "Iron Fish" submarines from the Beano comic strip "The Iron Fish."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of Dr. Moreau: Dr. Moreau and his creations feature, as does the main character of the novel, Teddy (Edward) Prendrick.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> It's That Man Again: A younger Miss Mopp, from the radio series It's That Man Again, is on the staff at the inn where Mina and Allan are staying.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ally Sloper:* Ally Sloper makes a cameo as Hyde and Samson ride to the British Museum.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Weary Willy and Tired Tim:* Weary Willy makes a cameo as Hyde and Samson ride to the British Museum.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Captain Kettle: Captain Kettle (from the "Captain Kettle" stories by C.J. Cutliffe) makes a cameo as Hyde and Samson ride to the British Museum.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Crystal Age: Mina plans to visit the ladies' commune called Coradine (from A Crystal Age by W.H. Hudson).
"The New Traveller's Almanac" by Alan
Moore, in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 2*
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> James Bond:* The "ex
libris" bookplate has "007" and "CB" on the key symbol. According to
artist Kevin O'Neill, the book belonged to Campion Bond. Aurie (Auric) Goldfinger is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dr. Dolittle: One of the stamps on the cover is for Fantippo, from Doctor Dolittle's Post Office and Doctor Dolittle and the Secret Lake by Hugh Lofting. Fantippo is also mentioned. The Capa Blanca Isles and Spidermonkey Island, from The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting, are mentioned. The Harmattan Rocks and No-Man's-Land are mentioned, from Doctor Dolittle's Post Office. Jolliginki, the Land of Monkeys and pushmi-pullyu are mentioned, from The Story of Doctor Dolittle. (remove earlier arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> She:* One of the stamps on the cover is for Kor (from She). The City of Ayesha, Kor, is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> King Kong: One of the stamps on the cover is from Skull Island. A skull-shaped islad is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Military Women: One of the stamps on the cover is from Manghalour, from Les Femmes Militaires by Louis Rustaing de Saint-Jory. Manghalour is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Zahir: One of the stamps on the cover (in Greek) is from Xiros, from "El Zahir" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Prisoner of Zenda: One of the stamps on the cover is from Ruritania, from The Prisoner of Zenda and its sequels. Strelsau and Ruritania are also mentioned. (remove earlier arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Alice in Wonderland: One
of the stamps on the cover is from Wonderland. Alice L.'s journeys to
Wonderland are referred to, and it is said that she died after
suffering a physical mirror-imaging upon her second return. (In the
story "The Case of the Detective's Smile," Holmes meets Alice, who
referred to several additional trips to Wonderland. Possibly the A.L.
who died was some sort of mirror-duplicate, and the genuine Alice's
continued existence was concealed for privacy's sake after the release
of Carroll's book.) (remove earlier arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Faustroll: One of the stamps on the cover is from Fragrant Island, from Gestes et Opinions du Docteur Faustroll, Pataphysicien by Alfred Jarry. The island of "Her," Ptyx, Bran Isle, Laceland, Amorphous Island and Cyril Island are also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Million Dollar Legs: One of the stamps on the cover is from Klopstokia, from the film Million Dollar Legs. Klopstokia is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Freeland: One of the stamps on the cover is from Freeland, from Freiland by Dr. Theodor Hertzka. Freeland is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gulliver's Travels:* One
of the stamps on the cover is from Laputa. The incarnation of the
League led by Lemuel Gulliver is mentioned again. The Houyhnhms, Glubbdubdrib, Balnibari, Laputa, Brobdingnag and Luggnagg are
mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of Dr. Moreau:* One of the stamps on the cover is from Noble's Island, the title isle from The Island of Dr. Moreau. Noble's Island is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Tempest: Prospero is revealed to have led a previous incarnation of the League. The
Caribbean duplicate of Prospero's Island is mentioned- Prospero's
Island was there in "Caliban Upon Setebos" by Robert Browning (as
opposed to the Mediterranean version established earlier in the Almanac- it exists in two places at once).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pilgrim's Progress: Christian, from Pilgrim's Progress, is revealed to have been a member of a previous incarnation of the League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Blazing World: Prospero's Men visited the Blazing World, from Observations
upon Experimental Philosophy. To Which is Added the Description of a
New Blazing World. Written by the Thrice Noble, Illustrious and
Excellent Princess, the Duchess of Newcastle by Margaret Cavendish.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Hunting of the Snark: The
Bellman Expedition, from "The Hunting of the Snark" by Lewis Carroll,
is described (as an exploration into the hole which Alice of Alice in Wonderland fell into). Snark Island is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Syn:* "A
mild-mannered clergyman from Kent" (Doctor Syn) is mentioned as a
member of Gulliver's League. Captain Clegg, one of Syn's aliases, is
mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Leatherstocking Tales:* "A Mr. Bumppo from America" (Natty Bumppo) is mentioned as a member of Gulliver's League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Scarlet Pimpernel:* The Blakeneys are mentioned as members of Gulliver's League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fanny Hill:* "Mistress Hill" (Fanny Hill) is mentioned as a member of Gulliver's League.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Dracula:* Mina features in the Almanac. Castle Dracula is referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Allan Quatermain:* Allan
Quatermain (and "Allan Junior") features in the Almanac. (Sir Henry)
Curtis and (Captain) Good are mentioned, as are Saba's Breasts
and Kukuanaland.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Child of the Open Sea: The Streaming Kingdom, from L'Enfant de la Haute Mer by Jules Supervielle, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Water-Babies: St. Brendan's Isle and "aquatic infants," from The Water-Babies by Charles Kingsley, are mentioned, as are Harthover Place, Airfowlness, Leaveheavenalone, Peacepool and Mother Carey.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Child of the Phalanstery: Avondale is mentioned, from "The Child of the Phalanstery" by Grant Allen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Awayday: Commutaria, from "Awayday" by Elspeth Ann Macey, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> My Heart's in the Highlands: Abaton, from My Heart's in the Highlands by Sir Thomas Bulfinch, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Enchanted Castle: Yalding Towers, from The Enchanted Castle by E. Nesbit, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sherlock Holmes:* Baskerville
Hall is mentioned. Mina visits a retired Sherlock Holmes. Camford and
Professor Presbury, from the Holmes story "The Adventure of the
Creeping Man," are mentioned. Uffa is mentioned, from "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips" by Arthur Conan Doyle.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Crotchet Castle: Crotchet Castle, Apodidraskiana and Dotandcarryone Town, from Crotchet Castle by Thomas Love Peacock, are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Bastable Family: Ravenal's Tower, from The Wouldbegoods by E. Nesbit, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Five Children and It: The "White House" and the Psammead, from E. Nesbit's novels Five Children and It, The Phoenix and the Carpet and The Story of the Amulet, are mentioned. Cook's Island is also mentioned, from The Phoenix and the Carpet.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wish House: The "Wish House" of Smalldene, from Rudyard Kipling's "The Wish House," is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Cthulhu Mythos:* The
Witch House of Arkham (from "Dreams in the Witch House" by H.P.
Lovecraft) and Exham Priory (from "The Rats in the Walls" by H.P.
Lovecraft) are mentioned. Captain Obed Marsh and Innsmouth, the Great
Cypress Swamp and Randolph Carter, Miskatonic University, Ulthar, the
Nameless City and the Mountains of Madness are mentioned. Wizard
Whateley is referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Under Milk Wood: Llaregyb (Llaregub) is mentioned, from Under Milk Wood by Dylan Thomas.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Floating Island (Careless): Captain Robert Owemuch and the Floating Island are mentioned, from The
Floating Island or a New Discovery Relating the Strange Adventure on a
Late Voyage from Lambethana to Villa Franca, Alias Ramallia, to the
Eastward of Terra Del Templo: By Three Ships, viz., the 'Pay-naught,'
the 'Excuse,' and the 'Least-in-Sight' Under the Conduct of Captain
Robert Owe-much: Describing the Nature of the Inhabitants, Their
Religion, Laws and Customs by "Frank Careless."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Under the Garden: Winton Pond, from "Under the Garden" by Graham Greene, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Black Indies: Coal City and the New Aberfoyle caverns, from Les Indes Noires by Jules Verne, are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Coming Race: Vril-ya Country, from The Coming Race by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, is mentioned. (remove earlier arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Land Under England: The underground Roman State, from Land Under England by Joseph O'Neill, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Nightmare Abbey: Nightmare Abbey is mentioned, from Nightmare Abbey by Thomas Love Peacock.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lair of the White Worm: Diana's Grove, Mercy Farm, Castra Regis and the Caswell family are mentioned, all from Lair of the White Worm by Bram Stoker.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Chronicles of Narnia: The
phrase "Narnia?" is written in connection with the Vril-ya word "Nania"
(or "Naria"). The Wood Between the Worlds is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Crock of Gold: Gort Na Cloca Mora, Glyn Cagny, the Sleepers of Erinn, Angus Og and Caitlin, all from The Crock of Gold by James Stephens, are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Selfish Giant: The Giant's Garden is mentioned, from "The Selfish Giant" by Oscar Wilde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Castle of Leixlip: Leixlip Castle, and Redmond and Jane Blaney, from The Castle of Leixlip by Charles Maturin, are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The House by the Churchyard: The Red House, from The House by the Churchyard by J. Sheridan Le Fanu, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Third Policeman: The home of Mr. Mathers and its gateway to an alternate Ireland are mentioned, from The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The House on the Borderland: The
ruins of "a house built on a wild crag jutting out above a chasm" on
the coast of Ireland is mentioned. This is the house from The House on the Borderland by W.H. Hodgson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Brigadoon: Brigadoon is mentioned, from the musical of the same name.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Crystal Age:* Coradine is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Story of the Glittering Plain: The Glittering Plain, aka the Acre of the Undying, and the Isle of Ransom are mentioned, from The Story of the Glittering Plain Which Has Also Been Called the Land of Living Men or the Acre of the Undying by William Morris.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Nova Solyma: The kingdom of Philomela and Nova Solyma are mentioned, from Novae Solymae Libri Sex (Nova Solyma, the Ideal City, or Jerusalem Regained) by Samuel Gott.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Courtship of Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo: The Yonghi-Bonghi of Bo of Coromandel, from the rhyme "The Courtship of Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo" by Edward Lear, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Journey of Panurge: Lanternland is mentioned, from both Le Voyage de Navigation que Fist Panurge, Disciple de Pantagruel (The Journey of Panurge, Disciple of Pantagruel) by Anonymous and Le Cinquiesme et Dernier Livre des Faicts et Dicts du Bon Pantagruel (The Fifth and Final Book of the Sayings of the Good Pantagruel)
by Francois Rabelais (part of the "Gargantua and Pantagruel" series of
novels). The Fortunate Islands, the Isle of Butterflies, Pastemolle and Luquebaralideaux Islands
are also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gargantua and Pantagruel: Lanternland is mentioned, from both Le Voyage de Navigation que Fist Panurge, Disciple de Pantagruel (The Journey of Panurge, Disciple of Pantagruel) by Anonymous and Le Cinquiesme et Dernier Livre des Faicts et Dicts du Bon Pantagruel (The Fifth and Final Book of the Sayings of the Good Pantagruel)
by Francois Rabelais (part of the "Gargantua and Pantagruel" series of
novels). The Oracle in the Bottle and Breadlessday (from the fifth
book), Clerkship, Ruach, Ennasin Island, Gaster's Island, Manduce and
the Sea of Frozen Words (from the fourth book), the Abbey of Theleme
(from the second book, La Vie Tres Horrifique du Grand Gargantua (The Very Horrific Life of the Great Gargantua)) and Gargantua's stint as ruler of Utopia (from the first book, Pantagruel Roi des Dipsodes) are also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Imaginary Island: The Imaginary Isle is mentioned, from Relation de L'Isle Imaginaire (Relation of the Imaginary Island) by Anne Marie Louise Henriette d'Orleans, Duchesse de Montpensier.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Voyage to Grand Garabagne: The Great Garabagne is mentioned, from Voyage en Grand Garabagne by Henri Michaux.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mountain of the Spirits: "The mountain Animas," from "El Monte de las Animas" by Gustavo Becquer, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Andorra: The republic of Andorra, from Andorra by Max Frisch, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Don Quixote: La Mancha, Barataria, Sancho Panza, Montesino's Cave and Don Quixote are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Fall of Peking: Exopotomania is mentioned, from L'Automne a Pekin by Boris Vian.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Orlando Furioso: The castle of Atlante, Nubia, Senapho and Alcina's Island are mentioned, from Orlando Furioso.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Death and the Compass: The city which cannot be named and Triste-le-Roy, from "La Muerte y la Brujula" by Jorge Luis Borges, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Letters from Auspasia: Auspasia, from Lettres d'Auspasie by Georges Duhamel, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Invisible Man:* Hawley Griffin is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Invisible Man (Universal): Hawley Griffin's experiments used heliotrope- in The Invisible Man
(1933), Jack Griffin used heliotrope as one of the key ingredients in
his invisibility experiments. (Presumably Jack was repeating Hawley's
experiments.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Adventures of King Pausole: Trypheme is mentioned, from Les Aventures du Roi Pausole by Pierre Louys.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Way to Succeed: Papafiguiera (Papefiguriera) is mentioned, from Le Moyen de Parvenir by Beroualde de Verville. Lubec is also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Indiscreet Jewels: Thermometer Island is mentioned, from Les Bijoux Indiscrets by Denis Diderot.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Bound Imagination: Flora, from "The Bound Imagination" by Ferdinand Raimund, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Letters From My Windmill: Trinquelage is mentioned, from Lettres de Mon Moulin by Alphonse Daudet.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Jacques the Fatalist: Nameless Castle is mentioned, from Jacques le Fataliste et Son Maitre by Denis Diderot.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Biography of Manuel: Poictesme, from the "Biography of Manuel" stories by James Branch Cabell, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Averoigne: Averoigne, from the Averoigne stories of Clark Ashton Smith, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Blue Mammoth: Grande Euscarie, from Le Mammoth Bleu by Luc Alberney, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fattypuffs and Thinifers: The Fattipuffs (Fattypuffs) and Thinnifers (Thinifers) are mentioned, from Fattypuffs and Thinifers by Andre Maurois.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Visitors in the Evening: Baron Hugh's Castle is mentioned, from the film Les Visiteurs du Soir.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> History of Calejava: Calejava and Dr. Ava are mentioned, from Histoire de Calajava by Claude Gilbert.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mysterious Sea: The sunken city of Belesbat is mentioned, from La Mer Mysterieuse by Claire Kenin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Disappeared City: The sunken city of "Disappeared" is mentioned, from Victor Hugo's "La Ville Disparue."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Undersea Tunnel: Atlanteja and the trans-Atlantic tunnel are mentioned, from Il Tunnel Sottomarino by Luigi Motta.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Enigma of the "Redoubtable": Le Douar is mentioned, from L'Enigme du "Redoutable" by J.H. Rosny.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Water Sprites: The Island of Boredom is mentioned, from Les Ondins by Marie Anne de Roumier Robert.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Amadis of Gaul: Magic Maiden's Rock, Devil's Island, Bandaguido, Bandaguida, Mongaza Island and the Fixed Isle are mentioned, from Amadis de Gaula by Vasco de Lobeira.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robinson Crusoe: The island of Alca is mentioned, from The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe. Speranza and Rob Crusoe are mentioned as well.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Penguin Island: Penguins transformed from humans by the Angel Gabriel on the island of Alca are mentioned, a reference to L'Ile des Pingouins by Anatole France.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Letter from the Baladar Islands: Asbefore, Farapart, Jumptoit, Incognito and Bang-Bang-Turkey are mentioned, from Lettre des Iles Baladar by Jacques Prevert.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Hurlubleu: The Hurlubierean Empire is mentioned, from Hurlubleu, Grand Manifafa d'Hurlubiere by Charles Nodier.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Sleep: Morphopolis (a proposed city at this point) is mentioned, from La Cite du Sommeil by Maurice Barrere.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Conan: Aquilonia, Amra (Conan) and Cimmeria are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The County One Never Reaches: Neverreachhereland is mentioned, from Les Pays Ou L'On N'Arrive Jamais by Andre Dhotel.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Phantom of the Opera: The "Phantom" of the Opera House is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robur the Conqueror:* Robur is a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Nyctalope: The Nyctalope is a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Les Miserables: Jean Valjean is mentioned (in graffiti).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> His Tram: The Graveyard of Unwritten Books is mentioned, from Son Tramway by Nedim Gursel.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Seven Solitudes: Loforen Cemetery is mentioned, from Les Sept Solitudes, Poemes by Oscar Venceslas de Lubicz Milosz.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Locus Solus: Locus Solus and Martial Canterel are mentioned, from Locus Solus by Raymond Roussel.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Grains and Exits: Fluorescente is mentioned, from Tristan Tzara's Grains et Issues.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of the Suicides: Suicide City is mentioned, from La Ciudad de los Suicidas by Jose Munoz Escamez.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Suicide Club: Suicide City is connected to the Suicide Club.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Arsene Lupin: Lupin is a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux. (remove earlier link)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fantomas: Fantomas is a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Omega:* A Martian from Docteur Omega is seen with Les Hommes Mysterieux.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Fantasy of Dr. Ox: Quiquendone and Dr. Ox, from Une Fantasie du Docteur Ox by Jules Verne, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Expiations: Dr. Ox is mentioned to have gone to Expiation City after the evente of Docteur Ox. Expiation City is from La Ville des Expiations by P.S. Ballanches.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Shadow: A Parable: The city of Ptolemais and the Charonian Canal are mentioned, from "Shadow: A Parable" by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea:* Captain Nemo is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Arcadia: The Arcadian Tunnel is mentioned, from Arcadia by Jacopo Sannazaro.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Castle of Otranto: The castle of Otranto is mentioned, from The Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Trip to Portiuncula: Portiuncula, from Die Reise Nach Portiuncula by Stefan Andres, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Seamen of Meloria: Meloria Canal, from I Naviganti Della Meloria by Emilio Salgari, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Invisible Cities: Ersilia,
Aglaura, Beersheba, Perinthia, Isaura, Phyllis, Despina, Thekla,
Moriana, Eudoxia, Zemrude, Octavia, Valdrada, Zenobia, Leonia,
Anastasia and Eusapia are mentioned, from Le Citta Invisibili by Italo Calvino.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Aucassin and Nicolette: Torelore, from the French medieval romance Aucassin et Nicolette, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pinocchio: The Busy Bees' island, from The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of the Day Before: The Island of the Day Before, from the novel with the same name by Umberto Eco, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Name of the Rose: The Abbey of the Rose, from The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mysteries of Udolpho: The Castle of Udolpho, from The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Village of the Gold Maker: Goldenthal is mentioned, from Das Goldmacherdorf by Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mountain King and the Misanthrope: The realm of King Astralgus is mentioned, from Der Alpenkonig und Der Menschenfeind by Ferdinand Raimund.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The History of King Kaboul: The Balbrigian and Bouloulabassian United Republic is mentioned, from Histoire du Roi Kaboul Ier et du Marmiton Gauwain by Max Jacob.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mouse That Roared: The Duchy of Grand Fenwick is mentioned, from the series by Leonard Wibberley beginning with The Mouse That Roared.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Grand Duchy: The Grand Duchy is mentioned, from E.T.A. Hoffmann's Der Goldene Topf (The Golden Pot) and several of his other works. Zaches, also from The Golden Pot, is mentioned. Murr Cat (a relative of Puss-in-Boots) is also mentioned, from Hoffmann's The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Frost: The village of Weng, from Frost by Thomas Bernhard, is mentioned (as the home of Zaches from The Golden Pot).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Runenberg: Runenberg, from "Der Runenberg" by Ludwig Tieck, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Viaggio in Drimonia: Cittabella is mentioned, from Viaggio in Drimonia by Lia Wainstein.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Petsetilla's Posy: Nexdorea is mentioned, from Petsetilla's Posy by Tom Hood.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Masque of the Red Death: The Palace of Prince Prospero is mentioned, from "The Masque of the Red Death" by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Meccania: Meccania is mentioned, from Meccania, the Super-State by Gregory Owen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Tulifantchen: Micromona is mentioned, from Tulifantchen, Ein Heldengedicht in Drei Gesangen by Karl Immermann.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Simplicissimus Teutsch: Mummelsee and Centrum Terrae are mentioned, from Der Abenteuerliche Simplicissimus Teutsch by Johann Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gormenghast: Under
River, Black House and the young man who speaks of "Castle Gormenghast"
are from the "Gormenghast" trilogy of novels by Mervyn Peake.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Maria Wuz: Auenthal and Maria Wuz are mentioned, from Leben des Vergnugten Schulmeisterlein Maria Wuz in Auenthal by Johann Paul Friedrich Richter.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pierre Menard: Pierre Menard is mentioned, from "Pierre Menard, Author of Don Quixote" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mines of Falun: The Falun Fault is mentioned, from Die Bergwerke zu Falun by E.T.A. Hoffmann.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Rainmaiden: The Regentrude is mentioned, from Die Regentrude by Theodor Storm.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Shadowy Alley: Sainte Beregonne is mentioned, from "La Ruelle Tenebreuse" by Jean Ray.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Axel: Axel Auersperg is mentioned, from Axel by Philippe-Auguste Comte de Villiers de L'Isle-Adam.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Country of Harmony: Harmonia is mentioned, from Au Pays de L'Harmonie by Georges Delbruck.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Devil in the Belfry: Vondervotteimittis is mentioned, from "The Devil in the Belfry" by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Strange Trip of a Philadelphian: Laiquihire and Waferdanos are mentioned, from Voyage Curieux d'un Philadelphe Dans des Pays Nouvellement Decouverts.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Fortress of Ice: The Devil's Teeth were mentioned, from La Citadelle des Glaces by Paul Alperine.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Journey to the Center of the Earth:* Professor Lidenbrock, Snaefells Jokull and Arne Saknussemm are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Flying Dutchman: Daland's Village is mentioned, from the opera The Flying Dutchman by Richard Wagner,
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Journey of Niels Klim: Nazar is mentioned, from Nicolai
Klimii Iter Subterraneum Novam Telluris Theoriam Ac Historiam Quintae
Monarchiae Adhuc Nobis Incognitae Exhibens E Bibliotheca B. Abelini by Baron Ludvig Holberg.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Peer Gynt: The trolls of the Dovre Fjell are mentioned, from Peer Gynt by Henrik Ibsen.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Capillaria: Capillaria is mentioned, from Capillaria by Frigyes Karinthy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Moomintroll: Moominvalley, Daddy Jones' Kingdom and the Lonely Island are mentioned, from the Moomintroll books by Tove Jansson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> King Ubu: King Ubu is mentioned, from the trilogy of plays by Alfred Jarry.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Sanitarium Under the Obituary Notice: Klepsydra Sanatorium and Dr. Gotard are mentioned, from Sanatorium pod Klepsydra by Bruno Schulz.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Happy Prince: The City of the Happy Prince is mentioned, from "The Happy Prince" by Oscar Wilde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mad King: Lutha is mentioned, from The Mad King by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Castle: The Castle is mentioned, from Das Schloss by Franz Kafka.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> In the Penal Colony: A penal settlement is mentioned, a reference to In der Strafkolonie by Franz Kafka.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Freeshooter: Wolf's Glen is mentioned, from Der Freischutz by Carl Maria, Freiherr von Weber, and Johann Friedrich Kind.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sophy of Kravonia: Kravna (Kravonia) and the Tower of Suleiman are mentioned, from Sophy of Kravonia by Anthony Hope.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Duck Soup: Sylvania and Freedonia are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> City of Vampires: Selene, the city of vampires, is referred to, from La Ville Vampire by Paul Feval.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Castle of the Carpathians: Castle Karpathenburg is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Dreadful Night: The City of Dreadful Night is mentioned, from the poem of the same name by James Thomson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Count Yorga: Yorga is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Palace Without Chairs: Evarchia is mentioned, from Palace Without Chairs by Brigid Brophy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Moby Dick:* Ishmael is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Broad Arrow Jack:* Broad Arrow Jack is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Yellow Submarine: A sergeant named Pepper is mentioned, and references to the events of the film are made.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Beggar's Opera: "Miss Diver" (Jenny Diver) is mentioned, from Beggar's Opera (and its sequel, Polly) by John Gay.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Riallaro: The Riallaro Archipelago is mentioned, from Riallaro, the Archipelago of Exiles by John Macmillan Brown and his sequel Limanora, the Island of Progress.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The New Gulliver:
Manouham, Letalispons, Hunchback Island, Geometer's Island, Greedy
Island, Doctor's Island, Foolyk, Philosopher's Island, Tilibet, the Struldbruggs, John Gulliver and Babilary are mentioned,
from Le Nouveau Gulliver, ou Voyage de Jean Gulliver, Fils du Captaine Gulliver by Abbe Pierre Francois Guyot Desfontaines.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Discovery of the Island Frivola: The islands of Juan Fernandez and Frivola are mentioned, from A Discovery of the Island Frivola; or, the Frivolous Island by Abbe Gabriel Francois Coyer.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Meipe: Meipe is mentioned, from Meipe ou La Delivrance by Andre Maurois.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Azor: The Land of Parrots is mentioned, from Azor, ou Le Prince Enchante by Pierre Charles Fabiot Aunillon, Abbe du Guay de Launay.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mount Analogue: Mount Analogue is mentioned, from Le Mont Analogue by Rene Daumal.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> James Dubourdieu: Paradise Island and Vendchurch's Island are mentioned, from The Adventures, and Surprizing Deliverances, of James Dubourdieu, and His Wife by "Ambrose Evans."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Coral Island: Coral Island is mentioned, from The Coral Island by R.M. Ballantyne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor: The island of Rose, the Black Tiger and Captain Slaughterboard are mentioned, from Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor by Mervyn Peake.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Captain Blood: Captain Blood is mentioned at the Pirates' Conference.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Treasure Island:* John Silver is mentioned at the Pirates' Conference. Treasure Island and Captain Flint are also mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Captain Pugwash: Captain Pugwash is mentioned at the Pirates' Conference.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Peter Pan: Captain Hook is mentioned at the Pirates' Conference.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> When the World Shook: Orofena is mentioned, from When the World Shook by H. Rider Haggard.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Voyage to the County of the Articoles: Maina is mentioned, from Voyage au Pays de Articoles by Andre Maurois.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mardi: The Mardi Archipelago is mentioned, from Mardi and a Voyage Thither by Herman Melville.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> South Pacific: Bali Hai is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Utopia Limited: Zara's Kingdom is mentioned, from Utopia Limited; or, The Flowers of Progress by Gilbert and Sullivan.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> HMS Pinafore: The Pinafore is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Survivors of the Jonathan: Hoste is mentioned, from Les Naufrages du "Jonathan" by Jules Verne and Michael Verne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island: Rampole Island is mentioned, from Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island by H.G. Wells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Invention of Morel: Villings is mentioned, from La Invencion de Morel by Adolfo Bioy Casares.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The House of Games: Brisevent and the Marvelous Islands are mentioned, from La Maison des Jeux by Charles Sorel.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Atlantiade: Eugea is mentioned, from L'Atlantiade, ou La Theogonie Newtonienne by Nepoumucene Lemercier.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Commonwealth of Oceana: Oceana is mentioned, from The Commonwealth of Oceana by James Harrington.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Spensonia: Spensonia is mentioned, from A Description of Spensonia and The Constitution of Spensonia by Thomas Spence.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Utopia: Utopia is mentioned, as are Nolandia, Happiland and Tallstoria (also from Utopia). (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fonseca: Fonseca is mentioned, from A Voyage to the New Island, Fonseca, Near Barbadoes by Anonymous.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Oroonoko: Oroonoko Island is mentioned, likely connected to Oroonoko, from Oroonoko, or the Royal Slave by Aphra Behn.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Nordic Robinson: Ferdinand's Island is mentioned, from Der Nordische Robinson by Johann Michael Fleischer.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Herland: Herland is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lolotte and Fanfan: Cannibal Island and San Verrado are mentioned, from Lolotte et Fanfan by Francois Guillaume Ducray-Duminil.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Song of the Crew: Chita is mentioned, from Le Chant de l'Equipage by Pierre-Mac Orlan.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Upstart Soldier: The Isle of Birds (of the Caribbean) is mentioned, from Le Soldat Parvenu by Eleazar de Mauvillon.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Most Dangerous Game: Zaroff's Island is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Voyage to Cacklogallinia: Cacklogallinia is mentioned, from A Voyage to Cacklogallinia by "Captain Samuel Brunt."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Aventures Philosophiques: Leonard's Land and the Kingdom of the One-Eyed are mentioned, from Aventures Philosophiques by Jean-Gaspard Dubois-Fontanelle.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Library of Babel: Babel is mentioned, from "La Biblioteca de Babel" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Kafka's First Story: The Palace of Justice is mentioned, from "El Primer Cuento de Kafka?" by Marco Denevi.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Acquainted With Grief: Madragal (Maradagal) and Parapagel are mentioned, from "Acquainted With Grief" by Carlo Emilio Gadda.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Cessares: The Cesares (Cessares) Republic is mentioned, from An Account of the First Settlement, Laws, Form of Government and Police of the Cessares by James Burgh.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Conqueror of Idols: Agzceaziguls is mentioned, from "Les Conquerants d'Idoles" by Charles Derennes.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> La Nina Rosa: The Pink Palace is mentioned, from "La Nina Rosa" by Marco Denevi.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Sea of Lost Time: The sea of Lost Time is mentioned, from "El Mar del Tiempo Perdido" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Green Child: Roncador is mentioned, from The Green Child by Herbert Read.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Country of the Blind: The setting of the story "The Country of the Blind" by H.G. Wells is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 100 Years of Solitude: Macondo is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Briefing for a Descent Into Hell: Watkinsland is mentioned, from Briefing for a Descent Into Hell by Doris Lessing.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Frozen Fire: Quivera is mentioned, from The City of Frozen Fire by Vaughan Wilkins.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Corto Maltese: The Mu of the Amazon jungle, goal of Corto Maltese in The Secret of Tristan Bantam and Mu, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Candide: Candide and Dr. Pangloss are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Face in the Abyss: Yu-Atlanchi is mentioned, from The Face in the Abyss by A.E. Merritt.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Green Mansions: Rima is mentioned, from Green Mansions by W.H. Hudson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lost World: Maple White Land is mentioned, as is Professor Challenger. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Creature from the Black Lagoon: The Black Lagoon is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Stories for Late Night Drinkers: Another Isle of Birds is mentioned, from Contes Pour Buveurs Attardes by Michel Tremblay.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Female American: Idol Island and Winkfield's Island are mentioned, from The Female American by "Unca Eliza Winkfield."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Trials of Persiles and Sigismunda: The Island of the Moving Trees is mentioned, from Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of the Philosophers: The Island of Fortune, Island of Chance and Philosophy Isle are mentioned, from L'Isle des Philosophes et Plusiers Autres by Abbe Balthazard.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Chancellor: Ham Island is referred to, from Le "Chancellor" by Jules Verne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Orlando Innamorato: The Island of the Palace of Joy, Malagigi and Albraca are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Orlando: Orlando (the gender-switching version) is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> RUR: Rossum's Island is mentioned, from RUR: Rossum's Universal Robots by Karel Capek.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Hermit: Quarll Island is mentioned, from The Hermit by Peter Longueville.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of Captain Sparrow: Captain Sparrow's Island is mentioned, from The Island of Captain Sparrow by S. Fowler Wright.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of the Great Mother: Great Mother's Island is mentioned, from Die Insel der Grossen Mutter by Gerhart Hauptmann.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Orphan Island: Orphan Island is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Rose Macaulay.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Thieves: Thieves City is mentioned, from La Cite des Voleurs by Maurice Level.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mysterious North: Dead Man's Valley is mentioned, from The Mysterious North by Pierre Benton.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Valley of the Beasts: The Valley of the Beasts is mentioned, from the short story of the same name by Algernon Blackwood.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Haunted Island: Haunted Island is mentioned, from "A Haunted Island" by Algernon Blackwood.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Rootabaga Stories: Rootabaga Country is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Thinking Machine: Professor Van Dusen is mentioned, and the events of "The Problem of Cell 13" are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Twin Peaks: The town of Twin Peaks is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Raggedy Ann: The Deep, Deep Woods are mentioned, from Raggedy Ann in the Deep Woods by Johnny Gruelle.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Shy Stegosaurus: Cricket Creek is mentioned, from The Shy Stegosaurus of Cricket Creek (first of two) by Evelyn Sibley Lampman.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny: Mahagonny is mentioned, from Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny by Bertolt Brecht.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Begum's Fortune: France-Ville is mentioned, from The Begum's Fortune by Jules Verne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet: Tyco M. Bass is mentioned, from The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The 21 Balloons: The Western American Explorer's Club, Professor Sherman and the "21 Balloons" incident are mentioned, from The Twenty-One Balloons by William Pene Du Bois.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> In Watermelon Sugar: iDEATH and the Forgotten Works are mentioned, from In Watermelon Sugar by Richard Brautigan.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Zorro: Don Diego de la Vega, "the Fox," is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Big Lebowski: A
crewman named Lebowski is mentioned, whose ancestors were fond of
"smoking and nine-pins." (According to Alan Moore, this is an ancestor
of "the Dude" and Mr. Lebowski from The Big Lebowski.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Boy Fortune Hunters: Tcha is mentioned, from The Boy Fortune Hunters in Yucatan by L. Frank Baum.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Yoknapatawpha County: Yoknapatawpha County is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Phantom Empire: Murania is mentioned, from the serial The Phantom Empire.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Goddess of Atvatabar: Atvatabar is mentioned, from The Goddess of Atvatabar by William R. Bradshaw.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 2000 Leagues Under America: The Inca Tunnel is mentioned, from Duemila Leghe Sotto l'America by Emilio Salgari.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The English Philosopher: Drexara is mentioned, from Le Philosophe Anglais by Abbe Antoine Francois Prevost.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Silver John: Silver John is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Li'l Abner: Dogpatch and the Valley of the Shmoon are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Oklahoma: Oklahoma! is referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Amerika: The Nature Theatre of Oklahoma is mentioned, from Amerika by Franz Kafka.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Oz: A "flaw in space" over Kansas, leading to "extra-worldly territories" is mentioned- this is a reference to the Oz novels.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Monster of Lake LaMetrie: The monster of Lake LaMetrie is mentioned, from "The Monster of Lake LaMetrie" by Wardon Curtis.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ruggles of Red Gap: Red Gap and Marmaduke Ruggles are mentioned, from Ruggles of Red Gap by Harry Leon Wilson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lone Ranger: John Reid, a Texas Ranger and masked vigilante, is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Green Hornet: John
Reid's move to the coast to raise his family is mentioned- an oblique
reference to his descendant, Britt Reid (the Green Hornet).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Town Where No One Got Off: Rampart Junction is mentioned, from "The Town Where No One Got Off" by Ray Bradbury.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pogo: The talking animals of Okeefenokee Swamp are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Frank Reade: Readestown is mentioned, from the Frank Reade stories by Harold Cohen. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Jack Wright: Wrightstown is mentioned, from the Jack Wright stories by Luis Senarens.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Cream of the Jest: Musgrave, Kennaston and Townsend are mentioned, from The Cream of the Jest by James Branch Cabell.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> House of Leaves: Reference is made to an event from House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Domain of Arnheim: Arnheim is mentioned, from The Domain of Arnheim by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Fall of the House of Usher: The "ruins of the Usher property" are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Wieland: Mettingen is mentioned, from Wieland or the Transformation by Charles Brockden Brown.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Gone-Away Lake: Gone-Away Lake is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Elizabeth Enright.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Freddy the Pig: The "talking pigs and other animals of upstate Centerboro" are mentioned, from the "Freddy the Pig" books by Walter R. Brooks.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Island of the Fay: The Island of the Fay is mentioned, from the short story of the same name by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Legend of Sleepy Hollow: Sleepy Hollow is mentioned. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Rip van Winkle: Van Winkle is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Man Who Corrupted Hadleyburg: Hadleyburg is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Roadtown: Roadtown is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Edgar Chambless.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Flatland: Flatland is mentioned. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Stepford Wives: Stepford is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Hell House: The munitions dealer Belasco and his "feared property" are mentioned, from Hell House by Richard Matheson.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Salem's Lot: Jerusalem's Lot is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Witches of Eastwick: Eastwick is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Hall Family Chronicles: The Hall family house and its "magical tokens" are referred to, from the "Hall Family Chronicles" by Jane Langton.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Time Garden: The events of The Time Garden by Edward Eager are referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Haunting of Hill House: Hill House is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Lottery: The events of "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson are referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Walled Towns: Beaulieu is mentioned, from Walled Towns by Ralph Adams Cram.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Cat in the Hat: A "talking cat" is referred to near Mulberry Street in Springfield- this is a reference to Dr. Seuss and his The Cat in the Hat.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> To Think I Saw It on Mulberry Street: A Mulberry Street in Springfield is mentioned- this is a reference to Dr. Seuss and his To Think I Saw It on Mulberry Street.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mogador: Mogador is mentioned, from the "Mogador" novels by Albert Ruy-Sanchez.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> My Father's Dragon: Wild Island is mentioned, from My Father's Dragon by Ruth Stiles Gannet.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Theatre of Passions: Genotia, Ximeque, Gynopyrea, Neopie Island and Pandoclia are mentioned, from Le Theatre des Passions by Louis Adrien Duperron de Castera.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Discovery of the Empire of Cantahar: Canthahar (Cantahar) is mentioned, from La Decouverte de L'Empire de Cantahar by de Varennes de Mondasse.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Memoirs of Sir George Wollap: Sir Charles Smith, New Britain, Marbotikin Dulda and Rondule (Rondisle) are mentioned, from Memoires de Sir George Wollap by Pierre Chevalier Duplessis.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Voyage and Adventures of Jaques Masse: Bustrol is mentioned, from Voyage et Avantures de Jaques Masse by Simon Tyssot de Patot.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Aepyornis Island: The island of Aepyornis is mentioned, from "Aepyornis Island" by H.G. Wells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Hannah Hewit: Hannah Hewit is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Charles Dibdin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Modern Legislator: Meillcourt, the Troglocites and Quacacites are mentioned, from Le Legislateur Moderne, ou Les Memoires du Chevalier de Meillcourt by Jean Baptiste de Boyer, Marquis d'Argens.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lord of the Flies: The location of that novel are referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Very True Relation of a Newly Discovered Isle: Feather Island is mentioned, from Relation Tres Veritable d'une Isle Nouvellement Decouverte by Fanny de Beauharnais.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Black Mischief: The Azanian Empire is mentioned, from Black Mischief by Evelyn Waugh.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ardistan and Djinnistan: Ardistan, Djebbel Allah, El Hadd, Djinnistan, Djunubistan, Ussulistan, Tshobanistan and the Chatar Defile are mentioned, from Ardistan and Djinnistan by Karl May.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Wolf of Kabul:* The
Wolf of Kabul is mentioned. (It is established concretely that William
Samson Sr. is the father of William Samson, the Wolf of Kabul.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Shore of Syrtes: Farghestan and Orsenna are mentioned, from Le Rivage des Syrtes by Julien Gracq.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Vathek: Samarah, Alkoremi, Fakreddin Valley and Ishtakar are mentioned, from Vathek by William Beckford.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The City of Sand: The City of Sand is mentioned, from La Cite des Sables by Jean d'Agraives.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Flying Legion: Jannati Shah is mentioned, from The Flying Legion by George Allan England.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Flying Train: Golden Mountain is mentioned, from Il Treno Volante by Emilio Salgani.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Flight Into Egypt: "Ici" or "Here" is mentioned, from La Fuite en Egypte by Philippe Jullian.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Magic Flute: Heliopolis is mentioned, from Die Zauberflote by Mozart.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Sunless City: The Sunless City is mentioned, from La Cite Sans Soleil by Albert Bonneau.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lamekis: The Kingdom of the Amphicleocles and Abdalles are mentioned, from Lamekis by Charles Fieux de Mouhy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Silence: The region called Silence is mentioned, from "Silence: A Fable" by Edgar Allan Poe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Saturnin Farandoul: Makalolo, Farandoulie and the destruction of Melbourne are mentioned, from Voyages Tres Extraordinaires de Saturnin Farandoul dans les 5 ou 6 Parties du Monde
by Albert Robida.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> South Wind: The Bulanga, M'tezo and Crotalophoboi Land are mentioned, from South Wind by Norman Douglas.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Tarzan: Tarzan's cabin and numerous locations from the Tarzan novels are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Scoop: Ishmaelia is mentioned, from Scoop, a Novel About Jerusalem by Evelyn Waugh.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Immortal: The City of the Immortals is referred to, from "El Inmortal" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Memoirs of Sigy Gaudentio di Lucca: Mezzorania is mentioned, from The Memoirs of Sigy Gaudentio di Lucca by Simon Berington.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Bong Tree Land: Bong Tree Land is mentioned, from various poems by Edward Lear.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Aline and Valcour: Butua is mentioned, from Aline and Valcour by the Marquis de Sade.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Giphantia: Giphantia is mentioned, from Giphantia by Charles Francois Tiphaigne de la Roche.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Naked Lunch: The Mugwump and the Interwoven Zone (Interzone) are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Macaria: Macaria is mentioned, from A Description of the Famous Kingdom of Macaria by Samuel Hartlib.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Doctor Brodie's Report: Brodie's Land is mentioned, from "El Informe de Brodie" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Barsac Mission: Blackland is mentioned, from L'Etonnante Aventure de la Mission Barsac by Jules Verne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Impressions of Africa: Ponukele-Drelchkaff is mentioned, from Impressions d'Afrique by Raymond Roussel.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Viceroy of Ouidah: Ouidah is mentioned, from The Viceroy of Ouidah by Bruce Chatwin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Babar: Mina and Allan encounter Babar's herd of elephants.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Heart of Darkness: Kurtz and the events of the novel are mentioned. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The War in the Air: Airship wars are mentioned, a reference to The War in the Air by H.G. Wells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The First Men in the Moon:* Professor Cavor and his lunar expedition are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Antangil: Antangil is mentioned, from Histoire du Grand et Admirable Royaume d'Antangil Inconnu Jusques a Present a Tous Historiens by (possibly) Joachim du Moulin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Jacques Sadeur: Terre Australe is mentioned, from Les Aventures de Jacques Sadeur Dans la Decouverte et le Voyage de la Terre Australe by Gabriel Foigny.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Floating Island (Verne): Standard Island is mentioned, from L'Ile a Helice by Jules Verne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Peasant Gentleman: The Jumelles are mentioned, from Le Paysan Gentilhomme, ou Avantures de M. Ransay: Avec Son Voyage Aux Isles Jumelles by de Catalde.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Land That Time Forgot: Caspak and Oo-Oh are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Erewhon: Erewhon is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Traveller from Altruria: Altruria is mentioned, from A Traveller from Altruria by William Dean Howells.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Cave Girl: Flotsam is mentioned, from The Cave Girl and The Cave Man by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Discovery of a New World: New Gynia is mentioned, from Mundus Alter et Idem, Sive Terra Australis Ante Hac Semper Incognita (The Discovery of a New World, or a Description of the Soath Indies) by Joseph Hall.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> William Bingfield: Bingfield's Island, Melinde, Ganze and Kronomo are mentioned, from The Travels and Adventures of William Bingfield, Esq. by "William Bingfield."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> History of Sevarambes: Sporoumbia and Sevarambia are mentioned, from Histoire des Sevarambes by Denis Veiras.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Island: Pala and Rendang are mentioned, from Island by Aldous Huxley.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pickles: Cuffycoat's Island and Vichebolk Land are mentioned, from Pickles, ou Recits a la Mode Anglaise by Andre Lichtenberger.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Birds of Paradise: Manoba and Jundapur are mentioned, from The Birds of Paradise by Paul Scott.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> New Atlantis: Bensalem is mentioned, from New Atlantis by Francis Bacon.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Swiss Family Robinson: New Switzerland is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mucker: Yoka Island is mentioned, from The Mucker by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Isle with Green Sand: Green Sand Island, Black Sand Island and Red Sand Island are mentioned, from L'Ile au Sable Vert by Tancrede Vallerey.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Voyage to Locuta: Locuta is mentioned, from Voyage to Locuta: A Fragment by Lemuel Gulliver Junior by E.S. Graham.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Supplement to the True History: The Animal Republic and Pyrandia are mentioned, from Supplement de l'Histoire Veritable de Lucien by Jean Jacobe de Fremont d'Ablancourt.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Iron Mask: Mask Island and Goatland are mentioned, from Le Masque de Fer by Charles Fieux de Mouhy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sandokan: The Black Jungle is mentioned, from I Misteri della Jungla Nera (The Mystery of the Black Jungle) by Emilio Salgari (first of the Sandokan novels).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mysterious Valley: The Sacred Valley is mentioned, from La Vallee Mysterieuse by Maurice Champagne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Other Side: The Dream Kingdom is mentioned, from Die Andere Seite: Ein Phantastischer Roman by Alfred Kubin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Madame Butterfly: Cho-Cho-San is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Mikado: Titipu and the Mikado are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Kai Lung: Kai Lung is mentioned, from the Kai Lung novels by Ernest Bramah.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Police of the Kingdom of Gala: Gala is mentioned, from Histoire ou Police du Royaume de Gala by Andre-Francois de Brancas-Villeneuve.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Jungle Girl: Pnom Dhek and Lodidhapura are mentioned, from The Jungle Girl by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-popple: Grambamble Land, Tosh and Lake Pipple-popple are mentioned, from The History of the Seven Families of the Lake Pipple-popple by Edward Lear.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Shadows on Tibet: Mount Tsintsin-Dagh is mentioned, from Ombres sur le Thibet by Paul Alperine.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Sounders of Abimes: True Lhassa is mentioned, from Les Soundeurs d'Abimes by Maurice Champagne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lost Horizon: Mount Karakal and Shangri-La are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Golden Cockerel: Dodon's Kingdom is mentioned, from "The Golden Cockerel" by Alexander Pushkin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Possessed: Pauk is mentioned, from Besy by Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Master and Margarita: Mina dreams of the events of Master i Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The History of a Town: Gloupov is mentioned, from Istoriya Odnogo Goroda by Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Yawning Heights: Ibansk is mentioned, from Ziyayushchie Vysoty by Aleksander Zinoviev.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Rose and the Ring: Paflagonia, Blackstaff and Crim Tartary are mentioned, from "The Rose and the Ring" by William Makepeace Thackeray.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Tartar Steppe: The Tartary Desert and Bastiani are mentioned, from Il Deserto dei Tartari by Dino Buzzati.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Alastor: Alastor is mentioned, from "Alastor or the Spirit of Solitude" by Percy Shelley.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Curious Republic of Gondour: Gondour is mentioned, from The Curious Republic of Gondour by Mark Twain.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Ivany: Ivanikha is mentioned, from "Ivany" by Yevgeniy Zamyatin.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mr. A.G. in the City of X: "X" is mentioned, from G.A. ur X.-ben by Tibor Dery.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Mathieu the Accomplice: The Land of the Goat Worshippers is mentioned, from Le Compere Mathieu, ou les Bigarrures de l'Espirit Humain by Abbe H.L. Du Laurens.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Kubla Khan: Xanadu is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Undr: Urnland is mentioned, from "Undr" by Jorge Luis Borges.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Southern Discovery: Megapatagonia is mentioned, from La Decouverte Australe par un Homme-Volant by Nicolas Edme Restif de la Bretonne.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Christianopolis: The Academic Sea, Caphar Salama and Christianopolis are mentioned, from Reipublicae Christianapolitinae Descriptio by Johann Valentin Andreae.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Monikins: The Leap Islands and Monikins are mentioned, from The Monikins by James Fenimore Cooper.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The French Adventurer: Antarctic France and the Empire of the Alsondons are mentioned, from L'Aventurier Francais by Robert-Martin Lesuire.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Arthur Gordon Pym: Tsalal and the events of the story are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Voyage to the Center of the Earth: The Iron Mountains, the Mercury and the subterreanean world of Pluto are mentioned, from Voyage au Centre de la Terre by Anonymous.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder: Kosekin County is mentioned, from A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder by James De Mille.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Plutonia: Plutonia is mentioned, from the novel of the same name by Vladimir Obruchev.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Good Soldier Svejk: Rudolf Svejk is mentioned, from The Good Soldier Svejk by Jaroslav Hasek.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Town of Glass: Elisee Reclus Island, Cristallopolis and Maurel City are mentioned, from Une Ville de Verre by Alphonse Brown.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> People of the Pole: The North Pole Kingdom is mentioned, from Le Peuple du Pole by Charles Derennes.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Ice: Polar Bear Kingdom is mentioned, from 20,000 Lieues Sous Les Glaces by Mor Jokai.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Adventures of Captain Hatteras: Queen Island and Captain Hatteras are mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> At the Back of the North Wind: The Back of the North Wind is mentioned, from At the Back of the North Wind by George MacDonald.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Noddy Goes to Toyland: Toyland and Noddy are mentioned, from the "Noddy Goes to Toyland" series by Enid Blyton.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Sand-Man: Spalanzani, Coppelius and Olympia (Olimpia) are mentioned, from "The Sand-Man" by E.T.A. Hoffmann.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Frankenstein: Frankenstein's Monster is referred to. (remove previous arrow)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pellucidar: Pellucidar is mentioned (and connected to Pluto).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Reverend Father Cordelier Pierre de Mesange: Ruffal is mentioned, from La Vie, Les Avanture, and le Voyage de Groenland du Reverend Pere Cordelier Pierre de Mesange by Simon Tyssot de Patot.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 2 Collected Edition (bonus material)*
(Note: All of the below never actually appeared in the story, and are
really there for pure entertainment value (excepting the covers, which
are there for artistic value), but it can be assumed by their presence
in the book that the creators intended them to be in the League universe.)
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Across the Zodiac: On the cover of League v.2 #3, Mina is holding a book with "Apergy" and "1880" on it- the novel Across the Zodiac, released in 1880, features the "repellent force" apergy.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> From the Earth to the Moon:* On the cover of League v.2 #3, a picture refers to the (Bal)timore Gun Club.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Tale of the Ragged Mountains: On the cover of League v.2 #3, a picture refers to Augustus Bedloe, the main character of Edgar Allan Poe's "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Visit to the Moon: On the cover of League v.2 #3, a model of the Astronef appears, from "A Visit to the Moon" by George Griffith.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Crystal Egg:* On the cover of League v.2 #3, a placard for "C. Cave" appears.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Phra the Phoenician: On the cover of League v.2 #3, Phra is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Alice in Wonderland:* On the cover of League v.2 #3, various beings from Wonderland are on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Lepidus the Centurion: On the cover of League v.2 #3, "Lepidu" is a name attached to a Roman helmet- likely it belongs to the title character of Lepidus the Centurion by Edwin L. Arnold.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Pinocchio:* On the cover of League v.2 #3, Pinocchio's head is on display.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> A Plunge Into Space: On the cover of League v.2 #3, the "Steel Globe" appears, from A Plunge Into Space by Robert Cromie.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Warlords of Mars:* In a montage of Mars information, Varnal is mentioned.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> John Carter of Mars:* In a montage of Mars information, Dejah Thoris is referred to.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> James Bond:* "Campion Bond's Moral Maze."
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Pirate of the Air:* In "Campion Bond's Moral Maze," Captain Mors is one of the destinations.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Robur the Conqueror:* In "Campion Bond's Moral Maze," Robur is one of the destinations.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Fu Manchu:* In "Campion Bond's Moral Maze," "the Doctor" is one of the destinations.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Sherlock Holmes:* In "Campion Bond's Moral Maze," "M" (Moriarty) is one of the destinations.
Seance
for a
Vampire
by Fred Saberhagen
Sherlock Holmes <-> Dracula: Holmes and Dracula meet again.
Sherlock Holmes <-> Dracula -> Henry Merrivale: Inspector Merrivale- later Sir Henry Merrivale- appears.
The
Case of the Missing Martian mini-series
Sherlock Holmes -> War of the Worlds: Holmes investigates the
theft of the last Martian war machine.
Sherlock Holmes -> The Lost World: Professor Challenger appears.
The
Rook
#4-6
The Rook -> Sherlock Holmes: Holmes teams up with the Rook.
The Rook -> Robur the Conqueror: Robar (Robur) goes up against the Rook and Holmes.
The Rook -> The Cisco Kid: The Cisco Kid and "Poncho" (Pancho) appear.
Tarzan Alive by Philip Jose Farmer
Tarzan -> The Scarlet Pimpernel: In the foreword, the author
refers to the "real" Scarlet Pimpernel. Sir Percy Blakeney and other
members of the Blakeney family are referred to. Percy's daughter Mavice
is said to have married James Wildman's grandfather. Chauvelin, the
nemesis of the Pimpernel, was an ancestor of Doc Savage's mother. (More
relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> The Lost World: In the foreword, the author
refers to the "real" Lord John Roxton and Professor Challenger. Lord
John Roxton is identified as the nephew of the sixth Duke of Greystoke,
and is said to resemble the Duke. Professor Challenger is a first
cousin to Alice Rutherford, Tarzan's mother. (More relatives are
described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Bulldog Drummond: In the foreword, the author
refers to the "real" Captain Hugh Drummond. Hugh Drummond's younger
brother, John Drummond, was adopted by Tarzan and Jane, and eventually
became Korak. (More relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Sherlock Holmes: In the foreword, the author
refers to the "real" Sherlock Holmes. Sebastian Moran knew John Clayton
(II), father of Tarzan. Mention is also made of Watson, Mycroft Holmes
and Siger Holmes (Sherlock and Mycroft's father). Black Peter Michael
Carey (from "The Adventure of Black Peter" ) is tied to Black Michael
(from Tarzan of the Apes)- Black Michael's murder of John
Clayton I (Sidney Trefusis) was the basis for the former story. John
Clayton I was also the John Clayton who appeared in The Hound of the Baskervilles.
Various relatives of the Greystokes are tied to the events of "The
Adventure of the Priory School." The sixth Duke's estranged wife is
said to have appeared in "The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton."
(More relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Doc Savage: In the foreword, the author refers
to the "real" Doc Savage. Mention is also made of Tarzan's "American
surgeon cousin" and his "five comrades." James Wilder (from the
Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventure of the Priory School") is said to
be James Wildman, the father of Doc Savage (James Wildman Jr.).
Savage's comrade Monk Mayfair is said to be the nephew of Professor
Challenger. (More relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Lord Peter Wimsey: In the foreword, the author
refers to the "real" Lord Peter Wimsey. Wimsey is referred to as
Tarzan's cousin, and his butler Bunter is mentioned. Wimsey is said to
be the son of Honoria Lucasta Delagardie, who was the daughter of
Lucasta Rutherford, the sister of Sherlock Holmes' mother Violet. (More
relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Raffles: In the foreword, the author refers to
the "real" Raffles. A.J. Raffles is said to be
the son of Egidnia Rutherford, sister of Alice Rutherford. (More
relatives are described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> An Unsocial Socialist: Sidney Trefusis, from Shaw's An Unsocial Socialist,
is identified as John Clayton I, the grandfather of Tarzan. Clayton
crashed his son's wedding to hand out socialist propaganda, leading to
a severe estrangement from his family- John Clayton II in fact dropped
the "II" and thought of his father as dead. (More relatives are
described in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Around the World in 80 Days: Phileas Fogg is mentioned as the possible grandfather of Korak's love Meriem.
Tarzan -> The Mad King: Mention is made of Barney Custer visiting Tarzan and Jane; Barney Custer is from Burroughs' The Mad King.
Tarzan -> The Prisoner of Zenda: Rudolf Rassendyll's brother was supposedly involved in the events of The Mad King. Rudolf Rassendyll is said to resemble the sixth Duke of Greystoke.
Tarzan -> Flashman: General H.P. Flashman is mentioned.
Tarzan -> The Eternal Lover: Tarzan's involvement is mentioned; Victoria Custer is tied to Barney Custer from The Mad King.
Tarzan -> Pride and Prejudice: Mrs. Wylie, the sister of John Jansenius (from An Unsocial Socialist) is said to be Agatha Jansenius, who married Fitzwilliam Bennet Darcy (from Pride and Prejudice).
Their daughter, Athena Darcy, married Sidney Trefusis/John Clayton I.
Pemberley House is tied to the Holdernesse Hall from the Holmes story
"The Adventure of the Priory School." (More relatives are described in
the actual book.)
Tarzan -> Nero Wolfe: Nero Wolfe is said to be a relative of Doc Savage, and the son of Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler.
Tarzan -> Micah Clarke: The mother of James Wildman, Doc
Savage's father, is said to be a descendant of Micah Clarke (from the
novel of the same name by Arthur Conan Doyle).
Tarzan -> 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Ned Land is said to
be the father of Arronaxe Larsen, Doc Savage's grandmother. Arronaxe
was named after Land's friend Professor Arronax.
Tarzan -> The Sea Wolf: Wolf Larsen married and then
abandoned Doc Savage's grandmother Arronaxe; she had a daughter by him,
also named Arronaxe. The younger Arronaxe was Doc Savage's mother.
Tarzan -> She: Ludwig Horace Holly, the narrator of She, is said to be the son of Venetia Rutherford, Alice Rutherford's sister.
Tarzan -> Auguste Dupin: Auguste Dupin is said to be the son
of Charles Dupin, twin brother to Paul Honore, maternal
great-grandfather to Lord Peter Wimsey. (More relatives are described
in the actual book.)
Tarzan -> G-8: G-8 is said to be Richard Wentworth, the son
of Lord John Roxton and Rhoda Delagardie- it is theorized that he later
manifested the split personalities of the Spider and the Shadow. (This
theory is refuted by Farmer in Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life.)
Tarzan -> The Spider: G-8 is said to have become the Spider. (This theory is refuted by Farmer in Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life.)
Tarzan -> The Shadow: G-8 is said to have become the Shadow. (This theory is refuted by Farmer in Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life.)
Tarzan -> Ulysses: Leopold Bloom is said to be the grandson
of Julius Higgins (aka Julius Karoly), the brother of John Karoly, aka
John Jansenius (from An Unsocial Socialist).
Tarzan -> Fu Manchu: Denis Nayland Smith is said to be the son of Sigrina Holmes, sister of Sherlock. Fu Manchu is also mentioned.
Tarzan -> Monsieur Lecoq: A coachman named Albert Lecoq was at Wold Newton when the meteor fell; Lecoq was the ancestor of Monsieur Lecoq.
Tarzan -> Arsene Lupin: A coachman named Louis Lupin was at Wold Newton when the meteor fell; Lupin was the ancestor of Arsene Lupin.
Tarzan -> Shell Scott: Shell Scott is theorized to be a
member of the "Wold Newton Family" due to his grey eyes, but his skill
level puts that in doubt.
Tarzan -> Travis McGee: Travis McGee is theorized to be a member of the "Wold Newton Family" due to his grey eyes and heroic traits.
Tarzan -> Lew Archer: Lew Archer is theorized to be the son of Enid Malone (nee Challenger), daughter of Professor Challenger.
Tarzan -> The Sea Hawk: Sir Oliver Tressilian is an ancestor of Tarzan. Tressilian is from The Sea-Hawk by Rafael Sabatini.
Tarzan -> Captain Singleton: Captain Bob Singleton is an ancestor of Tarzan. Singleton is from Captain Singleton by Daniel Defoe.
Tarzan -> The Outlaw of Torn: Norman of Torn is an ancestor of Tarzan. Norman of Torn is from The Outlaw of Torn by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Tarzan -> The Green Archer: The Green Archer is an ancestor of Tarzan. The Archer is from The Green Archer by Edgar Wallace.
"The Whisperer in Darkness" by H.P. Lovecraft
Cthulhu Mythos -> Bran Mak Morn: Reference is made to Bran Mak Morn.
Cthulhu Mythos -> The King in Yellow: Reference is made to the Lake of Hali, Hastur and the Yellow Sign.
PARALLELS
King Kull <-> King Kull (Marvel): The Marvel Universe is
parallel to the main crossover universe. Therefore, the King Kull that
appears with Spider-Man (see #3) is the Marvel version of the character.
Conan -> Elric: Conan the Barbarian #14-15. Conan meets
the otherdimensional warrior Elric. Elric crossed universes to meet him, thus Elric's reality is a parallel universe.
Dracula <-> Dracula (Marvel): The Marvel Universe is
parallel to the main crossover universe. Therefore, the Dracula that appears there is the Marvel version of the character.
Solomon Kane <-> Solomon Kane (Marvel): The Marvel
Universe is
parallel to the main crossover universe. Therefore, the Solomon Kane
that appears with the Marvel Dracula is the Marvel version of the
character.
Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde -> Abbott and Costello: Abbot
and
Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
The Abbott and Costello characters ("Slim" and "Tubby") in this film
are in the Victorian era, unlike all their other appearances. Thus, a
parallel universe.
Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde -> Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Abbot
and
Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The entire situation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is different in this film from the book- thus, a parallel universe.
Sherlock Holmes -> Sherlock Holmes (The Seven-Percent Solution): The Seven-Percent Solution
by Nicholas Meyer. Diverges from Holmes canon by making an innocent
Moriarty the target of a drug-addled Holmes (he gets better). Thus, a
parallel universe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Cold Comfort Farm: "The New Traveller's Almanac" by Alan
Moore, in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Vol. 2. Although the Starkadder family farm exists in the League world, Cold Comfort Farm exists in a timeline where Britain and Nicaragua fought a war in 1946. Thus, Cold Comfort Farm is a parallel universe.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> Elric: "The New Traveller's Almanac" by Alan
Moore, in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
Vol. 2. The Melnibonean empire and the remains of a black sword
(Stormbringer) are mentioned. However, Elric's world is parallel (as
per Conan's link to Elric).
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen -> The Purple Cloud: "The New Traveller's Almanac" by Alan
Moore, in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
Vol. 2. Although the "Real North Pole" exists in the League world, The Purple Cloud
takes place between 1915 and 1930 (according to the estimate in the
introduction) in a timeline where most life on Earth is wiped out by a
gaseous cloud.
SPIN-OFFS
Tarzan -> Hadon of Ancient Opar: Opar first appeared in the Tarzan novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Zorro -> Lady Rawhide: Zorro #3. First appearance
of
Lady Rawhide.
The Floating Outfit -> Calamity Jane (J.T. Edson): Calamity Jane was an associate of the Floating Outfit.
The Floating Outfit -> Waxahachie Smith: Waxahachie Smith was an associate of the Floating Outfit.
The Floating Outfit -> Company Z: Company Z's members are descendants of members of the Floating Outfit.
The Floating Outfit -> Rockabye County: One of the characters, Brad Counter, is the grandson of a member of the Floating Outfit.
Tom Brown's Schooldays -> Flashman: Harry Flashman first appeared in Tom Brown's Schooldays, by Thomas Hughes, before featuring in his own series of novels by George MacDonald Fraser.
PARAMETERS
1) Crossovers must work with the original canon of a fiction. If it
directly contradicts canon (i.e. Moriarty is a demon), then it's an
alternate universe instead. However, if the crossover merely bends
canon (i.e. Moriarty survived Reichenbach Falls and went underground),
it can be part of the larger crossover network.
2) The problem of differences in "secret" history (i.e. the "truth"
behind the death of the dinosaurs, Atlantis, Jack the Ripper, the
Tunguska event or Roswell) that would result from connecting two
fictions will be ignored. A similar problem, that of differences in
futures between two fictions (i.e. Doctor Who vs. Star Trek), will also be ignored, as it will be assumed the worlds share history until their timelines become incompatible.
3) The basic assumption of the crossover network is that all these
events take place in a world that has history broadly paralleling our
own. If an event in a crossover fiction should, by all rights, create
an alternate history (i.e. the Martian invasion), it must be considered
carefully. The rule is this- if the fiction features specific,
significant changes in established history (i.e. the Nazis win World
War II), it is an alternate universe and the crossovers only count for
that alternate universe. If the fiction merely displays events that
could change history, but didn't necessarily do so, then ignorance is
bliss- assume that somehow, history remained largely on our track.
4) If a crossover establishes that two fictions exist in different universes (i.e. DC vs. Marvel),
then all worlds directly connected to each fiction cannot co-exist. The
original versions of the fictions instead connect to the half that has
more existing connections- the half with fewer connections connects to
alternate versions of all those fictions tied to the larger half. Any
crossovers that present two universes established as separate as
instead coexisting (i.e. Superman vs. Spider-Man as opposed to DC vs. Marvel) take place in a third, alternate universe to both halves.
5) Links to outright pornography and works explicitly intended to promote
intolerance will not be counted. (Fortunately, there are very few of
these.)
6)
Clear parodies will not be counted, nor will offhand references that
explicitly or implicitly refer to the fictional person or thing (as
opposed to the "real" person or thing).
SOURCES
Heroes and Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by Jess Nevins
A Blazing World: The Unofficial Companion to The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Volume Two by Jess Nevins
A Cthulhu Mythos Bibliography and Concordance by Chris Jarocha-Ernst
The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana by Daniel Harms
An Expansion of Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe
* Because League connects to so many fictions, only the
chronologically first connections for each of its components are being
noted. (For example, the members of the League will not be noted as
links in volume 2.) The exception is for the "better" source- for
example, although John Carter and the War of the Worlds appear in
"Allan and the Sundered Veil," volume two is where they feature more
prominently. The other exception is material that first appears in the
"weaker" components (the collected edition bonus material and the "Game of
Extraordinary Gentlemen")- if a reference appears in a stronger source
after it appears in the weaker source, then the first strong source
becomes the only place it links from.
** Some connections that exist here are not being included.
- The Bostonians: Olive Chancellor appears, but she is far too young. In The Bostonians,
which appeared to be set at the time it was published- 1886- and not
decades in the future, Olive was an adult. I ignore a lot of the minor
age issues, but this is too drastic.
- Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Pollyanna: Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
was published in 1903, five years after these events, and Rebecca was
at least seventeen by the end of that book. Assuming the events of the
book were contemporary, that would make her at most twelve in 1898 (the
setting of League). But this Becky Randall is likely a senior (17-18 years old), and is thus too old. Pollyanna
was published in 1913, and Polly was eleven at the time of the book, so
she shouldn't even be born yet! Thus, the timing makes it unlikely that
these are really the literary characters. (Also, quite simply, I really
don't like what Alan Moore did with them.)
*** Some connections that exist here are not being included.
- Wu Fang (square 9): There are five Wu Fangs in pulp-era fiction, and it is unclear which is being referred to.
- The iron mask (square 16) could be the historical one. (A clear reference to the Musketeers would have been stronger.)
- Kallikrates (square 100): It isn't an appearance by Kallikrates (from She), just a mention (like calling someone "Sherlock Holmes" when they're acting like a detective).
**** Some connections that exist here are not being included.
All of the Moreau equivalents to popular animal characters from children's literature are not being counted as crossovers.