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Tentaclii

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

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: July 2020

Call: Shadows Over Avalon

17 Friday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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I don’t normally feature calls from anthology editors, but I’ll make an exception for one that’s both historical and British-flavoured. Shadows Over Avalon seeks stories arising from a short passage in H.P. Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward…

They were the pointed Saxon minuscules [scribal handwriting] of the eighth or ninth century A.D., and brought with them memories of an uncouth time when under a fresh Christian veneer ancient faiths and ancient rites stirred stealthily, and the pale moon of Britain looked sometimes on strange deeds in the Roman ruins of Caerleon and Hexham, and by the towers along Hadrian’s crumbling wall.

One of Lovecraft’s ancestral roots went back to Hexham and its district, and he had made an intensive study of the area via maps and books.

The remains of the Ancient Roman frontier wall at Hexham.

What’s wanted for the new book? The editors seek… “Cthulhu Mythos stories set in the Arthurian world”. Deadline: 1st October 2020.

Here’s Bartholemew’s 1910 map of the Arthurian Regions, to help you along, though doubtless the Arthurians now have better. Chester as Caerleon is very dodgy, and presumably the likes of Wolverhampton are only there for orientation.

And two evocative pictures from Hexham…

In the Saxon crypt at Hexham Abbey.

Ancient Roman memorial stone to a soldier, later found and set up in Hexham Abbey.

H. P. Lovecraft’s Odd Couples

16 Thursday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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The Gay & Lesbian Review surveys “H. P. Lovecraft’s Odd Couples”, as part of the July-August 2020 issue. This issue is on the ‘Fantastics’ and appears to be a special on fantasy writers and artists. Available now at a modest $3.99 for a digital copy. Surprisingly it’s not also sold via Amazon, or else I’d have had a one-click copy downloading to my Kindle.

Barlow’s correspondence with receiving libraries

16 Thursday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, REH

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Bobbie Derie delves into letters arising from Barlow’s deposits of letter-caches with receiving libraries, in the late 1930s. The focus is on the whereabouts of the Robert E. Howard letters, but the article also throws a little light on the possible disposition of some of Lovecraft’s rarer books after his death…

Later, Mrs. Gamwell [Lovecraft’s aunt] may want someone to look over Howard’s [Lovecraft’s] books for possible library donations, I believe there is not much for the Harris Collection, but other departments might find material.

So the assumption that it was all trucked down to the hill to the Dana bookstore may not be the whole story. Before that happened there may have been some ‘picking’ of certain choice volumes by Brown academics, as well as by his aunt and a few members of his circle.

The Dark Man, enlightened

15 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, REH

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Thanks to GreyIrish for the table-of-contents for The Dark Man journal on Robert E. Howard and pulp writers. My post of earlier today has now updated to give readers the TOC.

The naturalist’s bookmark

15 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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A Providence naturalist’s bookmark, a potentially useful RPG prop or story prompt. From a Providence notebook of 1897. Lovecraft knew Westminster Street well, and the prospect of obtaining “preserved” animals or curious “fresh specimens” there seems to offer much scope for Mythos fiction.

Update:

The Dark Man journal – new issue

15 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

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I see that Amazon now lists a June 2020 edition of The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies. At the journal’s website there’s also a new call for papers with a deadline of 16th August 2020.

Thanks to GreyIrish who has provided the TOCs for the latest issue of The Dark Man…

* Editorial by Jason Ray Carney and Nicole Emmelhainz-Carney.
* Willard M. Oliver, “Robert E. Howard and Jack London’s Martin Eden: analyzing the influence of Martin Eden on Howard and his semi-autobiography”.
* Todd Vick, “The Kid, Two-Gun, and history”.
* Karen Kahoutek, “More Than Meets the Eye: the women protagonists of the Conan stories”.
* Ralph Norris, “The Coming of Kull”.
* Luke F. Dodd, “The Sword and Sorcery Themes of The Sword’s Age of Winters, Gods of the Earth, and Warp Riders. (Album reviews).
* The Dark Man interview with The Cromcast [podcast]. (Interview).


There’s also now a table of contents for last summer’s issue. I learn it had an essay on Lovecraft, “Heredity and Madness in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Rats in the Walls””.


Also of note is a forthcoming book by a 2020 Dark Man contributor, Todd Vick, titled Renegades and Rogues: The Life and Legacy of Robert E. Howard. It’s set to appear from the University of Texas Press. It sounds to me like a ‘Howard 101’ book aimed at academics who need a quick primer…

You may not know the name Robert E. Howard, but you probably know his work. His most famous creation, Conan the Barbarian, is an icon of popular culture.

Set for publication in November 2020 or January 2021, the dating varies.

Barcelona in 1977

15 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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It’s Barcelona in 1977, and you’re easing through the pungent alleyways of the Ramblas having bagged this new three-volume set of Relatos de los mitos de Cthulhu…

The above offers another peep at what Lovecraft looked like to the Spanish and Latin Americans in the 1970s, this time with rather more appealing covers than my 1972 example. The covers offer a nice visual mix of monsters, astrological constellations (as if seen low on the horizon through foliage), and what one might interpret as the ‘waves of time’ or ‘cosmic waves’ or simply the ocean.

The ‘Lovecraft and others’ bit suggests that the Spanish were getting a large helping of Derleth along with their Lovecraft, at this point in time. Derleth was apparently the editor. The set appears to have gone to at least another two editions, though with new and less appealing covers than these.

Lovecraft’s Dictionary

14 Tuesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Kittee Tuesday, Scholarly works

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Lovecraft’s well-used dictionary was a red-bound one-volume edition of Stormonth or Stormonth’s Dictionary of the English Language (Harpers, New York, 1885 revised). Given its status as one of the most famous dictionaries, it’s regrettable that Lovecraft’s edition is only to be found scanned and online at Hathi — regrettable because Hathi is now so slow as to be effectively unusable, and because they don’t allow whole volumes to be downloaded. The best that Archive.org can offer is an 1874 British edition via the University of Oxford.

Spine of the $6 Harpers edition of 1885, as sold recently at auction.

Lovecraft used the Rev. James Stormonth’s venerable dictionary to help him write early letters to Moe on the permissible rhyming of rrr words, circa 1914-1916. It appears that, at that point in time, he had been using the single-volume work since he had first needed a good dictionary. It was one of two dictionaries he asked his aunts to send to New York, when he married Sonia, the other being Webster’s Unabridged (Webster’s International, 1890). Evidently it was not bagged by burgling youths in Red Hook, and if they saw it then they likely baulked at its hefty 1,200+ pages and well-thumbed state. A later letter shows Lovecraft was still consulting and recommending Stormonth in 1929. As late as December 1936 he tells Fritz Leiber that the use of the word constrictious in Adept’s Gambit is doubtful because…

I can’t find it in either of the two dictionaries — a Stormonth & an 1890 Webster’s International — which I possess.

He remarks to Moe that he valued Stormonth because it was thoroughly British and his British father had used the same edition, partly to prevent him “becoming nasally Yankeeised” in America. Lovecraft also valued it because its “conservative authority” eschewed what Lovecraft called “Oxfordisms” (slangy ‘tricks of phrase, syntax, and metaphor’, emanating from the University of Oxford) and gave the proper London pronunciation of the mid Victorian period. The first edition was in 1871, so the well-bred speech of the 1860s might be assumed…

Amidst the sea of conflicting usage, the man of sense will pronounce as his father and grandfather pronounced before him. I use a Stormonth’s Dictionary which was my father’s — recommended to him by his father. And I shall use it till I die, Sir! A fig for your momentary fashions!

He was largely averse to the Victorians, especially their mawkish Dickensian sentiment and their larger forms of architecture. Yet admired the era’s spirit of idealism, and also its personal manners and refined pronunciation. In 1927 he wrote…

If I could create an ideal world, it would be an England with the fire of the Elizabethans, the correct taste of the Georgians, and the refinement and pure ideals of the Victorians.

Given his vast collection of old books, it seems a little curious to me that Lovecraft only ever had two dictionaries, even if they were thick enough to stun a rat and thus presumably very comprehensive. The Rev. Stormonth wrote several other useful dictionaries which Lovecraft might have used and enjoyed. For instance, one wonders if Lovecraft knew of his A manual of scientific terms, pronouncing, etymological, and explanatory, chiefly comprising terms in botany, natural history, anatomy, medicine, and veterinary science, with an appendix of specific names (1885), which appears to be a shelf-companion for the scientific reader to Stormonth’s Dictionary edition of the same year. This is now on Archive.org and one can see from the first few pages that it is not an ordinary dictionary, as the startled dipper encounters curiosities such as abrachia (‘absence of the arms’), acanthocephala (‘parasitic worms armed with spines’), achroma (deficiency in colour), actea (‘the elder tree, full of clusters, clustering … black snake root’), aduncate (‘bent in the form of a hook’), amadou (from the German, ‘dry leathery fungus found on old trees’). Even in the first few pages there are inspirations for weird horror stories a-plenty. But perhaps he didn’t need the additional volume, because its 300 pages were already included in the much larger 1885 edition? Until we get a workable online copy of the larger work, we can’t know.


Stormonth’s dictionaries included ‘phonetic pronunciation’, meaning that the word is also given in a special phonetic alphabet meant to indicate ‘how you say it’. You can see an example above, drawn from A manual of scientific terms. Lovecraft appears to have been as conversant with the ‘phonetic pronunciation’ system as he was with poetic meter. But this system is not easily graspable by the tongue of the layman. Is there a simpler method to ‘hear’ the form, involving computers? Of course, you won’t find the ‘phonetic symbols’ on a standard keyboard. But what about a virtual keyboard? Yes, there’s one of those at ipa.typeit.org, so you can at least painstakingly get the complete ‘word’ from the page of a book to your Windows clipboard. But how then to have the computer ‘speak’ it? The indications are that such things are still in the realm of academic papers, surprisingly, but there is one basic option — for free at the 2017 tech-demo phoneme synthesis. Which, apart from the mechanical robo-voice in which the words are spoken, is a cool demo because it’s happening in your browser in javascript. As the maker of the site states, “It was odd that this tool did not exist”. I concur. Who, looking at a dictionary like Stormonth, would not want a digital version of it to embed one-click ‘click to pronounce’ speech-to-audio synthesis?

But possibly a more portable solution might be best — a free browser add-on that knows how to OCR (copy) the notation symbols from the screen, then offers options for correcting the inevitable copying errors from small complex text, and then knows how to pronounce the resulting ‘word’ using your chosen TTS audio voice. There is a browser tool that does this for the phonetic instances given on Wikipedia entries, but in that case they’re already neatly typed out. Such an addon might be extended to OCR not only the International Phonetic Alphabet (est. 1888), but also pre-1888 phonetic systems, and allow a choice of speaking voice. In which case, someone should please synthesise Terry Thomas, so that we can get an authentic sounding male British voice for the Victorian dictionaries.

Or erm… (oh, it’s Kittee Tuesday!) just for fun you could have it read by a cat. Now there’s an idea, a TTS voice that can read any text in a voice that sounds sort-of like it should be a cat ‘speaking’. Just add small purr-lings, and micro-meows, and some touches of LOLcat-ese…

PDF Index Generator 2.9 – indexes footnotes

13 Monday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Writers of non-fiction may be interested in the software PDF Index Generator 2.9 (February 2020) which is automated back-of-the-book indexing software for books. This latest release very usefully adds…

Ability to index footnotes automatically & list the footnote numbers of the indexed terms in the output index.

The software ‘knows’ it’s indexing a footnote, because it detects footnotes as being in a different font/size from the body text. Prior to this release you could add footnote numbers, but you had to do it manually. Not much fun, if you have 1,000 footnotes. But now the software can do it automatically.

The cost is $70, and I’ve never seen it go to a 50% discount even on Black Friday. It’s the best of about three choices, I’d say, and it’s the one I use. It’s now supported with a new 17 minute YouTube step-by-step tutorial, and there’s also a video demo of how to set the footnote indexing.

Basic usage for me is: first include footnotes and then filter by “Capitalised Phrases”; then add a filter to get “surnames; forenames” switched over; go through the resulting long list and un-tick the irrelevancies and mis-fires; then output the formatted index to Word; then (while proof-reading) manually slot in various un-capitalised concepts of interest to the likely reader. The result will not get you an invitation to the annual ball of the Society of Indexers, but is useful and should be good enough for a self-published book.

All of this is for a static index, not a dynamic index. By which I mean, if you then go tinkering with pages and shifting the text around, your index is kaput in terms of page-numbers. You thus have to be absolutely sure the book is finished bar some very minor typo-fixes, and the index is then the very last feature you add to the body of the book before the final-final proofreading.

Note that this is Java-based software and as such it used to require that you install Java and keep it updated (otherwise it’s a huge security risk). But with 2.9…

The Windows edition of the program now comes with Java embedded inside it, so you don’t have to worry about installing the right Java edition to run the program.

Anything Java is still a potential security risk, though, so you may still want to run it offline on an old laptop.

A current blog on Providence architecture

13 Monday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Architecture Here and There is a fine architectural appreciation blog for Providence, from the author of the book Lost Providence (2017). The RSS feed is not linked but is here.

“All life might well be a trifling pimple or disease”

13 Monday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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The Voluminous podcast dips into Lovecraft’s letters to his aunts, to find one on “Laundry and Influenza”…

Written during his time in New York, this letter to HPL’s Aunt Lillian discusses … the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918.

I haven’t yet listened to the podcast yet, and perhaps the presenters verbally state where the letter is from. But I have the Letters from New York volume, and there’s no entry for ‘Influenza’ in the index. A Google Books search hints (without a snippet) it might be in Selected Letters 1, but Joshi’s index booklet (2nd ed.) for the Selected Letters has no entry at all for ‘Influenza’, and my quick flick-through of Vol. 1 in paper fails to identify a letter that appears to mention the topic.

Presumably all will be revealed when we get the indexed and annotated ‘aunts letters’, due later this summer in two volumes from Hippocampus. Update: I’ve now listened to the show, and yes, it’s from this forthcoming book.

In the meanwhile, I see that Hippocampus is now newly listing No. 27 of Dead Reckonings: A Review of Horror and the Weird in the Arts.

The Scientific Romance in Britain

12 Sunday Jul 2020

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

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MarzAat reviews Brian Stableford’s scholarly history The Scientific Romance in Britain, 1890-1950 (1985). His review also reveals a book unknown to me and not previously noted on Tentaclii…

I would recommend this book to others interested in the history of science fiction, but, I suspect, it’s been superseded by Stableford’s four volume New Atlantis. Published in 2017, it pushes his survey back in time to some works of proto-scientific romance starting with Francis Bacon.

New Atlantis: A Narrative History of Scientific Romance appears to be from Wildside Press though some booksellers have it as Borgo Press, and the cost of extracting a set of paperbacks from Wildside is currently $64 plus shipping. In the UK they can also be had via eBay, with free shipping. There appears to be no ebook version yet.

Vol. I: The Origins of Scientific Romance sounds rather interesting in its own right. A weary reviewer castigated the book for its compendious nature…

Its aim seems to be to enumerate in the most exhaustive fashion how virtually every form of storytelling and every instance of scientific or pseudoscientific speculation, from the ancient world to the end of the nineteenth century, contributed to the gestation of the six-decade life of the scientific romance.

… but that sounds fine to me. One may not want to actually read through 300 pages in that form. But it sounds like a good ‘dip in at random’ book, for idle moments with tea and toast. I’d be interested to see if Stableford noticed my local lad Erasmus Darwin as being a precursor of science-fiction.

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