The quality Stuff To Blow Your Mind podcast has a new three-parter on the famous Minotaur and its Cretan labyrinth.
Lovecraft would, like most children before the early 1980s, have early become familiar with Greek myth and with the Minotaur story. He found it early in his boyhood, and in vivid form, in Hawthorne’s Tanglewood Tales for Boys and Girls (1853). Despite the book’s misleadingly rustic title — from which one might expect only cosy mid-Victorian woodland cottages and merrily skipping milk-maids — Hawthorne actually recounts powerful Ancient Greek myth… “the stories of the Minotaur, the Pygmies, the Dragon’s Teeth, Circe’s Palace, the Pomegranate Seeds, and the Golden Fleece” (S.T. Joshi, I Am Providence). Sadly, libraries in the U.S. are now pulling Hawthorne from the shelves. Apparently he offends some perpetually-offended politically-correct sect or other. Laughably, Upton Sinclair, once the golden boy of the left and about whom Lovecraft was sniffy, is being swept away along with Hawthorne.
walker8walker said:
Of interest? In 1975 John McInnis produced a thesis titled H.P. Lovecraft, the Maze and the Minotaur.
David Haden said:
Thanks. Yes, I linked to it two years ago here.