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Tentaclii

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

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: November 2019

Strange Tales

21 Thursday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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I haven’t listened to it yet, but World’s Deadliest Podcast popped up on ListenNotes. A new podcast, and Episode 7 is “Strange Adventures with Illustrator and Comic Book Expert Jesse White”. White appears to be a special expert on the art and working methods of John Buscema (Conan and others)…

Jesse has a new Kickstarter for a 1970s style pulp bagazine titled Strange Tales, which will feature an number of adventure stories told in the classic comic-book style. We also discuss John Buscema’s contribution to comic books, and we contrast the differences between the world views of Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft.

How to extract an old book

21 Thursday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Useful advice on caring for rare hardback books, by an expert book conservator, found in the latest edition of the UK’s Country Life magazine…

Lovecraftian writers in search of correct description of the physicality of ancient library work should also look at “Fingers, Lips and Parchment: How Medieval Users Handled their Manuscripts”.

Starblazer

20 Wednesday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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I’m pleased to see that Starblazer has returned, if only as a best-of reprint title. Each volume is an oversized double-issue reprint…

Collating two classic issues from DC Thomson’s archives and blowing them up to full graphic novel size.

Starblazer was the science-fiction sister-title to the UK’s venerable Commando, and ran from 1979-1991.

Biblioteca Lovecraft

20 Wednesday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Now shipping from Companhia das Letras in Brazil, a new Biblioteca Lovecraft – Vol. 1, being a 448-page Portuguese translation of Lovecraft’s stories.

Cthulhu in Switzerland

19 Tuesday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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At La Maison d’Ailleurs, Europe’s leading museum of imaginative science-fiction, a “Cthulhu-Con” in March 2020…

To be paired with a visit to their “Mondes (im)parfaits” exhibition, which appears to be a partial retrospective of the original art of the graphic novels Les Cites obscures, albeit framed by the work of other artists.

Deutsche Lovecraft / Lovecrafter

19 Tuesday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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Registration will open soon for the Deutsche Cthulhu Convention in Germany. I spotted a deadline of February 2020 for payment, presumably for a summer 2020 event.

Last noted here very briefly in 2014, the event seems to be a large German Cthulhu convention hosted by the German Lovecraft Society in a castle in Lower Saxony. Their tablet-tastic site doesn’t play nicely with Google Translate, so I can’t quite get a sense of how gamer/scholarly the event’s balance is. But they appear to have some sort of core symposium element.

Finding it made me aware of their Lovecrafter magazine. Here’s the pleasing cover of the July 2018 issue, and paper copies are available by mail-order.

Within are…

* A look at a horror and fantasy fanzine of the 1970s (presumably a German one).

* Lovecraft, the first 50 years – a survey of publishing Lovecraft in Germany, with publisher interviews.

* Fear of the Known – on the myths of Lovecraft in the digital world.

* Between protest and delusion – Cthulthu’s role in 1968.

… and some RPG game stuff.

More on monster trolls

18 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Added to my post from a few days ago on Monster trolls…


Monster manual (1994). I’d imagine this would hold up quite well in court as “prior art” on the matter of the use of the word “monster” + a green claw for things like books and comics.

The Lunatic Plague

18 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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I’ve managed to get hold of Wandrei’s I.V. Frost story “The Lunatic Plague” (August 1936). The writing is workmanlike pulp…

In the smoky haze that passed as atmosphere, the outlines of buildings shimmered. The tall apartment houses lining Riverside Drive seemed outlined in flame against the sun and shaken by tremors of earth. New York was suffering one of the annual heat waves that made seven million people wonder why they’d ever arrived at or stayed in that infernal congestion of dirt, detestable odors, torrid humidity, and air, street, and harbor pollution. Inspector Frick punched the bell under a brass plate, green with verdigris that almost concealed the name: I. V. Frost.

Once I got past a certain stiffness felt on the early pages, it proved enjoyable and fast-paced. In a pre Marvel/DC era it must have seemed a very weird plot to many readers used to more mainstream detective-mystery tales. I’m not a DC-fan, but I’d suggest that one might glimpse in this story the pre-DC origins of The Joker (introduced Spring 1940). And the later re-invented Joker, via the obvious surmise of what might have happened had the villain of this story actually made contact with the asylum… and taken it over.

I noted a few possible links with Lovecraft. Frost talks like Lovecraft…

Frost stated, “Insanity as such is not communicable in the sense that various diseases are. However, some infections result in mental derangement, and the person contracting an infection of that kind could loosely be said to have caught insanity as a secondary product of a primary disease. Mob hysteria, war fever, lynch-gang fury, and other mass demonstrations have been considered proof by several psychologists that mental disorders can be contagious, but other authorities have challenged the conclusions. In meanings rather than words, there has not yet appeared the slightest evidence that lunacy can be epidemic, or that a normal person can catch it from a victim of insanity.”

He walks like Lovecraft…

He hiked off, his long legs carrying him out at a pace that would have meant a brisk trot for the average man.

Wry and detached, he appreciates “cosmic” irony like Lovecraft…

Frost smiled at the host of detectives who thronged around him in the Grand Central Terminal. A beatific expression lighted his features, as with secret, supreme appreciation of some cosmic jest. He drawled, “Life is sometimes inspiredly lunatic.”

He even looks somewhat like Lovecraft…

Frost sat on a stool at one of the tables. With his great height and thinness, his ascetic face in profile against a window, he looked like a specter or the incarnation of a bird of prey.

Not having access to the rest of the stories, I can’t say if there are more such Lovecraft-like characterisation of Frost. But it may be something to look out for, if you get the new $50 Frost complete collection.

New books

18 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. On Lovecraft…

Upcoming are the huge volume of Lovecraft’s Letters to Family and Family Friends (the bulk of which consists of his letters to his aunts), a volume of his letters to E. Hoffmann Price and Richard F. Searight, and new editions of the letters to Alfred Galpin and Rheinhart Kleiner, each augmented with letters to several other individuals.

“We have also prepared a new edition of [Samuel] Loveman’s Out of the Immortal Night (2004) — a volume that we thought had included the bulk of his work, but which has now been augmented with a number of additional pieces, along with a long interview of Loveman conducted by a colleague in the 1960s.”

Also what sounds like a useful one-volume collection of Machen’s autobiographical works, now in the public domain…

“I am assembling a volume of Machen’s autobiographical writings (his three formal autobiographies — Far Off Things, Things Near and Far, and The London Adventure, augmented by a few separate essays), as a kind of supplement to my recent edition of Machen’s Collected Fiction.”

One assumes he’s aware of Strange Roads (1924) and will include it.

Shrine

18 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Just released, Shrine is a Lovecraft-inspired total conversion mod for the game Doom 2, with a makeover art-style that’s pixel-art meets comics. Doom II being the classic old shooter videogame that everyone used to play back in the mid 1990s.

Free but you’ll need a copy of Doom II installed “and should be running GZDoom with ‘jump’ enabled”.

Added to Open Lovecraft

17 Sunday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* P. N. Harrison, Book review of H.P. Lovecraft: Selected Works, Critical Perspectives and Interviews on His Influence, Mythlore, Fall/Winter 2019. (Finds this affordable academic book useful for introductory classroom use).

* R. R. Menegotto with J.C. Arendt, “Genero, Opressao E Horror Cosmico: a Caracterizacao De Lavinia Whateley em O Horror de Dunwich, de H. P. Lovecraft”, Scripta Uniandrade, Vol. 17 No. 1, 2019. (In Spanish. The characterisation of Lavinia Whateley in “The Dunwich Horror”).

* P. Pyrka, “Haunting Poe’s Maze: Investigative Obsessions in the Weird Fictions of Stefan Grabinski and H. P. Lovecraft”, Avant, Vol. VIII, No. 2, 2017. (Suggests that Lovecraft’s writing style arises out of a desire to write ‘like’ Poe, but also his inability to do so).

Lovecraft’s Influences and Favorites

16 Saturday Nov 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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In January 2019 Librivox started on recording “Lovecraft’s Influences and Favorites”. While not quite ready for prime-time, the set is now 80% complete.

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