A typeface made of cats…
Cat font
11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Fonts, Lovecraftian arts, Unnamable
in11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Fonts, Lovecraftian arts, Unnamable
inA typeface made of cats…
11 Saturday May 2013
Posted New books
inIt seems that Amazon UK is shipping the Oxford University Press collection of Lovecraft tales now, even though the OUP Press website says June 2013. The Classic Horror Stories has an introduction by Roger Luckhurst. You can preview the intro free, either on Google Books, or via Amazon’s “first 10% free” sample for your Kindle ereader.
11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Historical context
in11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Scholarly works
inNew bi-annual scholarly and intellectual journal, The Green Book: writings on Irish gothic, supernatural, and fantastic literature. Issue one out now.
11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Lovecraftian arts
in11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Scholarly works
inThe Italian Lovecraftians have reprinted the scholarly journal Studi Lovecraftiani No. 1 (Dagon Press, new edition 2013, in Italian). My translation of the contents list…
Editorial
Introduction to Lovecraftian Studies, S.T. Joshi.
Guide to reading Lovecraft, Fabrizio Claudio Marcon.
The “Copernican revolution” of the dreamer from Providence, Massimo Berruti.
H.P. Lovecraft In Italy: a special dossier.
The disciples of Erich Zann: Lovecraft and the music of Bruno Gargano, Elvezio Sciallis and Andrea Bonazzi.
[The Theosophist] Scott-Elliott : Inspiring Lovecraft, by Gianluca Formwork.
The Library of R’lyeh : a review of literature.
Necronomibooks : a review of news and overview of new Lovecraftian developments.
“This is a reprint, re-edited and corrected, the no. 1 of SL, released in small editions [60 copies] in 2005 and immediately sold out. In addition to new graphics, new material is added to the original content.”
11 Saturday May 2013
Posted Lovecraftian arts
in10 Friday May 2013
Posted Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
inWhat exactly was the providence that gave Lovecraft’s Providence its name? There’s a book on that, Providence in Early Modern England — which has a chapter on mysterious signs and portents associated with providence… “‘Tongues of Heaven’: Prodigies, Portents, and Prophets”.
Update: it was a free chapter when I linked it, but now seems to be paywalled! Sorry about that. But it’s mostly available free on Google Books: search “Prodigies, Portents, and Prophets”.
The first fanzine for weird tales? Strange fearful & true newes, London 1606.
They loved their weird giant tentacle monsters, even way back. The discription of a rare or rather most monstrous fishe, London 1566.
10 Friday May 2013
Posted Historical context, New discoveries
in09 Thursday May 2013
Posted Historical context, Scholarly works
inThere’s a new article from Roger Lockhurst at the Oxford Dictionaries, ahead of the Oxford University Press edition of Lovecraft, on “H.P. Lovecraft and the Northern Gothic Tongue”…
“There is a very specific language of Gothic and horror literature that has its roots buried deep in the history of English: doom has been around since Old English; dread carries over from Middle English; eerie, that sense of vague superstitious uneasiness, enters Middle English through Scottish. The adjectives are harsh and guttural: moons are always gibbous, the trees eldritch.”
08 Wednesday May 2013
Posted Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.
inGot an audio book where someone talks too fast? The excellent Impulse Media Player has just hit version 3.0. It’s freeware that gives you a crackle-free real-time speed change. It works perfectly. You can also change pitch, deepening a voice. I found settings of pitch -6 and speed -12 perfect for a more lugubrious reading of “Dreams in the Witch House”.
08 Wednesday May 2013
Posted Podcasts etc.
inAt last, a new audio book reading (.mp3 link) of Lovecraft’s “The Dreams in the Witch House”. Free, courtesy of reader Julie Hoverson and 19 Nocturne Boulevard.
“Gilman’s room” by Heizel87.