HPLinks #29 – Schultz, Pera, ‘We Are Providence’ stage play, Faunus in PDF, a pagan thesis, antique monsters, clouds and more…

HPLinks #29.

* Deep Cuts has a guest article examining “The Multi-Dimensional Career of Weird Literature Editor and Book Designer David E. Schultz”. A man well known to Lovecraftians as one of the editors and annotators of the triumph-of-scholarship that is the Lovecraft’s Letters series of books.

* A Spanish news site has a new article on “Filme de Edgar Pera com Pessoa, Lovecraft”, which reveals the director is set to follow his acclaimed ‘Lovecraft meets Pessoa’ movie Telepathic Letters (2024) with… “an upcoming project inspired by Lovecraft tales”. No further details as yet.

* Popping up on Abebooks, a 1983 French ‘BD’ comic-book adaptation of Lovecraft’s “Innsmouth”. New to me…

* Forthcoming on the New York stage, two plays about Lovecraft’s life. ‘Lovecraft in Brooklyn’ has been staged before, but is now being paired with ‘We are Providence’ which is billed as… “a new play set in Providence, Rhode Island”. The two plays are part of a spring and early-summer series that also features one with R.E. Howard…

On 24th April 2025, the series continues with ‘I have Known Many Grim and Loveless Gods’ [about] creator Robert E. Howard on the last day of his life reckoning with his creations and his mother’s illness.

* Robert E. Howard Days: The 2025 Howard Days Official Poster, revealed.

* Now in Kindle ebook, the first two volumes of Roy Thomas’s Barbarian Life: A Literary Biography of Conan the Barbarian. The third has yet to be an ebook, and note that Amazon misleads by selling a “Barbarian Life (3 book series)” that only has two ebooks. The three-book paperback set is significantly more expensive than the ebooks, at £45 UK.

* A new archive for Faunus, the Arthur Machen journal…

all [50] back issues of Faunus will shortly be available to members to download in PDF format for the first time

* All copies of the core An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia have suddenly become insanely expensive on both Amazon and eBay. Time for a budget ebook edition?

* New from Spain, “Revising paganism in the fiction of H.P. Lovecraft” (2025), in English. It appears to be a Phd thesis, for the University of Granada. Judging by the contents pages it seems something of an encyclopedia on the topic. Freely available online.

* Set for June 2025, the new Oxford Handbook of Biblical Monsters.

* S.T. Joshi’s new The Wind in the Portico: Horrors from Classical Antiquity (2025). Available now, a collection of…

instances of horror fiction, poetry, drama, and other work from classical authors (some of them translated by myself—taken from my book Classical Papers), but writings by John Buchan, H.P. Lovecraft, Edward Lucas White, Rudyard Kipling, and many others utilising classical myth and history for their horror tales.

* Newly on Archive.org, the article “The Vortex of the Weird: Systemic Feedback and Environmental Individuation in the Media Ecology of Ito Junji’s Horror Comics”. This led me to track down its source, Stockholm’s Orientaliska Studier No. 156 (2019), a special journal issue on ‘Manga, Comics and Japan’. Now freely available online.

* A new £130 academic book from Springer, “The Call of the Eco-Weird in Fiction, Films, and Games” (2025). Includes the chapter “Departing the Place Once Familiar: Lovecraft’s Eco-Weird Thought”.

* Back in 2019 I looked at Lovecraft’s spring 1931 musing on the possibility that rain clouds and drizzling mists might be partly influenced by fluxes in incoming cosmic-rays. 1931 was long before the idea was first proposed in 1959 by Ney in his Nature paper “Cosmic radiation and weather”. In 2025, an interesting bit of additional research evidence… “Cosmic-Ray Showers Play Pivotal Role in Triggering Lightning Flashes” on earth.

* Some of the indie titles among this week’s wave of Lovecraftian videogame news, Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss (first-person thriller/investigation), The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu (four-player co-op adaptation of “The Mound”, by the makers of the worthy game Zeno Clash), and Cthulhu’s Reach: Devil Reef.

* Newly released and of possible interest to Mythos writers, the desktop writing assistance software NovelForge 3.x now has full LLM AI assistance. Still standalone and affordable, at $60. AI’s can be used free, and there’s a video showing how.

* And finally, some readers may be interested in seeing the documentary movie We Are As Gods (2021), on the life and legacy of the counterculture publisher and Long Now thinker Stewart Brand.


— End-quotes —

“Effective weird-fictional language, through rhythm & associative word-values, must always have a certain undercurrent of menacing tensily — shadows, gathering clouds, & all that. […] Very, very few things in Weird Tales ever achieve the desired degree of atmospheric menace” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, November 1930.

“In Quebec one of the most striking things is the sky — the odd cloud formations peculiar to northern latitudes and unknown in R.I. [Rhode Island]. Mist and vapour assume fantastic and portentous forms, and at sunset on Labour Day I saw one of the most impressive phenomena imaginable from my vantage-point on the Citadel overlooking the river and the Levis cliffs beyond. The evening was predominantly clear; but some strange refractive quality gave the dying solar rays an abnormal redness, while from the zenith to the southeastern horizon stretched an almost black funnel of churning nimbus clouds — the small end meeting the earth at some inland point beyond Levis. From a place midway in this cloud-funnel, zigzag streaks of lightning would occasionally dart toward the ground, with faint rumbles of thunder following tardily after. […] With such bizarre skies, I do not wonder that the northern races excel those of the south in fantastic imagination.” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, September 1933.

The young Lovecraft photographs cloud types, New Year 1907…

CLOUD PHOTOGRAPHY. This work was performed by a new 6.5 × 8.5 camera. The following types were taken:

 Cumulus
 Cirrus
 Stratus
 Cirro-Stratus
 Cirro-Cumulus
 Cumulo-Stratus
 Cumulo-Nimbus, or Thunder-Cloud.

Celestial views were also taken.

“It seems, in the light of recent discoveries, that all matter is in a state of balance betwixt formation and disintegration, evolution and devolution — and that the infinite cosmos is like a vast patch of summer sky, out of which little cirrus clouds gather here and there, presently to be dissolved into blankness again. The universes we know correspond to the little cirrus clouds of that summer sky, being merely transient aggregations of electrons condensed from that field of ungrouped electrons which we call space, and soon to be dissolved into that space again. This process of formation and destruc­tion is the fundamental attribute of all entity — it is infinite Nature, and it always has been, and always will be.” — Lovecraft, “The Materialist Today”, 1926.


Release: NovelForge 3.x

For a few years now, the Photoshop plugin creator Mediachance has also offered the desktop CQuill Writer 1.x creative writing software, this being an affordable $60 standalone helper / story-organiser / style-prompter. After much development over the winter this has just been renamed NovelForge 3.x and 3.x can link to powerful LLM AIs (aka ‘chatbots’), which work directly in its editor window.

It uses the same user registration as CQuill, and I tested this… and yes… NovelForge picked up my old CQuill registration details. Just download the NovelForge trial installer, and it will automatically pick up your CQuill registration and also import the old project files. The user interface and workflow possibilities are much the same, with only a new AI assistant tab.

There’s a video on How to setup NovelForge with OpenRouter for free, to access remote LLM AIs. As you can see here, it can also work with local desktop AI hosting suites…

Use cases: paraphrasing; condensing; dialogue fixing (e.g. speech of the time period, regional accent and dialect, prevailing courtesy mannerisms etc); coherence and readability; cliche and modern slang avoidance; crafting more believable character responses e.g. emotional / logical / humorous; adding world-building details and names; quick research assistance; potentially also a ‘stylisation makeover’ (‘write it like Lovecraft’) and scene extension (‘suggest three events that might happen next, one of which should be plausible but unlikely’). And so on.

In the past I’ve mentioned that I plan to use my registered CQuill to distill a ‘Lovecraft Style’ module (doing so is only possible in the paid version). This is still planned, and (as with the further novels I hope to write one day) I’ll find the time and energy eventually.

HPLinks #28 – Whelan and Mountains, authenticity, REH Borak audiobooks, Sinking City 2, and more…

HPLinks #28.

* Artist Micheal Whelan recalls his career breakthrough 1976: Year in Review (Part One)

Staking everything on a letter from Donald Wollheim that promised a [book] cover assignment, bolstered by recent success selling his work at conventions, Michael packed his VW Beetle and with trailer in tow headed to New York City to pursue illustration…

At the foot of this portion from his pleasingly-illustrated memoirs, Whelan also notes that he will shortly be…

adding a small preliminary painting from [Lovecraft’s] “At The Mountains of Madness” to our shop. An exclusive preview of the original art will be available for our paid subscribers on Substack before the art is released to our shop on Wednesday, 5th March [2025] at 11am EST

* In the new £140 academic libraries book on Authenticity and Adaptation (Palgrave, Feb 2025), the chapter “”I have looked upon all that the universe has to hold of horror”: The Authentic Lovecraftian Image in Film and Television”. Seeks to identify an authentic core of Lovecraft-inspired visual media, amid its exuberant abundance…

The ‘Lovecraftian’ can be seen everywhere in twenty-first-century visual culture.

* New in Italian and available via Amazon Italy, Yog-sothothery, Oltre La Soglia Dell’immaginario Di H.P. Lovecraft (‘Yog-Sothothery: H.P. Lovecraft Beyond the Threshold of Imagination’) (October 2024). Being a multi-author volume of what sounds to me like literary essays, in Italian. The essayists explore Lovecraft’s…

fantastic stories, considered among the most innovative and intense ever committed to paper, [in] seven essays […] which take the premise that ‘to appreciate Lovecraft you need to have suffered a lot’.

* At the University of Rennes, France, the three-day Le Festival Sirennes. Set for 20th-22nd March 2025…

* In Spanish, another journal review of the book A traves del abismo: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (2024) (‘Through the Abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’). Freely available in open-access.

* The German Lovecraftians want a team leader for their Literature Team, which is…

currently working on a volume of essays from German-speaking countries, and a translation project of Lovecraft’s letters and essays

Also, some readers may wish to know that the Tolkien Society’s Amon Hen mag-a-journal is still seeking a volunteer graphic designer, and has been for over a year now.

* New on YouTube, Robert E. Howard’s “Blood of the Gods” (featuring his El Borak adventurer character) in audiobook, Part One and Part Two (120 minutes total). Plus another El Borak tale “The Daughter of Erlik Khan” (150 minutes). Both with a good professional reader. Since the 2012 El Borak audiobook is off-the-market (read from the Del Ray collection by another reader, Michael McConnohie) and totally unavailable, these seemingly-new El Borak recordings are very welcome. Several commenters complain about “ads” in these YouTube readings, but I assume they’re somehow clueless about ad-blockers and/or .MP3 YouTube downloader freeware such as that offered by MediaHuman.

* Want even more desert adventure from Robert E. Howard? Yup, there’s more, via a free audiobook from Horrorbabble reading “King of the Forgotten People” (53 minutes). 1930s adventurer Jim Brill goes seeking a missing scientist in the far reaches of the Gobi Desert.

* Also of note in free audiobooks. New and free on Librivox, the collection The Lost Valley and Other Stories by Algernon Blackwood. Also The Magician by Somerset Maugham. The latter centres on a lightly disguised Aleister Crowley circa 1907/08, and… Lovecraft it is not. Though the final description of the creepy Victorian house interior in the Staffordshire Moorlands is well done.

* One of the best big-budget Lovecraftian videogames of recent years now has a Kickstarter page for its planned sequel, The Sinking City 2. The campaign launches on 6th March 2025.

* Possibly of use for Mythos writers for games, the free Llama-3.1-8B-BeyondReality, a relatively lightweight free and local AI specifically designed for suggesting “interactive fiction scenarios” for “text-based adventures”.

* And finally, E-Arkham makes a growing series of fab monsters for the free 3D software DAZ Studio. Load, pose, choose a suitable eerie lighting preset, and then render in 3D. And potentially also then use these renders as seeds for AI enhancements / stylisation in Stable Diffusion. All his items are rather expensive at present, but those experienced in DAZ and Poser know to Wishlist and then come back when the big 70%-80% discount sales are on. All royalty-free, so you can use your renders commercially if you wish.


— End-quotes —

“The advent of Spring — even technically — is surely pleasant to think of. — […] a warm day sent me splashing through the mud & melting snow of the fields & woods […] I never before saw the ponds & brooks so high — & when I crossed the broad gorge of the Blackstone I found the lower banks [of the river] completly over-flowed; with great trees & cottage roofs projecting above an aqueous expanse like reliques of sunken Atlantis.” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, 29th March 1934.

“A sense of rushing through chartless corridors seized me, and I saw dates dancing in aether—1923—1924—1925—1926—1925—1924—1923—crash! Two years to the bad, but who the hell gives a damn? 1923 ends 1926 begins! Even the spring had delay’d so that I might see it break over Novanglia’s [New England’s] antient hills! I have lost 1924 and 1925 [to New York City], but the dawn of vernal 1926 is just as lovely as I view it from Rhodinsular [Rhode Island] windows! […] There is no other place for me. My world is Providence. […] The vista from my pseudo-ariel desk corner [at 10 Barnes St.] is delectable — bits of antique houses, stately trees, urn-topp’d white Georgian fence, and an ecstatic old-fashion’d garden which will be breathlessly transporting in a couple of months. Westward, from the brow of the hill, the view is awesome and prodigious — all the roofs, spires, and domes of the lower town, and beyond them the violet expanse of the far rolling rural meadows. [The State House and its] proud copper dome is the dominating feature of the Providence skyline. The view from this dome is said to be absolutely unparalleled — countless steepled towns, league on league of undulating countryside, and the beautiful blue bay to the south, gemmed with emerald islets. One can, the genial sexton says, see as far as Newport on good days; and he has promised to let me up there with a spy glass whenever I feel like making the climb.” — Lovecraft to Belknap Long, 1st May 1926, on Lovecraft’s return home from his long exile in New York City.

“… glimpses of a charming and mysterious gap in the far-off, vapour-wreath’d purple hills. There birds sang, and the sun filter’d down thro’ delicate vernal foliage and trac’d strange faery patterns on the grass and sand of the lane.” — Lovecraft describing his habitual place of outdoor writing, used daily while visiting Dwyer in “the West Shokan hinterland”. — Lovecraft, Travels in the Provinces of America, 1929.

“And so I emerg’d from under the Roman arch and beheld the city. The morning sun was high and brilliant, and the summerish air told me at once that I had at last set foot in that gentle Old South of which I have so often dream’d. Green and white were omnipresent — springtime leaves and grass, and delectable expanses of aethereal cherry-blossoms …” — Lovecraft in Washington, to Aunt Lillian, 21st April 1925.


HPLinks #27 – Lovecraft in Welsh, Providence Film Fest dates, book covers, Night Wire, Lovecraft in a cleft, and more…

HPLinks #27.

* Hippocampus Press now has a page for A Sense of Proportion: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long and the pre-order discount is active. This page is for the 500 limited-edition hardcover, said to be due in March 2025.

* New and free in open-access, the book Horror in Classical Antiquity and Beyond (2025). This touches on various topics of possible interest to Lovecraftians, such as Roman antiquity and its legacy in horror, hybrids in Ovid (again), and Mythos writers may also be interested in discovering new gobbets of true-grue in the chapter on ‘Recipes for Horror in Graeco-Roman Magic and Medicine’.

* The ultimate horror, having to read Lovecraft in Welsh. Now you can, as there’s a new book of translations titled Galwad Cthulhu a Straeon Arswyd Eraill (Feb 2025). Translated by…

acclaimed Welsh novelist and short-story writer Peredur Glyn, whose story collection Pumed Gainc y Mabinogi was shortlisted for Welsh Book of the Year in 2023.

* “Existentialism as Cosmic Indifference in Works of H.P. Lovecraft” (2020), an undergraduate dissertation. Currently under embargo, but I see it’s set to be available for public download on 17th June 2025.

* The forthcoming 2025 H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival – Providence has dates, 22nd to 24th August 2025.

* The organisers of the 2025 Howard Days have a new blog post, which notes that

The Windy City Pulp & Paperback Convention is happening 4th-6th April 2025 in Lombard, Illinois, where they are kicking off the ‘100 Years of Bob Howard’ festivities! Windy City is one of the best Pulp Cons in the country, and will celebrate Ol’ Two-Gun with dealers, auctions and a REH panel.

* Edward Gorey at 100, from the Gorey Charitable Trust. A round-up of Gorey events for his centenary year.

* Medievalists.net on “Laughing at Evil: The Hidden Purpose of Gargoyles” in churches.

* Another ‘Lovecraft as character’ tale, discovered. Equoid (2013) by Charles Stross. A novella, at 109 pages and one that is seemingly now collectable in hardcover. But there’s also an affordable Kindle ebook. The cover illustration and blurb are spoilers. But suffice it to vaguely say that a British secret-agent is sent to probe strange doings in the Sussex countryside, and these events are then interwoven (in the first half) with H.P. Lovecraft’s confession of his youthful encounter with an ancient horror.

* A new AI 1970s Sci-Fi Book Covers generator, on Glif.app. Glif.app appears to be yet another of those ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ online AI generator sites at which you buy credits. But it has enough free-trial credits to try it out about ten times.

* New on Archive.org, the 1974 UK edition of New UFO Breakthrough. This is a real 1970s paperback and I had it when I was a lad. I would have read it alongside Lovecraft and R.E. Howard. Wow… looking at the book now I see I was sipping from a “big ol’ keg o’ hot moonshine”. Not just normal cloud-skimming UFOs here, but also orgone accumulators, serpent people from Atlantis, underwater UFOs, alchemists, and polar entrances to an ‘inner earth’. Great stuff for the imagination, though, and possibly also a sort of youthful ‘innoculation’ against pure moonshine.

* Talking of which, Erik Davis (author of the classic Techgnosis) has a new long review, of the 1990s The Invisibles DC comic-book series. One I missed encountering back then, as the comic-book scene largely crashed and burned. But according to Davis…

one of the great representative works of the 90s […] a sometimes brilliantly illustrated tale of a team of colorful mutant punks taking on Lovecraftian archons in a metaphysical postmodern blender […] the last gasp of high and mutant psychedelic subculture that stretches back through Hakim Bey, the Church of the Subgenius, Illuminatus!, the Merry Pranksters, and the Discordian Society

* And talking of boyhood influences equally as whacky, but rather more British, I see the BBC has newly turned their old Radiophonic Workshop core sound-bank into a purchasable archive for download. Doctor Who’s old sci-fi wooshes, splurts, blips and whizzles, yours to re-use… for $200. Or sci-fi/horror audio crafters could just pop over to the huge Freesound.org (which incidentally has recently been ingested into Stable Audio Open, the AI sound-FX generator) and get much the same for free.

* New on YouTube, the classic “The Night Wire” by H.F. Arnold (1926, Weird Tales). With period audio FX and a dramatized reading, in 22 minutes. In 1936 Lovecraft thought it one of the few old Weird Tales stories worth reprinting. He wrote of… “certain obscure but desirable items which have anciently appeared in W.T. [Weird Tales] or elsewhere. It would have been simply barbarous [for lack of reprinting] to prevent the present generation from reading The Canal, The Night Wire, Bells of Oceana, The Floor Above, Beyond the Door, etc.” — Lovecraft to Hoffmann Price, 1936.

* ‘Call of Cthulhu Live’ in summer 2025. An official five-city tour of the UK for Chaosium’s flagship tabletop RPG game.

* The usual tidal-wave of Lovecraftian videogames thunders in each week and Tentaclii never has the time to comb the beach afterwards. But this week I noticed not one but three new one-man indie videogames, and liked the sound and look of all of them. Do No Harm: A Doctor Simulator with a Lovecraftian Twist; The Stamp; and HPL: Nyarlathotep Rising.

* And finally, a thought. President Trump has several times expressed a hankering for a huge new ‘Garden of National Heroes’. It sounds like a new National Park that would contain many thousands of statues and other forms of sculpture, most likely set along verdant long-distance walking trails. Far bigger than a sculpture park, but smaller than the regular-size National Park. It thus occurs to me that, once the bidding-war is over and the winning U.S. state begins to establish the new Garden-Park, it might offer a secure home to the currently-homeless Lovecraft statue? Perhaps the statues of the nation’s horror writers (possibly only the greats who had to struggle heroicly for their art — Poe, Lovecraft, Smith?) might be displayed inside a deep and dark natural rock-cleft? That would afford some protection from spray-can jockeys, while also offering suitable ambience and lighting. A cleft with the stars still visible above at night.


— End-quotes —

[I found myself in …] “a dank, foetid, reed-choak’d marsh under a grey autumn sky, with a rugged cliff of lichen-crusted stone rising to the north. […] I ascended a rift or cleft in this beetling precipice, noting as I did so the black mouths of many fearsome burrows extending from both walls into the depths of the stony plateau. At several points the passage was roof’d over by the choaking of the upper parts of the narrow fissure; these places being exceedingly dark, & forbidding the perception of such burrows as may have existed there. In one such dark space I felt conscious of a singular accession of fright, as if some subtile & bodiless emanation from the abyss were ingulphing my spirit; but the blackness was too great for me to perceive the source of my alarm. At length I emerg’d upon a table-land of moss-grown rock & scanty soil, lit up by a faint moonlight which had replac’d the expiring orb of day. Casting my eyes about, I beheld no living object; but was sensible of a very peculiar stirring far below me, amongst the whispering rushes of the pestilential swamp I had lately quitted. […]” — Lovecraft to Donald Wandrei, November 1927.

The poet enters a dark, sinister and ever-narrowing valley …

The walls contracted as I went
Still farther in my mad descent,
Till soon, of moon and stars bereft,
I crouch’d within a rocky cleft
So deep and ancient that the stone
Breath’d things primordial and unknown.
My hands, exploring, strove to trace
The features of the valley’s face,
When midst the gloom they seem’d to find
An outline frightful to my mind.

— Lovecraft, part of a poem he sent to Kleiner, 1918.


PayPal available again on Gumroad

I had no idea that, for some reason, PayPal had been removed from all Gumroad accounts. Not just mine, apparently. I was wondering why my sales and donations had collapsed there, for months now. But an email from them at the end of January 2025 says it’s back…

We’re thrilled to announce that PayPal is back on Gumroad! Our teams have worked together to restore both payment and payout functionality. You can count on PayPal being available on Gumroad moving forward. If you had a PayPal account set up before, everything has been restored and there’s no action you need to take. You may have already seen some PayPal sales come through!

If you also sell on Gumroad, you might also want to mention this to potential buyers.

Grok 3 Deep Search, currently free

Elon’s Grok.com is currently free to Google accounts, and is offering the new Grok 3 + its DeepSearch module for an unspecified limited time. It’s very very impressive, for those who give it a well-formed question/instruction-set, and it currently tops the world’s AI rankings. Impoverished scholars may want to use it now, as later Grok 3 + Deep Search will only be accessible via a top-tier X (Twitter) subscription at $40 a month.

May not be accessible in Europe, due to their AI regulations.

HPLinks #26 – Buy the actual Shunned House, Sarah Symonds, journals, Tarot, degeneration vs. devolving, and more…

HPLinks #26.

* Now available digitally, for academics with access behind the JSTOR paywall, the full-text of the journal Lovecraft Annual for 2024. With a long article by yours truly, but don’t let that put you off.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated, and he draws attention to the first volume of the series Relatos Macabros (Aurora Dorada). This being new translations of Lovecraft tales into Spanish, presented as a… “distinctive bilingual edition (using my corrected texts)”.

* Joshi also notes that one can currently buy the now-gentrified Shunned House at 135 Benefit Street, Providence. Yours for a mere $1.8m. Which should not be beyond a large crowdfunding campaign, should some local worthies wish to make it into the city’s first Lovecraft Museum.

* A new post in French (but easily auto-translated) from L’Antique Sentier, an illustrated post on Sarah Symonds, the antiquarian-artist who Lovecraft met in Salem. I wrote about Lovecraft’s visit to see this bas-relief maker on Tentaclii back in 2019. Regrettably, an image of her plaque of the Marblehead town ‘roofscape’ (purchased by Lovecraft) has yet to surface online.

* The new issue of the mostly-French journal Fantasy Art and Studies #17 (winter 2024) takes the theme of ‘Fantasy Flora’. Free to read online, as a Web flip-book — which regrettably means that articles can’t be easily auto-translated.

* The open-access Atlantis: Journal of the Spanish Association for Anglo-American Studies had a 2023 special issue (Vol. 45, No. 1) on the fantastic and science-fiction.

* Set for release in April 2025, a short 200-page book from a DePaul University neuroscientist on Horror on the Brain: The Neuroscience Behind Science Fiction.

* Grab your purchased Amazon ebooks while you can… as transferable file downloads. Amazon will turn off of this feature by 26th February 2025.

* In London, the major historical show ‘Tarot — Origins & Afterlives’ on tarot cards. This is the inaugural exhibition for the new £14.5m Kythera Gallery, at the Warburg Institute (London’s museum of cultural history). Runs until 30th April 2025. Free, but booking is required for time-limited entry tickets. Likely to be a popular draw, as the weather warms, so book ahead.

* For the first time in English, publisher Humanoids is to publish a 500-page sci-fi comic-book epic created by Caza, whose fine graphic work some may recall for the glory days of Heavy Metal magazine. The new single-volume ‘restored + English language’ edition of Arkadi and the Lost Titan is due March 2025. The publisher notes that the idea of producing a quality reprint of this was…

stuck in purgatory for decades [but now] the original negative films have been salvaged and are currently undergoing a scanning and digitization process, allowing the release of this magnum opus in its entirety.

Originally published as Le monde d’Arkadi, in French BD volumes from 1989-2004. The artwork style sometimes reminds me of Moebius, and sometimes Druillet. The sensibility is that of the then ‘newly-liberated from censorship’ 1980s Euro-comics.

* Also possibly of interest to readers, a new book from the UK on Female Detectives in Early Crime Fiction, 1841-1920 (September 2024). Said to be an “extensive survey” of instances, in a chunky 410 pages. Also note the forthcoming “Speculative Detectives’ special issue of the open-access Studies in the Fantastic (for which the call deadline has passed), which I would imagine will highlight some of the more recent female detectives who encounter the fantastical.

* New on Archive.org, The Spectatorial Vol. III (2015), which includes an article on Lovecraft and Innsmouth, “Becoming the Monster”. The upload made me aware of the Journal Archive of this University of Toronto journal offering… “works of speculative fiction, poetry, academic essays, graphic fiction, and artwork by the University of Toronto community and other speculative fiction enthusiasts.”

* A brief new blog post suggests the classic novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as a source for Lovecraft’s ideas on evolution/degeneration…

Lovecraft’s theory of evolution […] reveals a fear on his part that degeneration is a stronger force than development; that human beings can more easily devolve than they can evolve. Lovecraft’s theory derives, in part, from Robert Louis Stevenson’s famous novel: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886), a book that Lovecraft was very familiar with. Mr. Hyde is described by numerous characters in the novel as “deformed” or “degenerate.” When Jekyll transforms into Hyde, this can be interpreted as a devolution from a higher form of life into a lower one.

Well, perhaps… though degeneration ideas were common in the British and French research and thought of the late Victorian / Edwardian era, and in a different and more familial way via the North American anti-liquor and eugenic health movement. Lovecraft was familiar with both strands of thought. Add to this his sustained teenage dalliance with the French literary decadents, with their focus on the devolving of minds and bodies in sex, disease, drink, drugs and death. One might also note that ‘decaying degeneration’ over several generations and ‘devolving de-evolution’ (of a creature’s lineage to an earlier state in its evolution) are different things, not to be confused. The former can happen (e.g. the sorry results of repeated cousin marriage and incest over several generations), while the latter is biologically impossible (though it makes for a good comic-book plot).

As for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Lovecraft had it in his library as a cheap Everyman edition, but we don’t know the date of this edition nor when he read it. One would have expected his grandfather to have had such a classic in his library, and for Lovecraft to have read it as a lad… and thereafter cherished his grandfather’s book. But it seems not. Of course, various ideas on ‘generational degeneration’ and even ‘backwards evolution’ could equally have come partly from his uncle’s late-Victorian medical library.

* And finally, what appears to be a new(?) 2025 Italian translation by metal guitarist Fabrizio Pinna, of Lovecraft’s notes on writing interplanetary science-fiction. Freely available online.


— End-quotes —

“… this isn’t to say that poets and artists are less important than men of science, for in hard fact we must admit that truth is nothing of any intrinsic importance. It doesn’t matter a hang whether we know anything about anything or not, so long as we can be contented. If we can happily do it, we might just as well believe in Santa Claus, God, a green-cheese moon, fairies, witches, good and evil, unicorns, ghosts, immortality, the Arabian Nights, a flat earth, etc., etc., as learn the real facts about the universe and its streams and patterns of eternal and alternatingly evolving and devolving energy.” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, September 1929.

“No planet lasts for ever. Its sun expires sooner or later, & eventually the very material substance of its system — & galaxy — & universe — disintegrates into its constituent electrons & leaves only an ’empty’ field of force (out of which another universe is later born).” — Lovecraft to Emil Petaja, April 1935.

“Disintegration of all matter to electrons and finally empty space [is, so far as we know] assured [by scientific laws]. Case of acceleration — man passes into space” — Lovecraft, No.36 in the Commonplace Book, possibly circa 1919?

[Science will never] “be able to kill the feeling of wonder in the human spirit. The mystery of the black outer gulfs, and of the deepest cognitive processes within us, must always remain unplumbed — and against these imagination must always frantically pound.” — Lovecraft to Fritz Leiber, December 1936.

“That’s why I light out for the fifth dimension and the galaxies beyond the rim of Einsteinian space-time — to escape the concentrated ennui to which all phases of objective life ultimately boil down.” — Lovecraft to Moe, January 1931.


Grab your Amazon ebooks while you can…

The Verge notes “Amazon will stop allowing Kindle book downloads to your PC soon”. Who knew it was possible? Yup. Via…

Amazon Account.
Digital content and devices.
Content and devices.
Books.
More Actions…

And then you download.

I have an old Kindle 3 and so was able to get Letters to James F. Morton as an unencrypted .AZW3 book, which means the book’s full-text can now appear in my local searches using AnyText Searcher. Regrettably it’s the only book of Lovecraft’s letters-to-correspondents available as an ebook.

HPLinks #25 – Crypt opens slightly, Lovecraft’s stage-play performed, audiobooks, freeware, CAS, handwriting and more…

HPLinks #25.

* New on Archive.org, Crypt Of Cthulhu #14 (1983) and Crypt Of Cthulhu #57 (1988) as scanned PDFs. These were not previously online. Back issues of Crypt are no longer available to buy as PDFs, so this sort of occasional fan-scan release is all we have.

* Alfredo; A Tragedy, free online…

H.P. Lovecraft wrote one play, that never made it to the stage. Here we present it in [full-cast] audio drama form.

* In French on YouTube, but YouTube can auto-translate, Interview with Francois Baranger (November 2024).

* The Breathing Abyss, a new free Lovecraftian mod for the popular RPG videogame Skyrim (Special Edition)

The Breathing Abyss is an ocean-based quest mod centred around finding out what a mysterious entity is, where it’s from, and how it can be stopped. The mod features incredibly high-quality voice acting, a unique story, and custom assets.

* The Daily Express (a questionable British tabloid newspaper, inclined to clickbait) has a short player review of the new £10 Steam game Dreams in the Witch House

the mixture of point-and-click adventure, life sim and role-playing works extremely well. […] With multiple endings and outcomes, this sub-£10 adventure is great value for money

* John Coulthart writes

I’m currently putting together a revised edition of my Lovecraft book, so that’s one thing which may emerge at some point in the new year [2025].

* New on Librivox, public-domain audiobook readings of Lovecraft’s “The Haunter in the Dark” and “The Thing on the Doorstep”. Both read by Ben Tucker.

* Talking of audiobooks, there’s now a CPU-based local audiobook creator that uses local AI-generated voices. The latest Audiblez is free, open-source, installs on pure Python 3.x (no CUDA or PyTorch dependences, which are roadblocks for Windows 7 users) and generates speech locally on the CPU. The new version, released this week, adds a useful Graphical User Interface. Thus Audiblez may interest those with older PCs, who are otherwise unable to run local text-to-speech AI systems.

* I see that another excellent genuine freeware has also updated. Anytxt Searcher can now also run on Mac and Linux, as well as Windows, and has various other enhancements. Useful for scholars, it quickly searches across the text inside your desktop PC’s documents, including .ePUB files. For proximity-search, turn on Anytxt’s Regex ability by selecting ‘Regular Match’ in the search-type drop-down, and use (for example)…

\b(?:eldritch\W+(?:\w+\W+){1,9}?tentacles|tentacles\W+(?:\w+\W+){1,9}?eldritch)\b

A bit of a mouthful, but it works. This example will find all instances of ‘eldritch’ if the word occurs within nine words of ‘tentacles’. Note there are two instances of 9 in the regex, as well as the search-words. Both numbers need to be changed, if you’re expanding the seek-range.

* The Spiral Tower has a new long and cogent essay on “Sword and Sorcery Fandom: When Enthusiasm Becomes a Commodity”, in the hands not of corporates but rather of individual ’empire builders’ who are following the monetisation playbook…

… growth brought with it a new phenomenon: ‘enthusiasm opportunists’. These individuals, exploiting the community’s passion, began leveraging their fandom for personal gain through Kickstarter campaigns and other monetized ventures […] Over time, this monetized culture eroded the DIY ethos that had made the fandom vibrant. […] I voiced my discomfort with this shift, arguing that the commercialization of fandom was compromising its authenticity. However, my critique was poorly received, particularly by those who tied their monetized ventures to progressive [i.e. leftist] activism. My reluctance to uncritically endorse these ventures was cast, inaccurately, as opposition to their broader causes …

* New in English in the open-access journal Revista Laboratorio, “The Fallen American Adam In Clark Ashton Smith’s “The Maze Of The Enchanter””.

* The Pulp Super-Fan has a very short review of The Freedom of Fantastic Things: Selected Criticism on Clark Ashton Smith (2006) and Clark Ashton Smith: A Comprehensive Bibliography (2020).

* And finally, Lovecraft Copywork is a new free online site. It suggests you train to write in the manner of Lovecraft. Copywork is an old-school method of teaching good writing style. Each and every day one carefully and slowly copies a small portion of a great writer’s text, using one’s best handwriting (though here re-typing is suggested). Over time, one learns to intuitively emulate how the author wrote. The technique might also, I’d suggest, be paired with repeated listening to the same text-portion as read by a good audiobook reader.


— End-quotes —

Lovecraft on handwriting…

“Lonely philosopher fond of cat. Hypnotises it — as it were — by repeatedly talking to it and looking at it. After his death the cat evinces signs of possessing his personality. N.B. He has trained cat, and leaves it to a friend, with instructions as to fitting a pen to its right fore paw by means of a harness. Later it writes with deceased’s own handwriting.” — Lovecraft’s story germ #88, as noted in his Commonplace Book of story ideas.

“… the process of handwriting is no effort at all unless one aims for great legibility & ornamentation. The reason moderns think handwriting is hard, is that they have never practiced it enough to get used to it. […] It is, of course, perfectly adequate for careless & hasty letter writing, where no delicate plot-nuances have to be managed, & where the most slipshod sentence-structure can get by without criticism. Nobody expects anything of a letter, or judges any man’s style by one. Even when I write one by hand I pay no attention to rhetorick, but just sail along at a mile-a-minute pace. That is why I write so long & so many letters — because I take no pains at all with the language.” — Lovecraft to F.B. Long, February 1931.


Return to ‘The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne’

Gosh, has it been five years? How time flies. I’ve at last got around to fully working through the imaginative pulpy steampunk series The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne (SAoJV) (2000). It’s long, at 22 x 45-minute episodes. While an episode often feels longer than it is (briskly edited, sharply written), like most long TV series it’s patchy and padded when you take it on an episode-by-episode basis. If one wanted just enough for two evenings entertainment, I’d suggest the following view-list and viewing order…

1. “In The Beginning” (Introductions, Phileas Fogg backstory, Queen Victoria)

2. “Queen Victoria And The Giant Mole” (Verne’s machine stolen)

13. “The Golem” (Golem, murders in Paris)

3. “Rockets Of The Dead” (Transylvania)

14. “Crusader In The Crypt” (England, Phileas Fogg backstory completed)

11. “Black Glove Of Melchizedek” (Ancient occult glove, Fogg’s other brother)

12. “Dust To Dust” (Egyptian mummy)

20. “Secret of the Realm” (Sargasso Sea, Grail, Queen Victoria)

This omits the ‘mind-control, make the characters act out of character’, ‘time-travel’, ‘palace intrigue’ and ‘visit America’ episodes, to focus just on the better steampunk / supernatural episodes. The picked episodes are self-contained, though there are overlapping elements such as Queen Victoria, Count Gregory and the League of Darkness, the head of the Secret Service, and Fogg’s backstory (which you’ll likely lose track of, if you watch all 22 episodes in order).

Filmed in HD for some $30m in year-2000 Canadian money, and it shows. But sadly the HD has been locked in a corporate vault due to feuding investors. All we have is recordings from TV. There’s not even a DVD.

The drawbacks are the mis-cast teen Jules Verne with his jarring American accent and stage-school acting ability. Better to have had him be Nikola Tesla’s American son, and ideally played by a more capable actor. But then… they wouldn’t have had the series title and name-recognition. British secret agent Rebecca Fogg is consistently superb both in acting and action (there are a lot of stunts), and she often reminded me of Tilda Swinton. Her cousin Phileas Fogg is the main action-man and fills the role of a louche and jaded dandy-soldier well… though… he’s not David Tennant (who would have been brilliant in the role). Fogg’s servant Passepartout is often too goofy and clownish for the small screen. A brilliant physical clown, but he could have ‘dialled it back’ two notches for TV. But when the series works, it works. It’s fun, it’s pulpy, it still looks good thanks to superb storyboarding (oh, for a book of the storyboards and concept art…) / lighting / sets / costumes, cinematography etc. The music and audio production are fine, though three of the TV recordings have a slight echo. The digital FX are definitely from the 2000s, but quite adequate. Nothing explicitly Lovecraftian.


Related: There’s surprisingly little good non-anime TV steampunk. But the three-hour TV adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s Going Postal (2010), and the wild west TV steampunk series Legend (1995, 12 episodes) look the most promising follow-on possibilities.

HPLinks #24 – Wayne June, audiobooks, Angouleme, The Haunted Forest, cats and more…

HPLinks #24.

* Rest in peace, Wayne June (1954-2025), the man who read Lovecraft’s tales so expertly in the form of the Dark Worlds audiobook series and “The Shadow Out of Time”.

* New to me, an unabridged vintage recording of Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. Freely available on YouTube, as a six-hour reading. Read by David Palmer, though his voice is remarkably similar to the outstanding ‘Books for the Blind’ Lovecraft reader Gordon Gould. If a bit more wistful, perhaps. The Online Catalog of recordings for Books for the Blind etc reveals Ward was issued on tape way back in 1982.

* Just released, the LibriVox Short Horror Collection #77, this time containing a feast of R.E. Howard, Derleth, Lovecraft, Whitehead, and Wandrei. All recordings are issued as public-domain audio readings.

* Conan Chronology has a new and fascinating side-by-side look at exactly how the Comics Code censorship operated on the page in the U.S., followed by a long look at “How Conan Conquered the Comics Code”. Yes, Marvel’s Conan adaptations and adapters led the charge for the de-censorship of U.S. news-stand comic-books.

* “U.S. Govt: AI-assisted Works Can Get Copyright with Enough Human Creativity”. Good to know that such common sense is now official, at least in the eyes of the U.S. copyright office. So just because something used AI in some part, don’t assume it’s therefore freely redistributable.

* The new open-access journal, Imagining the Impossible: International Journal for the Fantastic in Contemporary Media hails from Denmark, and is published in English under Creative Commons Attribution. The journal has so far published three issues.

* In the latest edition of the Spanish journal Theory Now, an open-access review of the book A traves del abismo: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (2024) (‘Into the Abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’).

* New from Iceland in English, the 2024 Masters dissertation “Adapt and Die: Ecocriticism and the Lovecraftian Sublime in Rainworld, Outer Wilds, Frostpunk, and Factorio”. Freely available online.

* A delayed Masters dissertation from Norway in English, on “Lovecraftian Horror and the Role of Truth”. It will be freely accessible from 20th November 2025.

* Just finished a few days ago, the giant Angouleme comics-arts event in France. This saw major exhibitions on…

   — The Lovecraft adaptations of Gou Tanabe, now standing at twelve book-length adaptations. [ Radio France one-hour special ] [ In-gallery video and video short (loop) ] [ Printed catalogue currently available, but very likely to sell out ]

   — The “cult Vikings series” of comics, Vinland Saga. [ In-gallery video, a bit wobbly but not sea-sickness inducing ]

   — ‘The City in Science-Fiction Comics’, with selected works from 150 artists including Moebius, Druillet, Bilal, Frederik Peeters and Francois Schuiten. The focus was on “BD” comics format, common in continental Europe. Rather than on the comics of the USA, Britain or Japan. [ There doesn’t seem to be a catalogue ]

   — A survey of BD comics adapting fairy tales for young children. [ Again, no catalogue ]

Incidentally, the UK’s Lakes International Comic Art Festival now has dates — 26th-28th September 2025. This is now the UK’s only potential challenger to France’s giant Angouleme event in the future, after the regrettable lockdown-demise of Shrewsbury’s ambitious comic arts festival.

* Issued in France in French, at the end of January 2025, Gou Tanabe’s adaptation of “The Cats of Ulthar”, as Les chats d’Ulthar. The book is as yet unknown to Amazon UK.

* In Spain in February 2025, the 2nd ‘Ferroviaria Fantastica’, and this year the event has a Lovecraft theme throughout. The title translates as ‘Fastastic Railways’, but sadly it does not appear to be a festival of Lovecraftian scale-model electric railway layouts (now there’s an idea for a railroad-builder videogame). Seems more of a general regional one-day festival of the fantastic, with talks and creative workshops?

* Also in Spain, a regional gallery show ‘The Cthulhu Mythos’, with a substantial set of online gallery pictures.

* I’m pleased to see that Murray Ewing is slowly reviewing the novels of British novelist John Gordon at his blog. Who knew that there were many more novels, after the children’s classic The Giant Under the Snow? Not me, until now. Ewing’s latest review is of The Edge of the World (1983). The thought strikes me that a full-cast / full-FX unabridged audio reading of The Giant Under the Snow would be quite something.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated, and he brings news that the summer 2025 issue of the weird poetry journal Spectral Realms will contain the poem “The Haunted Forest”, liked by Lovecraft and compared by him to Poe. Thought lost, the poem has now been re-discovered in the January 1915 edition of Outward Bound.

* The German Lovecraftians now have dates for their major annual RPG convention anRUFung 2025, now set for 17th to 20th July 2025. They also report that the dedicated Lovecraftian Miskatonic Theatre, a real theatre in Hamburg’s Harburg district, has successfully crowdfunded $15,000 to replace all its stolen gear. It’s reported that this specialist ‘horror theatre’ has so far put on stage its adaptation of Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”.

* Marzaat unearths a substantial Lovecraft Mythos tale by John Brunner. Who knew? Marzaat’s blog post is however one to read after reading the tale itself, since we get a complete plot synopsis and plot spoilers. The tale itself is found in Weird Tales v55 #31 1992, and in Robert M. Price’s themed anthology The Necronomicon (Chaosium, 1996). A review of the Price collection called the Brunner tale the… “gem of the collection”.

* Due in early 2025 from Chaosium, a new $50 hardback edition of the Keeper’s Guide for the RPG Cthulhu by Gaslight, intended for the game masters who run RPG game sessions. New cover art by Loic Muzy. The book may also be of use to writers using the setting of late Victorian Britain and the nation’s wider British Empire.

* Elsewhere, I’ve reached seven years of producing my regular 20/20 : Tracking Optimism links newsletter, which tracks causes for rational optimism about the future, and notes substantial debunkings of doom-mongers and alarmists. 20/20 is definitely not one for those inclined toward gloom and doom. I’ve also reached issue #275 of my regular Tolkien Gleanings links newsletter, which tracks interesting Tolkien scholarship and other Middle-earth and mediaeval-fantasy related items that catch my eye. Again, not one for those who are allergic to elves and hobbits and the like. But some readers of Tentaclii may be interested.

* And finally, news just in: the cats of Ulthar reported to have withdrawn from their emergency military alliance with the cats of Scotland! (aka: The Scottish government will not, as was widely mooted in the media, ban the keeping of pet cats in Scotland).


— End-quote —

Lovecraft on northern Scotland…

“One of the great puzzles of Northern ethnology is the origin of the peculiar facial & cranial type associated with the Gaelic Celt of western Ireland & northern Scotland — the type with upturned nose, long upper lip, heavy eyebrow-ridges, &c. This type has no known analogue anywhere else in the world, & the ethnologist is at a loss to determine how it arose. The races entering into the composition of the Gaels must have been largely Nordic, with a touch perhaps of Alpine (Slav) & Mediterranean. Whence, then, came this peculiar physiognomy?” — Lovecraft to F. Lee Baldwin, August 1934.

“The cult [of witchcraft] does not seem to have crossed into Britain till late in the 15th or early in the 16th century; and it there found its chief seat in Scotland.” — Lovecraft to R.E. Howard, October 1930.

“… how much I enjoyed The House of the Isles, which swept my imagination along with a kind of feudal pageantry all the more potent because it was real family history, & written by one of the characters of the pageant itself, as it were. […] It is certainly a vivid & dramatic chronicle [of the feudal clans of Scotland], & gripped my imagination strongly enough to send me more than once to histories & reference works for parallel background-material & scenic colour. […] The long pedigree [i.e. ancestral line, detailed in the book] is certainly a matter of the keenest interest — both the actually historic portion, which may be taken as extending back to the generations just preceding Somerled, & the earlier parts in which legendary & oral tradition blend gracefully into an increasing twilight of poetic narrative. […] I am very grateful for the loan of The House of the Isles, & would be glad to see the subsequent volume some time if it be of convenient mailing proportions. [… Of course] In actual detail, the period of romantic mediaevalism contained repellent amounts of crudeness. There is little doubt but that neither Somerled nor Bandoin Ui Niall could write his own name, & both probably ate half-cooked meat with unassisted hands, wiping their greasy fingers on their garments. But taken in its entirety, with all its proud, violent feelings & ruthlessly energetic deeds, it has the inestimable quality of typifying concretely & dramatically those basic thoughts, feelings, attitudes, & motive-patterns from which the whole fabric of Aryan life has flowered, & which have characterised the experience of the race during the longest part of its history. It is a symbol of the utmost potency, & has a natural hold on the deepest hidden psychological processes of the European personality. The ending of a stream of experience based upon the approximately similar conditions which have always surrounded us hitherto, & have thus become the indispensable background & reference-points of our habitual thoughts & feelings, is tremendously to be regretted. It is a tragedy because it deprives us of that reservoir of precedent which has so much to do with our sense of the value & significance of things — throwing us back to the beginning, as it were, & placing before us the task of founding a whole new tradition based on the newer conditions of living.” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, February 1929.