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Tentaclii

~ News and scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft (1890–1937)

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: May 2019

New book: The Secret Ceremonies: Critical Essays on Arthur Machen

26 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Newly on the Hippocampus Press catalogue, a chunky book of new Machen scholarship titled The Secret Ceremonies: Critical Essays on Arthur Machen. Not yet on Amazon.

Essays which sound like they might be of vague interested to me, re: the possible Tolkien resonances…

* “Of Sacred Groves and Ancient Mysteries: Parallel Themes in the Writings of Arthur Machen and John Buchan”.

* “Sanctity Plus Sorcery: The Curious Christianity of Arthur Machen”.

New book: The Decorative Imagination of Arthur Machen

26 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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A new book on Lovecraft fave Arthur Machen, The Decorative Imagination of Arthur Machen. This draws on 20 years of the Machen journal Faunus, to assemble a survey of Machen’s…

range of interests, including the legends of the Great War [First World War], the Celtic Church, the “real” Little People, the occult, the byways of London …

The book also…

“makes newly available reprints of rare pieces by Machen himself … as a journalist and essayist”.

Protected: Two pictures of places poignant to Lovecraft

26 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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The sacking of Farnsworth Wright, editor of Weird Tales

25 Saturday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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Was Farnsworth Wright actually fired from Weird Tales? Don Herron is on the case and digs up what seems to be a clincher of a quote. In which case, he muses…

A few tweaks to the timeline and Farny [Farnsworth Wright] could have had HPL [Lovecraft] spearheading a legion of young apprentices in the [Weird Tales] pulp — which he was doing already by the mid-30s. Robert Bloch. Kuttner. Fritz Leiber was about to jump in, too. I wonder what that crew might have done if Lovecraft had lived, given what they did do? Perhaps [in that case] Wright wouldn’t have been unceremoniously kicked to the kerb.

A couple of days later Don posted More on the Firing of Farnsworth Wright, which picks up the notoriously inaccurate Wikipedia on what is apparently yet another inaccuracy, namely that… “Wright’s failing health forced him to resign as editor during 1940”.

I don’t know enough about this end of the Weird Tales years to be able to sift all the ramifying data points, but on the face of it there does seem to have been a sacking rather than a resignation. But I think that what we really need here is a good full archive-researched book-length biography of Wright.

New book: Forgotten Works & Worlds of Herbert Crowley

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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New from Beehive, The Temple of Silence: Forgotten Works & Worlds of Herbert Crowley. He’s not to be confused with occult loon Aleister Crowley.

It’s an expensive hardcover, and the Society of Illustrators calls it a… “sumptuous, towering monument of an art book”. The buyer gets a 20,000 word biographical monograph within the 108 pages, which I imagine means that the art on the remaining pages is the ‘best of’ rather than a full illustrated catalogue of his works.

‘Krazy Kat meets Edward Lear’ might be one way of summing up the works.

So far as I’m aware, Lovecraft did not see Crowley’s newspaper strips. Even in the reading room of the Providence Public Library he was probably not able to get the New York Herald, where the strips appeared. Though we know he read the New York Post shortly after he returned to Providence, so as to ‘keep up’ with New York. Also, Lovecraft had arrived in New York just as Crowley was leaving that city.

But Lovecraft was aware of Krazy Kat and may have seen it occasionally as it was widely syndicated. In his essay on “Cats and Dogs” he talks of the blind idiot-love owners have for grotesque dogs, comparing it to…

the childish penchant for the grotesque and tawdrily ‘cute’, which we see like-wise embodied in popular cartoons, freak dolls, and all the malformed decorative trumpery of the “Billiken” or “Krazy Kat” order, found in the “dens” and “cosy corners” of the would-be sophisticated cultural yokelry.

‘Une nuit avec Lovecraft’ reviewed

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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The French edition of Rodolphe & Marcele’s One Night with Lovecraft graphic novel, newly reviewed in French. As I’ve previously noted here, this fine graphic novel is free online in French, and in English translation on LibGen.

Assistant away…

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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This may be useful for those who frequent Amazon. How to fix the extremely annoying and totally unblockable “Amazon Assistant” pop-up nag from Amazon, on Amazon? It can’t be blocked as a pickable element with uBlock and nor can PoperBlocker detect and handle it as either pop-up or overlay. Nor can I see any way via ‘View source’ to get a unique div name. The additional problem here is that even when one keeps clicking “No thanks”, the pop-up still keeps coming back again and again.

To fix it…

* Download their wretched browser extension from the Chrome store, and install.

* Then once it has loaded in Extensions, immediately disable it and keep it disabled.

* The nags at the Amazon home page(s) should then stop.

Friday Picture Postals from Lovecraft: The Italian quarter in Providence

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

≈ 1 Comment

Pictures of Providence’s Italian quarter in the 1910s-30s are rather scarce, at least online. There is one above, and below I show three more from prior to 1921. These are badly scanner-moired, but are here newly-exposed to search-engines.

This district of Providence was also known locally as ‘Little Italy’, ‘the Italian Quarter’, and the Federal Hill district. It was settled by a large wave of Italian immigrants after 1890. Italian shops, Italian cafes, Italian banks, and other facilities were quickly established there, and the Italians gradually displaced an existing Irish population which was moving on and up in the world.

Lovecraft could see this district from his windows, in his later years…

The [new] study also has 2 west windows, at one of which I am now sitting, gazing across the roofs of the ancient hill to a strip of far horizon & a distant steeple on Federal Hill 2 miles away.

“Federal Hill (the Italian quarter) as seen 2 miles away from my window is really quite a mysterious & picturesque sight — with the dark bulk & spire of St. John’s rising against the remote horizon…”

Lovecraft set his substantial late story “The Haunter of the Dark” (1935) on Federal Hill…

From his few local acquaintances he learned that the far-off slope was a vast Italian quarter […] he came finally upon the ascending avenue of century-worn steps, sagging Doric porches, and blear-paned cupolas which he felt must lead up to the long-known, unreachable world beyond the mists. There were dingy blue-and-white street signs which meant nothing to him, and presently he noted the strange, dark faces of the drifting crowds, and the foreign signs over curious shops in brown, decade-weathered buildings. Nowhere could he find any of the objects he had seen from afar; so that once more he half fancied that the Federal Hill of that distant view was a dream-world never to be trod by living human feet. Now and then a battered church facade or crumbling spire came in sight, but never the blackened pile that he sought. When he asked a shopkeeper about a great stone church the man smiled and shook his head, though he spoke English freely. As Blake climbed higher, the region seemed stranger and stranger, with bewildering mazes of brooding brown alleys leading eternally off to the south. He crossed two or three broad avenues, and once thought he glimpsed a familiar tower. Again he asked a merchant about the massive church of stone, and this time he could have sworn that the plea of ignorance was feigned. The dark man’s face had a look of fear which he tried to hide, and Blake saw him make a curious sign with his right hand.

The pictures are of obvious relevance to the setting of “The Haunter of the Dark”, but look also at that weirdly thin house. Is there a possible inspiration for “Erich Zann”, in this home-made structure? Probably not, as “Zann” was written 1921, at which time Lovecraft may not have yet had his first boots-on-the-ground encounter with the district.

He toured the place in the expert company of his local friend Eddy, as Selected Letters Vol. 1 has…

I decided to have Eddy guide me thro’ the vast and celebrated Italian quarter — Federal Hill — which I had heard him so often describe and as quainter even than the Boston Italian quarter …

Sadly I can’t get more than this snippet from this now very expensive book, and thus can’t determine the date for this letter. But Selected Letters Vol. 1 goes up to 1924. [Update: yes, he got to know Eddy after the writing of “Zann”]

At dusk on a day in April 1926, at the end of one of his rambling exploratory walks in the city…

[the walk] introduced me to a tangle of horrible and infinitely alluring alleys of blackness in the Federal Hill Italian quarter

This must indicates just his discovery of the tangle of alleys, rather than the entire district, since he had already seen it with Eddy a few years earlier. Presumably he thus realised that he had not seen everything there in his tour with Eddy. He returned there in June 1926, and made an initial full exploratory walk of Federal Hill, during which he appears to have encountered the large churches for the first time…

Last Saturday “did” Mount Pleasant, Davis Park, and Federal Hill — and was astonished by the great Italian Churches.

But the remarkable thin house (seen above) was featured in the local press circa 1919. So he might have encountered pictures of it, prior to writing “Zann”…

The houses were tall, peaked-roofed, incredibly old, and crazily leaning backward, forward, and sidewise. […] at last I came upon that tottering house in the Rue d’Auseil, kept by the paralytic Blandot. It was the third house from the top of the street, and by far the tallest of them all. (“Erich Zann”)

That said, he could have been equally inspired by any number of prints (Samuel Prout and his ilk) and postcards of ancient streets in old European cities, or descriptions thereof in literature.

While he may have encountered some of the Hill’s residents on his walks, he had also known them elsewhere. For instance a member of the Providence Amateur Press Club, a group of aspiring young writers who Lovecraft had attempted to tutor and encourage, had lived on Federal Hill. The lad in question seems to have been a holdover of its former Irish population, who would by then have been well into the process of moving on and up as they assimilated into American life. (There was also a fruit pedlar who used to come to Lovecraft’s house on Angell St., Manuel Arruda, but the name suggests he was Spanish or Portuguese rather than Italian).

During the U.S. prohibition of alcohol, Lovecraft indulged in a bit of whimsy about the district in one letter. He joked with a friend that he might acquire there a local case of bootleg whisky, not for himself but to ship to Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright (to help steady his physical jitters induced by Parkinson’s disease)…

I feel tempted to unearth a local bootlegger [and] Providence’s Italian quarter is a miniature Chicago of hootch, gang wars, and rackets!

This was indeed the state of affairs there under the Morelli mafia gang, which had been allowed to become established from 1917. But apparently today Federal Hill, Providence, is said to have some of the most “funky” hipster-ish sort of places in the city, and yet to have also successfully retained an Italian character. That may be a bit of quiet online booster-ism, but I haven’t encountered anything to contradict such statements.



Lovecraft’s taste-buds may also may have led him to patronise the cheaper end of the Italian restaurant trade in Providence. He wrote…

[I] Like Italian cooking very much — especially spaghetti with meat and tomato sauce, utterly engulfed in a snowbank of grated Parmesan cheese.

Living in the notorious Red Hook in New York City in the mid 1920s, and forced by poverty to rub shoulders with jail-hardened gangsters and petty hoodlums in the cafes there, he often took his meals at…

John’s — the Italian joint around the corner in Willoughby St.

The above show two views of the same Jay and Willoughby interaction on Willoughby St., Red Hook, with one and possibly two corner cafes visible. The dates of the pictures are 1927 and 1928, and while the cafe(s) may not actually be John’s, the environment seen is closely indicative. Note that the theatre offers a “Burlesk” (burlesque) girlie show.

Once returned to his beloved Providence, we might assume that Lovecraft was even more open to trying out any new “Italian joint” “feed station” that looked suitable and cheap and yet able to attain a ‘New York quality’.

“He acquired a habit of writing long documents of some sort…”

23 Thursday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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The Dr. Henry Armitage Memorial Scholarship Symposium, 2019. “Abstracts due 15th June!”

One has to be physically present at the convention, it seems. No livecast presentations via screen.

Protected: Lincoln Woods explored

23 Thursday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Maps, New discoveries

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New book: Robots That Kill: Deadly Machines and Their Precursors

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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A new book from McFarland, Robots That Kill: Deadly Machines and Their Precursors in Myth, Folklore, Literature, Popular Culture and Reality.

The blurb makes it sound more appealing than the usual academic slab…

This book describes real-world killer robots using a blend of perspectives. Overviews of technologies, such as autonomy and artificial intelligence, demonstrate how science enables these robots to be effective killers. Incisive analyses of social controversies swirling around the design and use of killer robots reveal that science, alone, will not govern their future. Among those disputes is whether fully-autonomous, robotic weapons should be banned. Examinations of killers from the Golem to Frankenstein’s monster reveal that artificially-created beings like these are precursors of real 21st century killer robots. This book laces the death and destruction caused by all these killers with science and humor. The seamless combination of these elements produces a deeper and richer understanding of the robots around us.

… but there are no reviews yet, that I could find. It’s way over-priced in paper in the UK (£44 paperback), compared to the USA ($40 paperback, about £26).

Herbert West: Reanimator – a two-hour reading

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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This week’s The SFFaudio Podcast #526 is a full two-hour unabridged audiobook reading of “Herbert West: Reanimator” by H.P. Lovecraft, read by Jim Moon. Apparently it’s a re-run of a Hypnogoria podcast that I can’t immediately find and may no longer be available. “Herbert West” was of course the serial ‘shocker’ that Lovecraft wrote for Home Brew.

Looking for the Hypnogoria original of this audio reading, I was pleased to discover Hypnogoria: Microgoria #65 – Shiver and Shake and the Creepy Creations of Ken Reid. 33 minutes of podcast surveying a British master of fun cartoon monster-creation.

Ken Reid has a series of handsome book re-issues, Creepy Creations Vol 1., Faceache Vol 1: The First Hundred Scrunges, and Ken Reid’s World Wide Weirdies Vol. 1. His work will be fondly remembered by those of a certain generation.

I wonder if anyone still has that old cardboard “dial-a-monster” picture-frame from that time, which one could get through the mail and I for one had a copy of (long lost, now). It was an early generative work, as millions of unique combinations were possible, there being circular dials which would swing a variety of eyes, hair, chins, noses etc into the picture-frame portrait. They were designed so they would all more or less seamlessly blend together.

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