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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: July 2014

Lovecraft on the Web, linkrot purge

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

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I’ve given the ‘Lovecraft on the Web’ directory its annual link check.

Fixed most moved links, unless it’s simply the case that someone has paid a vanity fee to remove the www. — http://www.site.com

Removed URLs (taken to Yuggoth by ye buzzing ones): Pulpfest/Pulpcon; Old Time Radio Horror; Miskatonic Archive; Mythos Books; Nemonymous; Lovecraft Scholars (Yahoo Group); Creeping List (Yahoo Group); Necropsy: The Review of Horror Fiction; Representations of Antarctica.

Atlanta Radio Theatre Company: Call of Cthulhu

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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Atlanta Radio Theatre Company report they have a new studio, and post an .mp3 sample to prove that “The Call of Cthulhu” radio adaptation is really on its way…

“It’s hard to believe that we started this production all the way back in 2010. Another casualty of our notoriously long production schedule – BUT! There is starlight at the end of the tunnel! The production is nearly finished and will certainly be released this year and we are excited about ARTC Studio, which should put an end to these interminably long wait times for new material from us.”

Loveman and Crane, and Lovecraft

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 1 Comment

From The letters of Hart Crane, 1916-1932 (1952)…

* Hart Crane [c. June 1922, still in Cleveland], on Lovecraft’s good friend Samuel Loveman…

     “You will like my classic, puritan, inhibited friend Sam Loveman who translates Baudelaire charmingly! It is hard to get him to do anything outside the imagination,—but he is charming and has just given me a most charming work on Greek Vases (made in Deutschland) in which satyrs with great erections prance to the ceremonies of Dionysios with all the fervour of de Gourmont’s descriptions of sexual sacrifice in Physique de L’Amour, which I am lately reading in trans. [translation]”

* Hart Crane [14th Sept 1924, from Brooklyn, NYC], on Samuel Loveman…

     “I have just come back from a breakfast with Sam [Loveman] […] I have been greeted so far mostly by his coat tails, so occupied has Sambo [Crane’s nickname for Loveman] been with numerous friends of his here ever since arriving; Miss Sonia Green and her piping-voiced husband, Howard Lovecraft (the man who visited Sam in Cleveland one summer when Galpin was also there) kept Sam traipsing around the slums and wharf streets until four this morning looking for Colonial specimens of architecture, and until Sam tells me he groaned with fatigue and begged for the subway! Well, Sam may have been improved before he left Cleveland, but skating around here has made him as hectic again as I ever remember him …”

* Hart Crane [23rd Sept 1924, from Brooklyn, NYC], Crane feeling hard-done-by and rather catty because Samuel Loveman now spends his time with Lovecraft…

     “Sam is still here, and sleeping in the back room. […] What his present plans are—I don’t know, as I have scarcely had a word with him since last Friday night. He doesn’t evidently think about spending much time with me. […] It is all right with me, because I realize that Sam touches life at very few points where I do, and this even comes into our abstract discussions of literature, quite naturally, of course, because I see literature as very closely related to life,—its essence, in fact. But for Sam, all art is a refuge away from life,—and as long as he scorns or fears life (as he does) he is witheld from just so much of the deeper content and value of books, pictures and music. He sometimes talks about them in terms as naive as an auctioneer would use. Yet he is instinctively so fine and generous that I will always love and pity him, however much my admiration is curtailed. I don’t think he will remain in New York much longer. He is really bound to his family more than we’ve ever realized, although I have thought of that a good deal. He must have the assurance of his mother’s attendance and he fancies that the “quiet” of Cleveland is a more normal environment for him. Well, if he feels that way, it’s so. Feeling, his own feeling, is the only scale there is to use in such a matter, and I shall not urge him to stay here against his will—which couldn’t be done anyway.”


Many years later…

     “Charles Hamilton, in his Great Forgers and Famous Fakes (1980, pp.198—99), wrote that Loveman “dabbled in forgery.” For instance, he had obtained a supply of bookplates from the late Hart Crane (whom Loveman claimed had been his homosexual lover) and pasted them in books Crane would have been likely to own. Hamilton added. “Nearly every catalogue that Loveman issued was tilled with fabulous ‘bargains’ — books signed by Melville, Mark Twain or Hawthorne — a whole galaxy of great authors. All priced at ten to twenty-five dollars each. The signatures were in pencil and were not, of course, genuine; but it was exciting to study his catalogue and pretend that such bargains really existed.” (Joe Nickell, Real or Fake: Studies in Authentication, University Press of Kentucky, 2009).

     “He [Loveman] had acquired, on the death of Hart Crane’s mother, her entire archive of her son’s letters, books, and papers, a lot that included a large supply of Crane’s unused bookplates. Well into the late 1960s Loveman was pasting these into otherwise valueless books, offering them as books from Hart Crane’s library. At least once, to my knowledge, he slipped up and put a bookplate into a book not published until after Crane’s death. As senility set in, Loveman got more and more careless about signing books, using ball-point pens for signatures of authors who had died before the ball-point pen was invented. His catalogs were an endless source of amusement to those familiar with his wares. To my mind, he reached the peak of his forging career when he offered, for a mere $50, a book on whaling “annotated in pencil by Herman Melville.” I’ve often wondered who bought this treasure.” (Robert A. Wilson, Modern Book Collecting: A Basic Guide to All Aspects of Book Collecting, 1980).

So far as I’m aware, he never produced Lovecraft fakes as well. Such a pity that he didn’t sell his Lovecraft letters, rather than burn them all, if he needed money that badly.

Gorham Silversmiths, 1906

02 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Gorham Silversmiths, Providence, 1906 (Hat-tip: Shorpy). Gorham was one of the biggest local employers, and possible employer of H.P. Lovecraft’s father as a salesman. Although according to S.T. Joshi, the only evidence we have for that is Sonia’s hazy 1948 memories. One wonders if she might have been recalling a tale once told her by Lovecraft about his father’s cousin Frederick (1850-1893) a businessman in jewellery manufacturing in 1890s New York City, and her memory had conflated and confused the father/jewellery references with Gorham? On the other hand, it is possible that Lovecraft’s father had somehow got into the jewellery trade via Frederick.

gorham-providence-ri-q1906-shorpy

Open Letter on Studies in Weird Fiction

01 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Bobby Dee has a new “An Open Letter on Studies in Weird Fiction” essay, at Wikithulhu. Including a useful discussion of what he calls “zombie ideas”, also known as received wisdom or outright myths, for example that ‘Lovecraft had syphilis’ or that he was ‘involved in the occult’.

He also suggests the need for a better framing and subtle contextualising of research questions, something which is all the more useful for those hefting a big axe they intend to grind on Lovecraft’s gravestone (‘Lovecraft was a racist, woman-hater, bad writer, disliked puppy dogs, etc’)…

“[on the ‘he hated women’ accusation]…how did Lovecraft’s depiction of women compare to those of his peers? Certainly Lovecraft handled women differently than Dashiell Hammet or Ernest Hemingway, but how does Lovecraft’s use of female characters stack up compared to Seabury Quinn [the star name of Weird Tales, at the time], or his fellow masters of the weird Robert E. Howard and Clark Ashton Smith? … [then it would] perhaps [be] worth retreading some [of that] old ground

I might have added an extra paragraph about the need to discover the wider historical context of one’s research question, and also to take into account a previous researcher’s apparent biases, most often inculcated by the historical era in which they were raised and trained. But sometimes also by their personal idiosyncrasies, such as L. Sprauge de Camp’s blockheaded inability to detect when Lovecraft was joking and joshing or running into self-parodic hyperbole in his letters, which was frequently.

As for “weird fiction” as a term, I can add that — contrary to opinion in the blathersphere and academia — Lovecraft did not purloin the term from Le Fanu.

Added to Open Lovecraft

01 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* Alyssa Arbuckle (2014), “Considering “The Waste Land” for iPad and Weird Fiction as models for the public digital edition”, Digital Studies, 2014. (Compares “The Waste Land” for iPad with “the author’s own attempt at developing a digital literary application (Weird Fiction)”).

* Jose Eduardo Serrato Cordova (2013), “El imaginario gotico en dos autores Mexicanos: Emiliano Gonzalez y Ernesto de la Pena”, Revista Isla Flotante, Vol.V, No.5, 2013, pp.27-44. (In Spanish. Discusses… “the reception of the gothic in Mexico, via Emiliano Gonzalez and Ernesto de la Pena … The first of whom adapted for the Mexican reader the fantasy literature style of H.P. Lovecraft”).

* Fernando Dario Gonzalez Grueso (2007), “Buddai: el gigante dormido Australiano de Lovecraft”, Culturas Populares, No.4, 2007. (In Spanish. Compares the motifs and themes of certain folklore, with those employed by Lovecraft. Specific reference to “The Shadow Out of Time”, re: aboriginal oral legend and myths of the sleeping giant, frightening winds, the sinister moon, fields of stones, and ancient footprints once left by giants of the Dreamtime).

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