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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: October 2022

‘The Oblique City’ – Lovecraft in Quebec

11 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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“The Oblique City: H.P. Lovecraft, New France and Quebec”, a new gallery exhibition by comics (BD) artist Christian Quesnel. At the Galerie Montcalm in Canada, running until 8th December 2022…

The latest work by Christian Quesnel, ‘La cité oblique’, a free interpretation of the Quebec travelogue by H.P. Lovecraft … sprawling mists, forgotten deities and poignant creatures

Also I found a podcast interview with the artist, though it doesn’t appear to be in English.

The blurb for the podcast usefully reveals that the works are also in a print volume…

his [BD] album La Cité oblique, published by Editions Alto

Tracking this down, one finds that the book appeared in August 2022 and the blurb reveals more…

Christian Quesnel spent several years creating this magnum opus, which is enriched by Ariane Gelinas’s soaring prose … a parallel history of Quebec … [Lovecraft’s] wanderings through “the city of enigmas walled behind the closed shutters of dream” combine brilliantly with a Lovecraftian tale of the brave deeds of Qartier and Loui Heyber. The result is a highly hallucinatory tribute to the father of the Cthulhu Mythos, as well as a fascinating reworking of the past.

Sounds great. I look forward to seeing the book appear in English.

Forthcoming McFarland books

10 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Why do publishers make it so difficult to find out about forthcoming books? For instance, the McFarland website has no way to search by all books + latest, by date. But after some naughty URL-hacking by me, they do now. Though even then you still have to manually open the book blurb fold-away section for each and every page. And then another section to get the publication date. Sigh. Oh, for a unified all-publishers news-feed for all forthcoming non-fiction books in English. Hint: it’s definitely not Amazon, which is rubbish at that and also clogged up with shovelware and ‘blank notepads’ junk.

Anyway, some possible forthcoming or just-out McFarland titles of interest to Tentaclii readers. As always with McFarland, some will be gems, some clunkers…

Ancient Stone Sites of New England and the Debate Over Early European Exploration (2nd Edition)

Reading the Great American Zombie: The Living Dead in Literature

The Dark Side of G.K. Chesterton (“explores the darker fringes of his wild imagination”)

Music and the Paranormal: An Encyclopedic Dictionary

Fantastic Serial Sites of California: Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Locations, 1919–1955 (screen filming locations)

How to Misunderstand Tolkien: The Critics and the Fantasy Master

Beowulf in Comic Books and Graphic Novels

The Writer and the Cross: Interviews with Authors of Christian Historical Fiction

The Knights Templar in Popular Culture

Frank Drake (1930-2022)

10 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, Scholarly works

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It’s sad to hear of the death of Frank Drake, originator of the famous Drake Equation.

Of course Lovecraft never lived to hear his November 1961 equation, or even an intimation of it in early science-fiction. He never put its weightings so precisely, but I do recall that in his letters he sometimes put his mind to thinking along the same logical step-by-step lines, about the chances of other intelligent and enterprising beings elsewhere in the galaxy. I seem to recall a passage in which he estimated the likely time between the emergence of each new sentient species, and from that logically extrapolated according to the astronomy of his day (which was still discovering basic matters about the universe), concluding there was a good chance of other intelligences.

Though re-finding the relevant quotes would take a long time. Roll on the unified mega-index of Lovecraft’s letters, which will hopefully have entries for concepts such as “Extraterrestrials, likelihood of actual existence”. Possibly the forthcoming ‘Lovecraft and astronomy’ book will also have some identification of the relevant letters.

Digital Art Live magazine #72

09 Sunday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Available now, the new Digital Art Live magazine #72 (October 2022). I’ve newly expanded it, with ten new additional features and the issue runs to a chunky 108 pages in PDF. Few are in the mood for a gloomy Halloween issue at present, so the October theme is “Costume”. With a focus on fun and futuristic clothes, mostly in 3D rather than 2D painted. Though there are a few “Halloween” touches, here and there.

DAL72

It’s important that this issue sells. It’s the first being sold for $5 per-issue. Admittedly the theme lacks Lovecraftian appeal… but any appropriate publicity you can give the Gumroad link in your own digital arts forums, on suitable Facebook groups, art-blogs, will be most welcome.

If this issue sells then the November issue will be on the new AI image generator tools. If any Tentaclii reader has good contacts with the developers of such, I’d welcome an introduction — with a view to an interview done via email (a list of questions is sent).

Lovecrafter #9 and #10

08 Saturday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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The German Lovecraftians report that…

The new double-issue (9 + 10) of The Lovecrafter magazine was sent out this month by our hard-working cultist Andre. It should have reached our members’ mail-boxes by now.

The theme of the double-issue is “Lovecraft’s Geography” / “Dreamlands”, and TOCs include…

* “Somewhere in the middle of nowhere” examines various locations from Lovecraft’s works in detail.

* Another article goes “the opposite way and describes how role-playing games mix geographical reality and fiction”.

* A further article goes “in search of lost species”.

* An article on “the Cthuloid book portfolio of the Nighttrain publishing house”.

* An interview in which “Rahel and Rene talked extensively with Huan Vu about the current status of the shooting of his Dreamlands project.” (movie?)

* Many RPG game scenarios and game reviews, and more.

They also report a new book…

in [German publisher] Festa’s Weird Fiction series. In November, Dunkle Pforten will be the first of a total of six volumes that will [eventually] contain all the stories by Robert Aickman (1914-1981) in German for the first time.

Contemporary Biography Builder

07 Friday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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A useful time-saver for researchers. A Contemporary Biography Builder tool, with a focus on America. First insert the not-so-famous person’s birth-death dates. Then advance the death date by 20 years, to make sure most obituaries, posthumous survey articles and memoirs are captured. Then search.

You get pre-built links, constrained to those dates and the name…

Long and Voluminous

06 Thursday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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A new Voluminous podcast reads a Lovecraft letter to Frank Belknap Long, 25th February 1924. It’s part of the new Long cache deposited at the John Hay Library, and apparently it’s largely new here…

A couple of excerpts from this letter were published in Selected Letters I, but it is not yet available in the Brown Digital Repository, which means that except for a very small handful of people, you are among the first to experience the complete version since Frank Belknap Long opened the envelope 98 years ago!

The reading is followed by a good interview with the John Hay librarian in charge of the Lovecraft materials. It’s revealed that the collection has un-digitised collections from the Lovecraft Circle, and they welcome endowments specifically targeted at Lovecraft and the Circle (which, I guess, might enable scanning). It seems they can’t dip into the general university funds to pay for such things, and Special Collections relies on endowments and donations.

The S.T. Joshi Fellowship at Brown is revealed to have re-opened to scholars. That was mentioned in the podcast as being “1st October”, but it seems this was a slip of the memory. The S.T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship Web page states 1st November 2022, so there’s still time to apply. A point to keep in mind for applications is that Brown is said (in the interview) to favour applications to work with un-digitised areas of collections. It was thus interesting to hear that they have un-digitised Circle materials, and also one of the world’s largest collections of Silver Age U.S. comics, in that respect. So potentially one might track the early emergence and evolution of Lovecraftian themes in comics.

Another factor revealed in the interview is that, as of NecronomiCon 2022, scanning of the new Long letters has not yet started. So presumably they won’t be arriving online very soon.

Campus Miskatonic 2022

05 Wednesday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi brings news of a Campus Miskatonic convention. 5th November 2022, in Verdun, northern France. This year the focus is on discussing the relationship between Lovecraft and R.E. Howard.

Funny old Wright

04 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Once around the Bloch: an unauthorized autobiography of Lovecraft correspondent Robert Bloch, on Archive.org to borrow.

A couple of interesting points. In the earlier part of the 1920s, living in suburban Chicago…

Children’s books were not yet a major concern of the publishing industry: as a result of the cultural lag, libraries offered favorites of a previous generation. Tom Swift was still inventing, and G.A. Henry’s heroes were busily saving a vanishing British Empire. My father would introduce me to the dime-novel demi-gods of his own boyhood, buying reprints which detailed the exploits of Buffalo Bill, Nick Carter and Frank Merriwell.

This would seem to somewhat contradict Whitehead’s statement that many American boys were no longer aware of the Sherlock Holmes stories, although admittedly Holmes had by then gone off the boil and is not mentioned by Bloch. Lovecraft’s friend and fellow-writer Whitehead, a close observer of American boy-culture in evening clubs and summer-camps, had remarked in a 1922 essay on the…

fact that there is just now growing up a generation of readers for whom the Doyle of ‘Sherlock Holmes’ is an obsolescent figure.

But perhaps there were regional and urban/rural differences in consumption at that time, and urban Chicago was not the same as semi-rural Florida in term of boyhood reading tastes or availability. Possible also a difference between summer-camp boys and those who had to work through the summer.

The teen Bloch later visited the Weird Tales offices. On editor Farnsworth Wright and his business manager at Weird Tales…

Both men had a rare sense of humor, which is probably why they tolerated a teenage interloper like myself.

We don’t tend to think of Wright as having “a rare sense of humor”, but apparently he did in person.

The Hobbit, unabridged and full-cast

03 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

≈ 4 Comments

Here’s something which may brighten a dull Monday. I’ve been pleased to discover a new free ten-hour unabridged audio version of Tolkien’s The Hobbit. Full-cast (one man, young, British) + audio FX + music.

The Hobbit (Audiobook) by Bluefax is not quite up to the vocal standards of master-mimic Phil Dragash, who had earlier accomplished the same thing with an unabridged The Lord of the Rings. But the voicework is very good, it’s a great listen and is overall a fine audiowork and precursor to hearing Dragash’s LoTR.

My understand is that to legally download this you need to first own the retail book and the retail audiobook. Also the soundtrack album for the disappointing and overblown The Hobbit movies. Which is where the music comes from, but be warned that the Hobbit movies are otherwise the worst possible introduction to Middle-earth.

With a good unabridged audiobook to hand for repeated listening, I may now expand my The Cracks of Doom book to a third edition. To encompass the ‘untold tales’ to be found in the cracks of The Hobbit as well as The Lord of the Rings.

There’s a certain amount of horror to be found here, and indeed children’s book reviewers warned of it on publication. I don’t refer to that strange anti-Tolkien phobia, which seems to involve a horror of encountering fey singing elves. Yes, there are singing elves a-plenty. But the central chapters on Mirkwood and its spiders may have some reaching for their Lovecraft, for light relief.

The text used by Bluefax is the modern edition, which subtly aligns the 1937 original of the Gollum sequence with the plot of the 1950s The Lord of the Rings, and also makes other small changes. Such as not having Bilbo briefly note some itinerant hobbits when he and Thorin make their way out of the Shire via Breeland (though the existence of roving hobbits who choose to be itinerant is later revealed in LoTR, when Merry inserts his brief history of Breeland… “Some, doubtless, were no better than tramps, ready to dig a hole in any bank and stay only as long as it suited them.”). Also, in the early drafts of LoTR, ‘Trotter’ (later Strider) was to have been one of these roving hobbits.

September on Tentaclii

02 Sunday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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September departs. The leaves are still on the trees around Tentaclii Towers, and hardly any autumnal colours are yet to be seen in the vast sweep of treetops. But the northerly gales are blowing through, and it can’t be long before the leaves turn and fall in abundance as we head toward Halloween. Not that many will be keen to lightheartedly celebrate Halloween this year, being beset by a multitude of real horrors.

Despite intermittent pain (hopefully temporary) I’m hard at work on the first bumper $5 issue of the monthly Digital Art Live magazine, which should be released by the end of next week. Anything you can do to publicise this October issue, after it becomes available, will be most welcome. Yet I’m still finding the time to keep Tentaclii rolling on a relatively daily basis, albeit with the temporary suspension of the long ‘Picture Postcards’ posts on Fridays due to time constraints.

As for the blog in general, I’m pleased to say that after six months Google Search appears to be treating the moved Tentaclii normally again. Though there’s still a lack of deep Google indexing of older posts.

Here at Tentaclii my historical delving was rather light. But I posted my second long post with notes on my reading of “Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei”. I also found another primary article on the museum run by Lovecraft’s friend James F. Morton. Morton himself describes his Paterson Museum in 1933, adding a little more detail to what we know about it from geological journals and suchlike. With all the various data available, it may now be possible to fairly faithfully reconstruct the museum as the setting for a Mythos tale or RPG scenario.

In September I finally finished and released my big scholarly Tolkien book, Tree & Star: Tolkien and the quest for Earendel. 200,000 words and over six years of detailed work. As usual lots of new discoveries and footnotes. I could have spent another day finessing the large index, and a further day in yet another round of proof-reading, but the index is quite functional and the book is public at last. It is available now to buy on Gumroad, as a .PDF ebook.

I’ve now cracked, to my own satisfaction, three of the biggest mysteries in fantastic literature. The source for the Time Traveller in The Time Machine (see my Wells book); the likely identity and location of the Gawain-poet (or at least his patron, see my Gawain book); and now the fateful word “earendel” from which sprang Tolkien’s legendarium. All have close connections to my part of England, as it happens.

Kipling may be next on the bucket-list, and he even has a very slim connection (via his dad) to North Staffordshire. Though there the only unsolved mystery appears to be why he has been airbrushed out of the history of early science-fiction. Following my late-August annotation of “With the Night Mail”, I posted a few follow-on blog posts in September which dug down into why Kipling was… “the first modern science fiction writer”, and found quotes from leading sci-fi authors of the 20th century to back this up. More such quotes are welcome, if you know of any, especially from Heinlein who was a great admirer. Following these posts I made a new Tentaclii blog-post tag for my Kipling posts, and another for my few posts about Conan Doyle.

This month I also took a look at Lovecraft biographer de Camp’s non-fiction science writing. Active in the era of Asimov and Sagan, it seems he was something of a stalwart flanker of these great men — and at a critical time when the line needed to be held against a rising tide of 1970s irrationality and mumbo-jumbo. In looking at this side of de Camp, I inadvertently discovered another “Lovecraft as character” tale new to me — de Camp’s “Balsamo’s Mirror” (1978).

Only one substantial ‘Postcards’ post at Tentaclii, this month. I took a look at ‘Purgatory’ and ‘Paradise’ in Newport, one of Lovecraft’s favourite places and local summer excursions. I also fixed up the picture-loading on the old blog posts that had featured the same place.

Only one interesting new Lovecraft-related book of note this month, in English. The forthcoming revised and expanded Eyes of the God: Selected Writings of R. H. Barlow. Tangentially related to Lovecraft, I also spotted and posted about the new historical survey books Radio Psychics: Mind Reading and Fortune Telling in American Broadcasting, 1920–1940 (partly relevant to “Nyarlathotep”?); and a book on the curious overlaps of The Occult and the Sciences in Modern Britain (i.e. 1870s-1930s).

S.T. Joshi’s annual scholarly megajournal Penumbra is forthcoming and has released its TOC for 2022. I’m in the 2022 issue, so I should hopefully be getting a copy in due course. I haven’t had the Lovecraft Annual arrive yet either.

In overseas book and journal news: the large and handsome new issue of the Italian Linus magazine devotes itself to Lovecraft; the French magazine Actuality: The Universe of Books brought news that leading French prestige publisher La Pleiade has a major Lovecraft edition in the works; the German Lovecraftians reported a successful annual summer gathering; the Italian journal Studi Lovecraftiani No. 21 appeared, and I dug up and translated the TOCs for Tentaclii readers. An up-away over in Russia, Russian readers had the first volume of a I Am Providence translation in hardback.

The cover of the forthcoming Lovecraft in Holland emerged as a preview, and it appears the book will be in English rather than Dutch — the title is in English and I assume even the writer of the foreword Robert M. Price can’t quite stretch his immense range to talents to encompass fluent Dutch. Also forthcoming, presumably in 2023, is an un-titled book on Lovecraft and New York City in the 1920s.

In podcasts this month, Henrik Moller’s 150th podcast interviewed members of the “Providence Pals”, pioneering early Lovecraft scholars. Voluminous at NecronomiCon delved into the local newspaper astrology debate which the young Lovecraft engaged in, with live readings of the letters. Various new story readings were linked to, at Librivox and elsewhere.

In comics the Spanish now have Alan Moore’s major work Providence as a translated one-volume omnibus book; in France A Bestiary of the Twilight (‘Le Bestiaire du Crepuscule’) is a major and well-reviewed new French graphic novel that has Lovecraft as the lead character. Only in French at present. The new YouTube “H.P. Lovecraft – an animated biography” also used toony artwork.

2023 event news is starting to emerge, with Howard Days 2023 naming their dates and theme. The 3rd London Lovecraft Festival has dates in February 2023.

Also in September, I took a deep dive into “fixed layout” .ePub files, in pursuit of the feasibility of an animated magazine format (now that .PDFs are effectively bjorked in that regard). The simple and lightweight looping animation format is there (.aPNG), also the simple code* to control to prevent the manic appearance of such. What is not really there yet is the desktop Windows .ePub reader. The only really viable ereader choice for that is Thorium, which supports both fixed-layout and .aPNGs images. It’s free and open source, but Thorium would not be ideal. One would have to say to readers: “Erm… you have to use this particular reader. It’s sort-of OK, and… it’s the only choice for the Windows desktop”.

Ok, that’s it for the summary of September 2022. As always, please consider becoming my Patron on Patreon, or increasing your monthly patronage there. You can also donate directly via PayPal, or buy my books or other sold items. You can also help with a free link or two from your own blog, or on social media. It really helps me out in these increasingly difficult times, thanks.


* simple code

Simple working and multi-browser tested HTML code to control an .aPNG. You’re welcome.


Animated demo:


Click here to replay


Providence from the North, 1849

01 Saturday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 3 Comments

Providence from the North, 1849, a Library of Congress print. Here cleaned and rectified, and reduced to a more sensible size.

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