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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Monthly Archives: September 2019

Cthulhu outside the Library

09 Monday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Here’s an update on my previous post, “Cthulhu in the Library?”. A new photo has surfaced. The ironwork Cthulhu-a-like I had spotted in a 1965 book of b&w art-photographs of the Brown campus was not inside but rather outside the John Carter Brown Library.

Previous photo:

Newly found photo showing exterior context:

It’s not quite a lion, because of the dog-like teeth. The paw is also dog-like rather than cat-like. More like a supernatural hound, then? Possibly evoking Cerebrus, the multi-headed hound “that guards the gates of the Underworld”?

The Kirby Effect

09 Monday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The late Stan Taylor’s book-length Jack Kirby biography, now available free at The Kirby Effect: the journal of the Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center. Complete with colour scans and archival pictures. The last chapter posted was 1st June 2019, and it looks like it sees one new chapter posted every four months or so. As such the online book is currently only missing the final few chapters…

22 – Allegory Of His Life
23 – Why Did The Fourth World Fail?
24 – Once More Into The Breach
25 – Animated
26 – The Animated Artist

Picture: Jack Kirby at the board, from Kirby: King of Comics.

This spurs a fascinating historical “What If? idea” What if… Stan Lee had said to Jack Kirby one day at Timely in the mid 1950s: “Jack, forget these capes-and-tights heroes. They’re over. The kids want monsters and mystery. So I found us the secret sauce for our new Yellow Claw title, it’ll have new types of monster… and these monsters are gonna get us past this new freakin’ Comics Code and let us scoop up all the homeless readers of EC’s horror comics! Take a read of these here Lovecraft stories… yeah yeah I know, ya heard he’s supposed to be about indescribable monsters… but you’re Jack Kirby, you can draw anything…”

Of course it didn’t happen that way. In the end we got the superpowered capes-and-tights heroes vs. the superpowered monsters, and quadruple the fun. But it could have just gone toward creepy mystery monsters — before being swept away by TV and cheap paperbacks.

A ‘new’ Howard letter

08 Sunday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, REH

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A “New” R.E. Howard Letter, which had been hiding in plain sight in ‘The Eyrie’ in the Weird Tales issue for May 1926.

Howard recommends Nordic stories to the editor and readers. He singles out the Grettir the Outlaw vampire story from Iceland, presumably in the Sabine Baring-Gould translation (1890) rather than William Morris (1869) — though Howard scholars may know otherwise. But possibly younger readers of Weird Tales may equally have found it via Allen French’s popular and streamlined retelling for children The Story Of Grettir The Strong (1908) in their public library.


It would probably be useful for scholars to have a “complete Eyrie and Souk” to 1945, compiled into a single PDF with good OCR, once all the Weird Tales scans and related titles are on Archive.org. Or someone might produce an annotated and indexed ebook of such.

Memory: The Origins of Alien

08 Sunday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers

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Murray Ewing reviews the new documentary feature-film Memory: The Origins of Alien (Alien = the original movie) and offers a thoughtful emphasis on H.P. Lovecraft’s contributions.

Review: the Lovecraft Annual for 2015

07 Saturday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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I’m pleased to say that I’ve acquired a copy of the Lovecraft Annual for 2015, for which thanks to my Patreon patrons. The volume arrived via Wordery, a bookseller who sent a small-format paperback in a ridiculous oversized ‘won’t fit in a letter-box’ 12″ stiff-card envelope, more suited to a vinyl LP! I doubt I’ll be using them again, for this reason. Booksellers, please take a tip from Amazon and invest in packing machinery which wraps the book such that it slips through a slim normal-sized letterbox.

After finishing it I thought it worth a quick review. This 2015 issue of Lovecraft Annual contains the usual sound Lovecraft scholarship by veteran Lovecraftians, while also offering space to promising newcomers and reviewing selected items. Three or four short filler-notes give Lovecraft news, or capsule overviews of a set of recent releases.

The book runs to 232 pages and articles usefully have on-page footnotes rather than end-notes. Illustrations are in colour, but thankfully this has not increased the list price above normal. The print-on-demand printers Lightning Source have done a good job at a modest price.

The issue opens with H. P. Lovecraft’s “Letters to Marian F. Bonner”, these being his letters to her and given in full. This appears to be the first publication of the letters, and here they are copiously annotated by David E. Schultz and S.T. Joshi. The letters are from late in Lovecraft’s life, and they arose because of his aunt’s illness and convalescence. Bonner had worked in the Providence Public Library, in the Periodicals Room, and she lived in the boarding house at the back of the garden courtyard shared with Lovecraft and his aunt. She was a close friend of Lovecraft’s surviving aunt. Lovecraft gives no hint of having met or noticed Bonner during her Public Library employment. One then assumes that she may have worked behind the scenes, perhaps preparing and cataloguing the periodicals and newspapers for what was by then one of the nation’s leading public libraries. Lovecraft’s letters to her are ‘playfully formal’, and one almost gets the sense that a strange middle-aged flirtation is ongoing by correspondence between two intensely bookish people. One gets hints that Lovecraft was responding to some similar tone in her own letters, but those have been lost. Given that he and Bonner shared a secluded garden, there is much discussion of its furry feline inhabitants and Lovecraft offers delightfully hand-drawn letterheads illustrating these. These headers are faithfully reproduced in colour, and one shows a cat-head produced by a carved rubber-stamp sent to him by Barlow. Lovecraft here usefully confirms my supposition (see my new Annotated ‘Cats of Ulthar’) that he knew of the Greek origins of ailurophile and its meanings. Lovecraft’s library and informal ‘circulating library’ of fantastic literature is also discussed, and some local journals are usefully named (The Netropian, a magazine available to patients and visitors in the local hospitals and which carried illustrated local history articles including one on Benefit St.) and local lectures and art gallery shows (Lovecraft approved of regional marine and sea-shore artist Henry J. Peck).

The letters cease and then we have the all too brief posthumous “Miscellaneous Impressions of H.P.L.” (1945) by Marian F. Bonner herself. This is also available in Lovecraft Remembered but fits nicely here.

Kenneth W. Faig, Jr.’s essay naturally follows, as “Can You Direct Me to Ely Court?: Some Notes on 66 College Street”. Faig’s essay focuses on the history of the house and that of its garden, courtyard and lane, rather than on the interior arrangements. I was interested to learn that 66 was the first house on its site, and only the second house ever built on the street. This explains the need for the little unpaved lane which ran down the side of the Library, this being needed to reach the house from College Street. The later grand event of the ‘moving of the house’ is not addressed, except in passing and in relation to its continuing existence on its new site. Faig goes into great detail on the house history and occupants, both before and after Lovecraft, but the paucity of the materials means that he cannot get a good idea of the look of the gardens and their plantings. He seems unaware of my 2013 “A Note on The Paxton” (in Lovecraft in Historical Context #4) in which I point out that the Paxton/Arsdale resident Sarah Bartlett Bullock (1840-1921)… “kept a diary to 1921, now at the R.I. Historical Society” on microfilm. I there suggested late entries in this diary may have a description of the courtyard and its plantings, or perhaps even some sketches made when she first arrived.

More biographical information on Lovecraft’s Paxton/Arsdale correspondents can be found in Ken Faig’s “Lovecraft’s 1937 Diary” in the Lovecraft Annual for 2012.

David E. Schultz follows with an essay on “66 College Street”. This closely examines both the architecture and the surroundings, and Lovecraft’s own sketches of the house frontage are here reprinted and compared. Schultz discovers that the Paxton was later called the Arsdale, and that it was later a Brown dormitory. I had failed to discovered these two names via online sources in my brief look at the Paxton in 2013, but I can now add a date here: 1946, which Schultz doesn’t have. The Brown Alumni magazine reported that the declining ‘old Arsdale’ at 53-55 Waterman Street became the ‘Hopkins House’ dormitory for males in 1946, when there was a sudden and pressing need to accommodate the large numbers of students suddenly returning to their studies after serving in the Second World War. One other element not noted by Schultz is my 2013 discovery of the nature of the Paxton/Arsdale’s retired residents, who were evidently very bookish and artistic people. Schultz’s essay also has excitingly clear and large photographs of 66 College St. and of some of its surrounding houses. One can even see that Ely’s Lane was still unpaved in 1941. We are also treated to Lovecraft’s outline sketch plan map of his last home, its lane and its environs.

The Lovecraft Annual usually also has a few informative filler paragraphs, where space allows. In 2015 one of these announced David E. Schultz’s annotated Fungi from Yuggoth critical edition for 2016. Yet I don’t recall it having appeared? Perhaps it was a very limited-edition hardback that I missed, and the paperback has yet to appear?

A filler paragraph also notes the new discovery of 85,000 words of new Lovecraft letters to Zelia Brown, then set to be published by the HPL Historical Society. These later appeared (in paper only) as The Spirit of Revision: Lovecraft’s Letters to Zealia Brown Reed Bishop. I see this is now on Amazon, if you want to add it to your wish-list there, yet this paperback is far more affordable if had direct from the Society website.

Donovan K. Loucks goes searching for Curwen’s town-house, and finds it in two good exterior photographs.

We then sail far away from Providence with Brendan Whyte’s “The Thing (Flung Daily) on the Doorstep: Lovecraft in the Antipodean Press, 1803–2007”. This is a detailed account of the results of a search for all things “Lovecraft”, sweeping across the newly digitised Australian and New Zealand press and similar resources. It’s a useful survey that first checks for possible Lovecraft family and then outlines Lovecraft’s early reception in Australia as seen in the press.

S. T. Joshi’s “Charles Baxter on Lovecraft” is a mild title. A casual peruser of the table-of-contents might mistakenly assume it to have something to do with Charles Dexter Ward. In fact it is S.T.’s full response to some dubious congeries of derision that had appeared in the leftist New York Review of Books in 2014. A lengthy review of Klinger’s Annotated had there foolishly attempted to usher back the Edmund Wilson era, in which Lovecraft was to be deemed a pulp hack of no worth and consigned to the outer darkness. Despite having ample space in their oversized newspaper-broadsheet publication, the Review of Books had then refused to print more than a mere 400-words of Joshi’s response to the said review. Here the reader is treated to Joshi’s point-by-point response in full.

Bobby Derie’s short “Six Degrees of Lovecraft: Henry Miller” draws some interesting parallels. Much as I enjoy Miller’s non-fiction memoir The Colossus of Maroussi every 15 years or so, I have no interest in his fiction. Yet this essay is more about their parallel interest in Machen and it also touches on their later roles in helping to break down both the outright literary censorship and the implicit taboos of the 1960s. I was also interested to be reminded that Lovecraft had read The Black Cat magazine from 1904. How long he then read it for appears to be unknown, but I imagine it might have fallen away as a subscription in the breakdown of 1908. By the early 1920s he was amazed that the title still existed and until then he seems to have considered it a lost relic of his boyhood. Sadly The Black Cat was on the last of its nine-lives and it expired in 1922, thus partly opening the road for Weird Tales in late 1922. Given the likely 1904-1908 dates it thus seems unlikely Lovecraft would have seen Arthur Leeds’s “The Man Who Shunned The Light” (1915) in The Black Cat, that being an obvious fore-runner for “Cool Air” (find “The Man…” in my book Historical Context #4). It would be interested for someone to take a look at Black Cat for 1904-08 and see what supernatural items Lovecraft might have been reading there during ‘the lost years’.

David Goudsward’s “Cassie Symmes: Inadvertent Lovecraftian” takes a detailed biographical look at Frank Belknap Long’s aunt. It was she who subsidised the handsome setting and printing, ably accomplished by Lovecraft’s friend Paul Cook, of her nephew’s first volume of poetry. Goudsward uncovers some interesting details on last-minute changes to this and another book, which suggests some previously unknown Lovecraft revision work.

Kenneth W. Faig, Jr.’s “Clergymen among Lovecraft’s Paternal Ancestors” is a partial updating and extension of his previous good work in painstakingly tracking down and documenting Lovecraft’s ancestry. One section usefully briefly summarises Lovecraft’s shifting perceptions of his paternal ancestry.

Todd Spaulding then offers a version of his Masters dissertation, here being titled “Lovecraft and Houellebecq: Two Against the World”. This is part essay and part review, and it offers a summary of Houellebecq’s reading of Lovecraft and embeds this in a set of useful short overviews of the French understandings of Lovecraft over time. The full cultural history of Lovecraft’s reception by the French (and the British/European surrealists with French connections, and related artistic and theoretical circles) is a 600-page door-stopper book that remains to be written, but this essay lays down some useful groundwork in English.

Donovan K. Loucks looks into “Donald A. Wollheim’s Hoax Review of the Necronomicon” and finds and reprints the text.

Steven J. Mariconda has a book review of S.T. Joshi’s Variorum edition of the collected Lovecraft, explaining what this limited-edition actually is, and how Joshi’s definitive texts came-to-be after vast amounts of close textual work. The final review is a scourging of a new biography of Lovecraft.

Overall this is an excellent issue, and is well worth obtaining at its affordable £8 to £15 price.

Lovecraft Film Festival 2019

07 Saturday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers, Lovecraftian arts

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H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival, 4th – 6th October 2019, USA. Now with guests and film-schedule announced.

Friday ‘picture postals’ from Lovecraft: misty lanes at the end of summer

06 Friday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, Historical context, New discoveries, Picture postals

≈ 1 Comment

Last week’s ‘picture postal’ had a setting of quiet streets and mistiness. This week’s post continues with the same theme, evoking the ‘end of season’ shawl that many New England places would have worn by September.

I. The mist in New England.

The picture also evokes the distinctly seasonal nature of Lovecraft’s own travels and visits. His annual cycle, of summer walking followed by a winter hermitage, was partly due to his extreme sensitivity to the cold. By the early 1930s he was becoming the old man he had once feigned to be, and appears to have become both more susceptible to cold and more fearful of encountering it. By the mid 1930s his ‘sitting outdoors season’ didn’t usually start until quite late, mid-May. Some historical context is relevant here. The natural state of the eastern USA during the late 1920s and 30s was somewhat different than today, being often significantly hotter in summer and colder and more icy in winter. We can also assume that mistiness was often enhanced by household coal-fires being lit as the mornings and evenings grew chill. Domestic burning of ‘soft coal’ (heavy smoke) was then permitted, for instance, and only in 1946 did Providence begin to adopt clean-air measures. Add to that the likelihood of autumnal garden bonfires being lit.

Toward the end of his annual walking season he would have started to encounter such evocative mists, fogs and mizzling rains. Such mists were almost never captured by picture postcards, which makes scenes like the one seen above all the more valuable. They remind non-residents that New England was actually somewhat akin to England, in terms of the vagaries and mistiness of its very seasonal weather. The region wasn’t all an endless parade of bright summer-scenes.

Yet sometimes it was an endless parade of such scenes, or seemingly so when the bright clement weather would run on in the year. Such was the year 1933, for about six weeks from mid September to the end of October, and Lovecraft continued to enjoy such weather by taking cheap local bus-rides and walks. During most of October 1933 he even contrived to explore parts of the inland back-country far behind Providence. Here he is in October 1933, writing to Morton…

Well, well! The old man’s still out in the open! But though it’s quite oke for brisk walking, it ain’t so good for settin’ down and writin’. Hard work guiding the muscles of my pen hand, for I doubt if the thermometer is over sixty-eight degrees. Glorious autumnal scenery. I’ve spent the last week tramping over archaick rustick landskips, searching out areas still unspoil’d by modernity…

The run of fine weather was over by around Halloween. On 2nd-3rd November 1933 he wrote to R.E. Howard…

Our autumn has been very mild … But of course this is the very end of the season. No more continuous mild weather can be expected [now], though there may be isolated days of more or less pleasantness.

How did he first become sensitised to the Providence mists? He purposefully went walking in such conditions. In a 1933 letter to E. Hoffman Price he also recalled his youthful explorations of Providence, and how he had first become…

sensitive to the mystery-fraught streets and huddled roofs of the town, and often took rambles in unfamiliar sections for the sake of bizarre atmospheric and architectural effects ancient gables and chimneys under varied conditions of light and mist, etc.

He especially favoured such misty atmospherics when blended with a quality of “spectral hush & semi desertion”, ideally accompanied by far half-glimpsed vistas in which the imagination could lightly play. Hush was of course something rather more likely to be encountered at the very end of summer, when the region’s visitors and trippers had departed and the locals were again in a more workaday mood inside their schools and workshops. Lovecraft devised a proto-psychogeographic technique to greatly increase his chances of encountering such hushed moods. In 1933 he would alight from a local cross-country bus in the middle of nowhere, then strike across country in the hope of reaching another distant bus-route where he might flag down a homeward bus. Sometimes he was forced to hitch-hike back, though another part of his practice was to never actually ask for a free ride. Presumably this was partly because he feared that if he asked, a contribution to ‘gas money’ might then be demanded at the end of the journey? By such means he semi-randomly roved down back-roads and up little lanes that he had never seen before…

I have found several alluring regions never before visited by me [that] represent a settled, continuous life of three centuries suggesting the picturesque old world rather than the
strident new.


II. The cosmic mists.

In spring 1931 H.P. Lovecraft had the idea that rain clouds and drizzling mists might be partly influenced by fluxes in incoming cosmic-rays. Although he admitted that the confounding factors on earth would make such things difficult to measure and prove…

Just how far our precipitation is affected by the recent prevalence of ether-waves is a still-open question. The unprecedentedness of any natural phenomena is always subject to dispute — for certain types of phenomena may be naturally cyclic, whilst others may attract notice more than formerly because of increased reporting facilities [and newly populated areas growing up into] dense habitation” — Lovecraft in a letter to Clark Ashton Smith, 15th April 1931.

How prescient. Here his use of “ether-waves” does not mean broadcast radio, though that was by then a secondary shadow-meaning to be found in the radio trade press and a few newspapers. Lovecraft’s new-found ability to hear a speech by the British King may indeed have caused his eyes to mist up with tears of patriotic joy. But his knowledge of science was such that he would not have imagined that mass radio ownership might be the cause of mistier mornings on Rhode Island.

Lovecraft appears rather to have been using “ether-waves” as one finds it in standard 1930s textbooks of meteorological science. There it means radiant energy, such as cosmic-rays, x-rays etc. More specifically, a usage from the June/July 1931 Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society suggests that he had the cosmic-ray end of this spectrum in mind…

First, the cosmic rays enter the earth uniformly from all portions of the sky. Second, they consist – as they enter the earth’s atmosphere – of ether waves, not of electrons. (R.A. Millikan, the Bulletin quoting a talk of his given in September 1930.)

This use of “ether waves” then must indicate that Lovecraft was thinking in April 1931 of ether-waves (cosmic-rays) as inducing “nucleation” in the air, as a mechanism by which the cosmic forces that “filtered down from the stars” could affect the formation of clouds and mists on the earth. Thus, in his mind, a “recent prevalence of ether-waves” would affect “precipitation” in the weather on earth. His only apparent concern was “just how far” this effect carried through.

But all the scientific papers and textbooks say that this idea was first proposed in 1959 by Ney in his Nature paper “Cosmic radiation and weather”. Which implies that Lovecraft’s scientific intuition was thirty years ahead of the curve. Was Lovecraft then the first to propose a direct causal link between ‘space weather’ and ‘earth weather’?

The answer to this puzzle is probably that Lovecraft partly intuited the idea from the Nobel prize-winner Robert A. Millikan. We know this eminent and questing scientist was being tracked by Lovecraft, since he mentions Millikan to Frank Belknap Long in early 1929 when Lovecraft refers to a new theory… “Millikan’s “cosmic ray””… this being mentioned in the context of a discussion of “the radio-active breakdown of matter into energy, and the possible building up of matter from free energy” (Lovecraft).

This latter point indicates that Lovecraft knew that Millikan was proposing cosmic rays that were engaged in atomic construction rather than (as we now understand it) radioactive decay. This point may seem arcane today, but from such things the fate of the universe could be determined: construction meant a constantly-renewing universe, decay an eventual infinitely diffuse heat-death of the universe. The latter theory was given a substantial boost by the publication of the Big Bang theory which occurred in Nature on 9th May 1931 (after Lovecraft’s letter), this being apparently accompanied by much journalistic befuddling of a credulous public — with feverish talk of the coming “heat-death” of the universe.

Of course we cannot be certain that Lovecraft was reading Millikan directly, in the scientific journals available at his Public Library or in the periodicals room at Brown. Because Millikan might also have been encountered in the ‘popular science’ magazines and newspaper columns of the time. He was a popular figure, as scientists go…

Dr. Millikan was the first to prove [1925] the puzzling effect was actually the work of rays bombarding the earth from cosmic depths. The story of his [independent] search is one of the epics of science. Climbing mountain peaks in the Andes, sending aloft sounding balloons on the Texas plains, making tests in a raging blizzard among the Rockies, lowering lead-lined boxes of instruments into the water of snow-fed lakes in the Sierras, he followed one clue after another. (Popular Science, November 1936).

At this time the cutting-edge of science was headline news in regular newspapers, rather than being confined to specialist magazines or to slipshod hysteria in newspapers, as it mostly is today. We also known that Lovecraft was “strongly interested” in such things…

the absorption of radiant energy & re-emission at a lower wave-length has strongly interested me” — letter to Morton on fluorescent rocks, 13th November 1933.

… and that he later attended a public lecture on cosmic rays by W.F.G. Swann in early 1935 (Morton letters).

Perhaps this interest was strong enough in 1931 to cause him to follow the contents pages of the hard science journals, and to actually read papers by Millikan and others. Thus his reading of Millikan and a few others in early 1931 might plausibly be inferred. In which case Lovecraft most likely saw, or at the least read a good summary of, a key paper by Millikan titled “On the question of the constancy of the cosmic radiation and the relation of these rays to meteorology” (Physical Review, December 1930). Since this contains the following…

These rays must therefore exert a preponderating influence upon atmospheric electrical phenomena. [followed by a discussion of] “water vapour … condensing on ions” and the conclusion that… “the cosmic rays enter the atmosphere as ether waves or photons, and hence produce their maximum ionization, not at the surface of the atmosphere, but somewhat farther down.”

The paper does not appear to have been discussed or noted elsewhere. I have looked through and keyword-searched the book-length biography of Millikan (1982), and have searched Google Scholar and Google Books and a few other sources. Note that Millikan doesn’t actually baldly state the rays—>clouds idea in his paper, and he doesn’t actually mention precipitation (i.e.: rain-clouds, rain, drizzling mist). But he gives enough leads and hints in this paper that Lovecraft the meteorologist-and-astronomer would be able to tie the pieces together into a working theory. Given this absence of commentary elsewhere, I then have to suspect this paper is the source for Lovecraft’s April 1931 understanding of levels of precipitation being “affected by the recent prevalence of ether-waves”. The timing of the paper certainly fits neatly with that of Lovecraft’s letter to Smith. We also know that Lovecraft attended a lecture on the latest developments in cosmic rays, in early 1935. In a letter to Barlow he commented on this lecture, implying that he had already had a good working knowledge of such things and that the lecture had usefully updated this.

There is a further small puzzle here. How did Lovecraft know of the recent “prevalence” of ether-waves/cosmic-rays? Because these do not appear to have been measured in time-series until 1933. The answer to the puzzle might be that the aurora borealis was then recently known to be a natural proxy for incoming cosmic-rays. An increase in the aurora would have been noted in the meteorological and polar journals, possibly even in the newspapers. The effect on shortwave radio-reception may also have been understood to be an indicator. We know that Lovecraft enjoyed ‘fishing’ on his older aunt’s radio-set for the most distant exotic radio stations he could find, and this could have sometimes meant rare distant shortwave signals bouncing off the ionosphere. His younger aunt’s radio set was apparently not so powerful. Yet regular ‘fishing’ on either might still have led him to build up a mental time-series of the disturbances in the upper-atmosphere.

“I sometimes ‘fish’ for distant stations when over there — for there is a fascination in the uncanny bridging of space” (Lovecraft in October 1932).

What then was his idea of this rays-to-clouds effect, put in modern scientific terms? At its crudest the idea of “nucleation” holds that: 1) cosmic-rays arrive and cause ionisation inside our atmosphere; 2) which introduces more tiny floating nuclei suitable for water-droplets to form on; 3) and in that way certain types of low-level cloud are more likely to arise when there are more rays. The science of this is still being actively researched, at least by those willing to brave the venomous politics of the field. Personally I remain to be convinced by scientists who suggest more sophisticated and roundabout ideas about how cosmic-ray fluxes and clouds might interact (and thus influence weather). Yet it’s not wholly impossible that Lovecraft’s 1931 hypothesis about ‘cosmic mists’ might one day be agreed to be correct, if science can see through the fog of confounding factors.

On the road

05 Thursday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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“Authors on the Road: Lovecraft’s Travels with David Goudsward”. A public-service TV show from 2013, newly on Archive.org.

Also on YouTube but there it seems to be at lower resolution than on Archive.org.

A little more on used bookshops in Providence

05 Thursday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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1) An issue of The Antiquarian Bookman from 1959 has an article called “New England Triple-play” which, judging by the snippets on Google Books, gives a fairly detailed multi-page boots-on-the-ground tour of Providence’s used book shops as they were at the end of the 1950s, including addresses. Regrettably, such a useful journal is not digitised and online.

2) A few weeks ago I wrote here about ‘uncle’ Eddy’s bookshop and Lovecraft. I see that later there was also a Dick’s Book Shop in Providence, and that the owner made a claim to Lovecraft in the 1960s. Like uncle Eddy’s Book Shop this shop also dealt in second-hand books. This other book shop was announced in Publishers Weekly as moving from 487 Westminster St. in 1939, to 70 Richmond St. It then pops up in Antiquarian Bookman and a trade directory at 102 Broad St., for a few years circa 1958-61. Then it appears back at Richmond St., at No. 44, during the 1960s.

Anyway, here are the basic details of this other shop’s claimed connection with Lovecraft, as remembered by ‘Jimserac’. He was commenting on a post on the blog “Notes From A Burning House: Remembrances of Bookstores Past” in July 2008…

In the 60’s you could walk into Dick’s Book Shop on Richmond Street and buy a copy of Davie’s Geometry, or any number of other antiquarian books, for maybe a dollar, two at the most and be treated to Dick’s first hand description of his personal acquaintance with H.P. Lovecraft.

The veracity of the owner’s remembered claim seems questionable, though. Since Dick’s appears to have been first established after Lovecraft’s death. The shop is not found by either the “Dick” or “Dick’s” name, or the Westminster St. address, in the 1920, 1934 or 1936 Directories for Providence.

Dick’s is not to be confused with the Dana bookstore. This other store appears to have been a rather more upmarket used bookstore, and judging from the brief Dana memoir of Lovecraft he almost never went in there and didn’t converse when he did.

Call: Not Dead, But Dreaming: Reading Lovecraft in the 21st Century

04 Wednesday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Call for papers for an edited volume: “Not Dead, But Dreaming: Reading Lovecraft in the 21st Century”.

Because interest in Lovecraft continues to grow, our intention is to explore some of the reasons why he has become so influential — and so indispensable — since the early 1990s. … his expanding popularity and the significance of his legacy as we entered the digital age. Consequently, we are interested in research that focuses on the significance of Lovecraft’s work from the 1990s to the present day.

An interesting topic but the list of suggested approaches is limited, and they appear to indicate that “the significance” to be considered is that of the influence exerted on university academics. This list further suggests that the editors only really want papers which use a narrow range of fashionable C.V.-ready PhD supervisor-pleasing approaches. Also, the end result seems likely to be yet another $120 ‘for academic libraries only’ dust-gatherer.

However, the call does mention “Lovecraft’s poetry” as a possible focus, surprisingly. Given the rarity of places in which to offer a close analysis of the man’s poetry in the context of its reception by modern readers, the call thus seems worth mentioning here.

The call, with a deadline for proposals of 30th November 2019.

Getting started with Ardath Mayhar

04 Wednesday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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Where does one start when faced with the vast output of the East Texas writer Ardath Mayhar? Even the intro to her main Megapack Kindle ebook doesn’t provide a quick overview survey and guide. According to the Women SF Writers of the 1970s pages at Tor, she doesn’t even exist. But after a bit of searching and jiggling of Wikipedia I think I now have it roughly worked out…

Audiobook: Crazy Quilt: The Best Short Stories of Ardath Mayhar. I can’t get the table-of-contents for this in any format. Also in paper, but no ebook.

Rural weird/dark: Strange Doin’s in the Pine Hills: Stories of Fantasy and Mystery in East Texas, and A World of Weirdities: Tales to Shiver. The first is in Kindle ebook and is dark rather than weird, and the latter is in collectable paper with 29 stories, “many of them never before published”.

Other starter fiction:

i) As a starting point for her fantasy, How the Gods Wove in Kyrannon (1979) seems to be the best. It was her first such book, a set of tightly linked brief and delicately-Dunsanian stories followed by culminating sections. Its world-setting appears to have later been spun off as a three-volume series under the name Lords of the Triple Moon with these being aimed at a slightly younger audience than the first book? All are in Kindle ebook.

ii) The Ardath Mayhar MegaPack in two $2 Kindle books of stories. The first seeming to have the best and lighter stories in it, the second some darker material. I’m uncertain if these two collections form ‘the complete short fiction’ or are just a partial selection from her vast output. They seem to present the stories in no particular order, and include a number of westerns.

iii) Messengers in White sounds like the most interesting and successful of her science-fiction novels to start with. It’s available in Kindle ebook.

iv) Her ‘what happens when we make intelligent monkeys?’ novels sound perhaps-fun, but is probably not the science-fiction work to start with. These are found as Monkey Station: The Macaque Cycle, Book One and Trail of the Seahawks: The Macaque Cycle, Book Two, and both are in Kindle ebook. There was talk of a videogame, but I’ve found no evidence of a book three? Difficult to tell much more about it without proper reviews. It’s very difficult to find reviews for her work that are not flippant and cynical, and one gets the feeling that — like Clifford Simak — her robust rural Texan conservatism and blending of fantasy/sci-fi didn’t sit well with the sci-fi establishment of the 1980s and 1990s. (“Conservatism” doesn’t here = evangelical or religious, and a Starlog interview reveals that she was hounded locally by deluded Christians during the bizarre moral-panics over ‘Satanism’ in the 90s. Even today I encountered one prissy Christian on Amazon reviews, squeaking over discovering that Mayhar’s regionalist East Texas novels had dared to offer a tepid view of her local Church-goers).

Regionalist: So yes, there’s also a whole bundle of East Texas local rural novels and stories. Mostly ‘young adult’ tales with feisty heroines, though there’s also what is apparently her survivalist adult-novel masterpiece The World Ends in Hickory Hollow. I had my fill of that kind of post-apocalyptic novel in the 1980s, and I’m not sure I want more even now, but it’s well regarded.

Westerns: There are a great many robust pre-PC wild-western novels which might appeal to R.E. Howard fans. I’ve no idea were one might start with these.

Advice: Through a Stone Wall: Lessons from Thirty Years of Writing. Paper only. Seems to be well-regarded.

Autobiography: Strange View from a Skewed Orbit: An Oddball Memoir. Paper only. Said to be excellent.

Most of her books appear to be quite short by modern standards, many well under 200 pages. One associates the late 1980s and 90s with over-padded door-stopper books, especially in fantasy, but that doesn’t seem to be the case here.

So, that’s my somewhat hazy outline based on some online research scrabbling among scattered and sparse materials. Any advice or correction is welcome.

“The Howler”

04 Wednesday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

The making of a stop-motion animation of “The Howler” by H.P. Lovecraft.

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