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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Monthly Archives: December 2023

LORA links

16 Saturday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI

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More ‘style LORAs’, plugins for AI models, new in the last ten days or so. Plucked from among the daily tidal-wave of LORAs for individual game and anime characters. These are for use with a suitable AI model, plugged into desktop software such as InvokeAI or ComfyUI.

SyFyEye1 – v2.0. Big sci-fi landscapes, with large planets / moons in the sky, veering towards ‘wallpaper’ rather than old-school space-art.

The above might be used in combination with the also-new Grand Scale LORA.

The Shadow v1.0. The pulp character.

Aliens from “Mars Attacks”.

Horror Manga in the modern b&w manga style. Looks a bit toony, but you might be able to push it more towards a Junji Ito look. Perhaps in combo with the new Junji Ito LORA, even.

Book cover with face. Possibly of special interest to RPG makers needing artwork.

Alfred Bestall Style, creator of the British comics character Rupert the Bear. Also looks useful for a ‘1930s vintage artwork’ look with suitably muted printed colours, rather than the garish colours of modern reprints. However, to ‘de-age’ faded paper prints and old paintings a bit, you might look at the White Papper LORA.

By the way, the latest power-metric for AI image-making speedsters is… “cats per second” (CPS). Several new tweaks / modules have recently enabled near real-time AI generation of images. At the same time the power-draw is going down. These things will be running in a display panel on the side of your breakfast toaster before long. Or perhaps first in a nude-y camera, given the interests of most AI users.

In the Japanese Gardens

15 Friday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

≈ 1 Comment

Given the dreary weather, for this week’s ‘Picture Postals from Lovecraft’ post it seems suitable to revisit one of Lovecraft’s favourite places. The Japanese Gardens at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens, if only in b&w. These had opened in 1915…

… and were thus barely a decade old when Lovecraft encountered them in the mid 1920s.

Here we see a Lovecraft-alike writing near the bridge of the Japanese pond, with its bronze storks.

These are apparently from circa 1925, and are thus as Lovecraft would have seen it.

The place was also open in winter, when the hot-houses would have been the main draw. But after a fresh fall of snow the Japanese Gardens would also have had a certain allure. New York had several record-breaking snow-storms during Lovecraft’s time there. Again these pictures are from near to the time that Lovecraft was in New York City.

It’s a Scream!

14 Thursday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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40 Years of Scream!: The Archival Collection, collecting the British children’s horror weekly, which featured fave 2000AD writers such as John Wagner, Alan Grant and Alan Moore. 464 pages, set for release in April 2024 and pre-ordering now.

Mayor Lovecraft

14 Thursday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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I think I missed this one. The 30+ Minutes with H.P. Lovecraft podcast had “Mayor Lovecraft” – Leeman Kessler chats about playing Lovecraft for over a decade (December 2022). Kessler created and performed the popular “Ask Lovecraft” series of YouTube shorts.

Peruvian gold?

13 Wednesday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

≈ 3 Comments

Currently on Abe Books at a silly $22k, the book History of the Conquest of Peru (1847), with a questionable Lovecraft inscription.

Popular Magazine

13 Wednesday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Popping up on Archive.org, a scan of The Popular Magazine for July 1908. Let’s take a look at what might have appealed to Lovecraft. Joshi has him regularly reading… “Street & Smith’s Popular Magazine around 1905–10″.

Cover: finishing from the deck of a crowded passenger boat. Hmmm, somewhat lacking in fish-monsters.

Looking at the contents, things get more interesting the further toward the back one goes. There one finds items such as…

THE WHITE MAN’S GIFT. A tale of stirring adventure on the Patagonian pampas.

THE WHITE VEIL OF MYSTERY. Tells of the coming of two ships to a strange rock in the ocean.

TALES OF THE LOST LEGION. A Series.

Otherwise, conventional historical sea adventures, modern business tricks, mining and gold in the west, prehistoric adventure.

Even the above three pale when looked at more closely. For instance “White Veil” has nothing of “the bells of faery” about it. “The Lost Legion” is not about Ancient Romans and not set in northern England, but is a ‘lost race’ tale in America.

There are also a number of half-page fillers, such as this which brings to mind “The Dunwich Horror”…

THE two heaviest boys in the world live on a farm in Texas, and, although their united ages do not exceed fourteen years, their combined weights total 360 pounds. The elder boy—William Ashcroft — looks a veritable mountain of flesh … At five years of age he was as large as a full-grown man.

Otherwise it’s difficult to see what Lovecraft saw in it, based on this one issue, though it did sometimes carry more unusual material. September 1907, also on Archive.org, seems equally lacking in any Weird Tales type material. My guess is he picked it up for the sequel to Haggard’s famous She in early 1905, and soon after bagged a discounted three-year subscription. It certainly was good value, 224 pages a month for 15 cents.

Limbo and companions

12 Tuesday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Odd scratchings

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In a recent survey of AI LORAs, I found one that made images that resemble the style of the ground-breaking Limbo videogame. Some readers might be curious about the look of the game. So here’s my four-page survey of the small but perfectly-formed sub-genre of such games, from DAL #49 (the ‘Mono’ issue, May 2020).

It’s likely a few more have appeared in the last three years, though I don’t recall spotting any in PC Gamer or Edge.

Necronomicon pages

11 Monday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ 1 Comment

Lots of Necronomicon pages, by MrZarono.

World of Tim Burton

10 Sunday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Advance notice for ‘The World of Tim Burton’, a big retrospective exhibition at the Design Museum in London, opening shortly before Halloween 2024.

Talk: HPL in Greenwich Village

09 Saturday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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The Greenwich Village Village Preservation of New York has a pre-Christmas Lovecraft talk coming up soon. “Labyrinths of Curving Lanes”: Greenwich Village and H.P. Lovecraft will be on 14th December 2023, St. Mark’s in-the-Bowery Church, 131 East 10th Street. Booking now.

Actually, I see that the book being promoted popped out a few weeks ago with little fanfare. I though it was due in early 2024, but you can buy it now in both ebook and paper. I plan to get a copy once Lovecraft in Florida appears, and will hope to do a joint review.

Street & Smith proto-pulps to 1930, now online

08 Friday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings, Picture postals, Scholarly works

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Northern Illinois University has reportedly completed its scanning project for much of the output of the Street & Smith publishing company to 1930. At the Nickels and Dimes website one can now find, freely online, 113,342 well-scanned pages from 4,790 ‘dime’ novels and proto-pulp ‘story papers’. The work began as “a local initiative in 2013”, but grew over the years and then landed “a grant of $338,630 from the National Endowment for the Humanities” to ensure completion.

The site doesn’t yet have the new press-release about the project’s completion, but a sort-by-date shows it runs to 1930. Note that their U.S. public domain status only extends to 1928, and that only from 1st January 2024.

And there are enough pictures here, and since I have a snuffling cold, I feel can class this post as one of my weekly ‘Picture Postals’ posts. Especially since some of the serials are known to have been enjoyed by Lovecraft in his youth. Such as the ‘Nick Carter’ adventure-mysteries. For instance, one can imagine him being intrigued enough to at least pick this combo of kitties and Egypt off the news-stands for a thumb-through even at age 19…

Though if he read them that late appears to be unknown. Possibly not. Lovecraft recalled them in a letter for the musical and philosophical Galpin, suggesting they were intended for “small boys”…

“Nick Carter and Old Sleuth, dear to the small boys of other generations, and studied almost invariably without knowledge or consent of the reader’s parents!”

Though that would be small boys of the early 1900s, apparently able to read page after page of small text. Something that would likely be deemed beyond the capabilities of the screen-boggled boys of 2023.

Lovecraft read a lot of them…

“If I had kept all the nickel novels — Pluck & Luck, Brave & Bold, Frank Reade, Jesse James, Nick Carter, Old King Brady, &c. — which I surreptitiously read 35 years ago… I could probably get a young fortune for ’em today”.

As to dates, Joshi has him as reading…

“Street & Smith’s Popular Magazine around 1905–10; read the entirety of the Railroad Man’s Magazine (1906–13); he began reading the Black Cat around 1904.”

We also know he gave up on following Conan Doyle’s new Sherlock Holmes tales in 1908.

For ‘prime dime’ Street & Smith juvenile reading we’re probably more likely talking about Lovecraft at between the ages 9 – 16, the years 1899 – 1905. So those would probably be the years to look at first, on the now-completed Nickels and Dimes website. That said, his interest in occasional issues as late as 1913 can’t be ruled out. And, newly interested in the industry trends and markets for fiction, he would have at least glanced at Street & Smith’s covers on the news-stands during the mid 1920s.

He was likely drawn to Popular Magazine by the sequel to the famous She in February 1905.

Note that at Nickels and Dimes you need to enlarge the view before you go to fullscreen. You can’t enlarge once in fullscreen, it seems. Also note that key S&S magazines such as Popular Magazine appear to be missing. Evidently it’s the complete collection, but not complete in terms of the entire S&S output. If you can offer them a complete run of missing titles, or fill-in issues, I guess they’d be quite interested.

Raymond Chandler as a writer of the fantastic

07 Thursday Dec 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

Who knew? Wormwoodiana digs out Raymond Chandler’s Fantasies.

I for one want to know more about “The Four Gods of Bloon” and “The Rubies of Marmelon”, both of which sound almost like Dunsany titles.

Seemingly uncollected in one volume, suggesting an opportunity for a publisher. I assume they were actually written, and that they may still exist somewhere in an archive. Alternatively an opportunity for an anthology of noted writers, each asked to ‘write to one of his unwritten titles’ and in a somewhat Chandler-esque style.

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