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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: April 2019

Weird Tales, the “Cthulhu” issue in high-quality CBZ

25 Thursday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, Weird Tales, February 1928. Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”, and “The Dream Snake” by Robert E. Howard. The .CBZ (‘Comic Book Zip’) is the best option re: quality, rather than the over-compressed PDF. It can be opened with any Comic Book Reader software or a PDF reader software that supports the format (such as SumatraPDF).

The following issue had no reader response, with the Eyrie covering the January issue. This includes a letter from Lovecraft…

The issue in which readers first responded to “Cthulhu”, presumably April 1928, is not yet online. [Update: it now is but proves to have only the most vapid and very slight mentions of “Cthulhu”]. But May 1928 is, with responses from R.E. Howard and others.

For Wright to follow this with the cheap shocker “The Lurking Fear” might seem something of a clunky editorial decision. But probably he feared an adverse reader reaction among the bulk of his readers, and thus thought that a more conventional “shocker” might restore Lovecraft to good standing with them.


“Cthulhu” had also been trailed in the January 1928 issue, thus…

Manuskript 0.9

25 Thursday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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The popular Manuskript open source software has released its 0.9 version. It seems the best free option for writers who want a Windows equivalent of Scrivener 3.x, the latter at present being Mac-only (until the too-long-awaited Windows release eventually appears, perhaps in 2019).

As I wrote here last December of Manuskript…

The first thing you’ll want to do in Manuskript, when trying it, is change the tiny squished font in the main writer. Font settings are not easy to find initially, but are down in: Edit | Settings | Views | Text Editor | Font. You can also change padding, line-spacing, background colour and more. The full-screen view has its own font and background controls, also found by digging into the same Settings panel. Don’t accept the clunky defaults, and figure on spending about 30 minutes setting up the UI and fonts. With Pandoc installed Manuskript can import more file formats than it supports ‘out of the box’.

It lacks predictive and autocomplete text, but that can be sorted with the paid SumitSoft Typing Assistant 8.x or its free equivalent Smart Type Assistant, both of which can work with any software on a Windows PC.

If all you need is a predictive Notepad equivalent, take a look at the free LightKeyPad, although be suitably wary re: privacy and security.

On reading LOTR for the first time

24 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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The Eldritch Paths takes to The Lord of the Rings, having got past the usual off-putting gripes from the Tolkien-haters (Lovecraftians will be familiar with the catechism, as it’s also used against Lovecraft). The Eldritch Paths’s final book report appeared yesterday, as “The Beauty and Horror”…

I was a bit reluctant to read the trilogy. The complaints I’ve heard about Tolkien being “boring”, Middle-earth as a setting being cliche, and that the novels having way too much description put me off. Eventually, I hunkered down and bit the bullet. To my surprise, I was blown away.

Lord of the Rings has genuine moments of horror. I’m not talking about cheap thrills here either.

Super. I envy him a first reading sans the movies, I wish I could experience it all afresh, but short of getting a blast of the black breath and losing my memory, that’s not going to happen.

It appears that Eldritch Paths read the book in print, but for those who prefer audiobooks these days then your only choice should be the unofficial unabridged reading by Phil Dragash with good headphones and an audiobook player that does bookmarks easily (e.g. AIMP). If this appeals, then be warned that Eldritch Paths’s book review has spoilers.

Added to Open Lovecraft

24 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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* P. Ozcariz Gil, “The Very Old Folk: Roman Provincial Administration, Vascones, and Epigraphy in H.P. Lovecraft”, Agora: Estudos Classicos em Debate, 21, 2019. (In English. An excellent and detailed examination of the historicity of the Lovecraft dream-story known as “The Very Old Folk”).

Weird Tales, 1929 issues

24 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org…

* Weird Tales, January 1929. “The Silver Key” by H.P. Lovecraft, and “Skulls in the Stars” (Solomon Kane) by Robert. E. Howard.

* Weird Tales, November 1929. Lovecraft’s revision tale “The Curse of Yig”, with Zealia Brown Reed. Also “Skull-face” (part two) by Robert E. Howard.

“HPL ghostwrote “The Curse of Yig” (WT, November 1929) in 1928 from a plot synopsis and a questionnaire pertaining to the Oklahoma setting for the story” — Lovecraft Encyclopaedia.

“… it can hardly be doubted that the story as we have it is almost entirely the work of Lovecraft except for the bare nucleus of the plot.” — Joshi, I Am Providence.

“… if you want to see a new story which is practically mine, read “The Curse of Yig”” — letter from Lovecraft.

So sweet…

23 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Unnamable

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Google Autocomplete semantics module, not quite down with the SF kidz yet… chocolate meringue, anyone?…

The Lovecraft Collectors Library, Volume I

23 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, The Lovecraft Collectors Library, Volume I. This has three essays by Lovecraft that appear to have been unavailable online until now, and which can be found in print in Collected Essays Vol 5. The essays are…

Idealism And Materialism — A Reflection (1919).
A Confession Of Unfaith (1922).
Nietscheism And Realism (1921).

Omen Exitio

22 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Each month it seems a tidal-wave of ‘inspired by Lovecraft’ games surges past, heading on into oblivion. I don’t usually pay attention to them. But it seems worth noting the new Omen Exitio. It’s a ‘visual novel’ from Italy, and has high design-values and some minimal solo-play game elements…

“inspired by the [‘choose your own adventure’] gamebooks of the ’80s and ’90s”

The game elements are stats-gaining, not point-and-click puzzles, it seems.

Looks fun, though it needs Windows / Steam and is not for the Amazon Kindle.

Talking of the Kindle, the makers of the award-winning 80 Days are prepping their new game. It’s a science-fiction adventure in space, featuring lost races, linguistics and archaeology. Probably mid 2019. (Update: it’s out now, and is sadly not for the Kindle as their last game was).

Dr. Styx (1945)

21 Sunday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

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Dr. Styx (1945) – The First Mythos Comic?…

“I was fully expecting the usual EC type ghost host but was stopped dead in my tracks when the focal character mentioned he was reading a book by Ludwig Prinn! On I go and there it was mention of the Outer Ones banished from the Earth, Cthulhu, Abdul Alhazred. Here was a genuine Cthulhu Mythos comic!”

Terry Gilliam’s Don Quixote – released

20 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers

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I’m pleased to see that Terry Gilliam (Monty Python, Time Bandits, Brazil) has released his major new movie Don Quixote, and that it’s getting positive reviews. Good acting, with a central actor able to grounds the flights of fancy. Lively and fun, inventive cinematography, fantastical. Given that it’s been 25 years in the making, it has a few rough edges but I’ve looked at eight reviews from the New York Times to Hey U Guys and it looks good. It’s great that such a film can make it to a cinema release in 2019, and with a full 2 hour running time. You should be able to catch it at U.S. cinemas now. Official Website.

New: The Dark Man, Vol 9

20 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, REH, Scholarly works

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A new edition of The Dark Man: The Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Fiction Studies Vol. 9 (Feb 2019), now in Kindle on Amazon.

Of interest to Lovecraftian scholars is…

* “The Outside Scholar: Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Scholarly Identity. Part Two: A Complex and Baffling Question”, by Karen Joan Kohoutek.

This follows Part One in The Dark Man Vol. 8, No. 1 (2015), also in Kindle ebook format.

I also note an article in The Dark Man that I had overlooked, an article to be found in the Vol 7. No. 1 (December 2012) issue. This volume is not on Amazon in ebook, so far as I can tell, but is in ebook as an ePub from Lulu.com. The article is…

* “I ‘n’ I a-Liberate Zimbabwe: Motifs of Africa and Freedom in Howard’s The Grisly Horror”, by Patrick R. Burger.

This seems likely to be of interest to those writing about Lovecraft’s interest in and use of Zimbabwe (the remarkable hilltop fortification, not the nation).

Friday Picture Postals: Friend’s Beans

19 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Picture postals

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Above: (top) possibly late 1940s judging by the style and use of colour; (bottom) an ‘instant communication’ postcard on 1909, presumably of use to those with very poor handwriting.

Lovecraft once wrote…

Prof. Kittredge of Harvard has written a book of old New England lore based on the Farmer’s Almanack — its contents and history. I have this volume — you really ought to read it! It’s as much a part of a New England education as Friend’s Beans!” — Lovecraft letter to Morton, October 1927.

Beans were a local Boston speciality and were of course a favourite and staple of Lovecraft’s frugal diet…

Fortunately I have reduced the matter of frugal eating to a science, so that I can get by on as little as $1.75 per week by purchasing beans or spaghetti in cans and cookies or crackers in packages.

Although when living alone in New York City it seems he was forced to Heinz beans…

… you take a medium-sized loaf of bread, cut it in four equal parts, & add to each of these 1/4 can (medium) Heinz beans & a goodly chunk of cheese. If the result isn’t a full-sized, healthy day’s quota of fodder for an Old Gentleman, I’ll resign from the League of Nations’ dietary committee!! It only costs 8 cents — but don’t let that prejudice you! It’s good sound food…

One hopes the results were then simmered in a pan or placed in an oven, but I have a feeling that for Lovecraft it was often a cold dish. Especially during the killer heatwave summers New York had at that time.

The choice of Heinz was perhaps because they were cheaper (we tend to forget how expensive food was compared to the cheap abundance of today). Or that Friends’ was not a brand popular in New York City and thus unobtainable there. Many food and restaurant brands were regional rather than national, at that time. Made in Boston, the brand had historical roots which would have appealed to Lovecraft’s regional rootedness…

Note also here the canned bread, presumably canned in much the same way as pemmican.

Incidentally, the book mentioned above by Lovecraft was The old farmer and his almanack. Lovecraft had acquired the 1904 original, not the 1920 edition linked above. The Hartmann letters on astrology show that Lovecraft had had The old farmer and his almanack since shortly after its publication in 1904. Judging by the contents list, one wonders if it occasionally served as an inspiration-mine for Lovecraft…

George Lyman Kittredge (1860-1941) was an expert on aspects of English literary history (Gawain, Shakespeare and others), who later became learned on aspects of the publications of Cotton Mather and the history of New England Witchcraft belief. Kittredge was the sort of person who Lovecraft might have ventured to address by letter on some point of fact, but I’m not aware of him being a Lovecraft correspondent.

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