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Tentaclii

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

Tentaclii

Monthly Archives: April 2024

Ground-level marketplace panorama

19 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

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This week on ‘Picture Postals’, I stay with Lovecraft’s city of Providence, anticipating the city’s coming NecronomiCon / Armitage Symposium later this year. Here I’ve found a rare wide ground-level view of the Marketplace at the centre of the city. Most such views are elevated.

Marketplace looking toward State Capitol

The date is perhaps 1900, Lovecraft then aged 10 and forming an ever-widening picture of his city based around central hubs such as this. The river is below and on the left, and we can see a bit of the bridge across it. In the distance is the State Capitol building. On the far right, the Board of Trade building, seen below ‘head on’ and with College Hill behind it.

Board of Trade looking toward College Hill

The area where the panorama cameraman is standing was the weekly marketplace. Off-camera to the right would have been the ‘Old Brick Row’ (which Lovecraft later tried to save from being swept away) and behind that College Hill.

The Old Brick Row

See my earlier marketplace post for pictures which contextualise the new one seen above.

This 1906 view is also a panorama which looks in the same direction, and it shows the above panorama location in the distance (just left of the chimney top). The docks area (below and out-of-sight of the spot from which this balloon-photo was made) was a place that Lovecraft would later explore with Eddy in the 1920s.

1906 view over the industrial side of the Providence docks

Full-cast “Dunwich”

18 Thursday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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Grey Matter has a new full-cast adaptation of “The Dunwich Horror” in 45 minutes, with an open .MP3 download.

“Whatever he left inside… it’s loose”.

Latest LORAs

17 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI

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A few more recent Lovecraft-adjacent new free LORA add-ons, for use with a local install of Stable Diffusion 1.5.

Meteor Shower v1.0. Artistic meteor showers. It can also do just one or two. The same maker also has the earlier similar Fireflies from last Halloween.

Meteor Shower

Fireflies

Dark Core Style. It “creates comic-book-like inked illustrations, dark, gloomy and simplistic with lots of sharp angles”.

And Death and Decay, looking very suitable for generating the basis of a heavy metal album cover. The same maker also has a new Celtic / Gaul Warrior today.

Lovecraft in DOOM II

17 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ 4 Comments

You wouldn’t know it from the description, but Compound Fracture, a mod for the original DOOM II videogame is claimed to be…

my 10-map episode based on Nyarlathotep and Yog-Sothoth. The final boss is supposed to be Yog-Sothoth.

I learned this from finding a new forum thread, which jogged my memory about the game. Greatly enjoyed by me at the time, along with the fantasy variant Hexen. The forum thread also suggested the mod Rylayeh for DOOM II.

Via search, I found five more mods (aka wads) that are substantial and have good reviews…

Shrine 1.2 for DOOM II. A “Lovecraftian Total Conversion mod!”

Void for DOOM II. “Lovecraft meets Lewis Carroll”. Uses ZDoom.

Strange Aeons v5.7 for DOOM II. Huge Lovecraftian total conversion. Uses ZDoom.

Beyond Kadath for DOOM II. “A story-driven WAD roughly in the vein of H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos.”

Maskim Xul for DOOM II. “One of the winners of the 2018 Cacowards.”

The game itself can be had on CD via eBay for around £15. It’s obviously become collectable, despite the vast quantities it sold, and the days of getting a jewel-case for £1.99 inc. shipping seem over. More affordable is the download at GOG.com for £4 including “the enhanced re-release” of 2019. Then you download ZDoom / GZDoom and run it through that, giving the old game enhanced powers. You may also need a Flashlight++ mod.

Dredge

16 Tuesday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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The maker of the hit videogame Dredge is in the very early stages of a live-action movie adaptation. Basically Dredge is a Lovecraftian ‘small trawler’ fishing game, with its possible-movie officially described my the developers as… “a grounded atmospheric cosmic-horror blend of H.P. Lovecraft and Ernest Hemingway.” Sounds good. The Sonic the Hedgehog producer is apparently on board, so I guess there is actually a chance of co-funding for at least a modest indie movie. Casting suggestions for a fisherman pulled into the net of cosmic horror are now invited.

If you can’t wait for this dose of damp cosmic horror, this week the ‘Fairies of New England’ blog appears to have visited H.P. Lovecraft’s “Dark Swamp” and has pictures.

Don’t correlate the contents…

15 Monday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI

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Testing out an AI that claims to do reasonably good text generation. But… kinda. Heavy Photoshopping was needed.

A Joshi update on the letters

14 Sunday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated, and he notes the title of the forthcoming Long letters, A Sense of Proportion: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long, in one volume due later in 2024. He and Schultz are also considering a Letters to H.P. Lovecraft volume, which I would assume would be ‘selected’ rather than everything known? Since the Price letters would take up a volume on their own, and the whole lot might have to be two volumes?

Joshi also notes “I continue to work (with David E. Schultz) on Letters to R. H. Barlow“. Which I guess will then replace O Fortunate Floridian? (Update: No it won’t: it’s letters to Barlow from people other than Lovecraft).

Joshi anticipates that the Lovecraft Annual and a number of books of Lovecraft scholarship will appear toward the time of the NecronomiCon / Armitage Symposium in Providence, later in 2024. See his full 12th April 2024 blog post for the details.

Mysteries for £27

13 Saturday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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The Lovecraft Letters Vol 1: Mysteries of Time and Spirit from a UK seller at a quite reasonable £27 in hardback. Sadly it can’t be shipped to an Amazon locker, and the seller isn’t also listing it on eBay. So I can’t get it. But some lucky Lovecraftian will. Get it while it’s hot…

The Gaslight Equipment Catalogue

13 Saturday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Useful for writers as well as RPG gamers, and new on Archive.org as a scan in PDF, Monograph #319, Miskatonic University – The Gaslight Equipment Catalogue (2005). ‘Gaslight’ = the game-setting of the British Empire in the 1890s.

The Providence Journal

12 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

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Anticipating the NecronomiCon and Armitage Symposium later in 2024, here’s another ‘Picture Postals’ post on Lovecraft’s Providence.

The Providence Journal daily newspaper played a significant part in Lovecraft’s coming of age. In his youth the paper informed him daily — most likely in its Evening Bulletin form — of his surroundings, in a way that adults would not have; it provided him with a slice of local public opinion in the letters pages; and it eventually offered him an outlet in print. A few examples will suffice. In 1906 Lovecraft used the letters pages to attack the ‘hollow earth theory’ of polar entrances to the earth’s interior, then still somewhat plusible. In 1912, the paper gave him his first published poem, the prophetic “Providence in 2000 A.D.”. In the 1920s he advertised in its pages for the return of his lost Houdini manuscript (whatever happened to that, one wonders)…

MANUSCRIPT — Lost, title of story, “Under the Pyramids,” Sunday afternoon, in or about Union station [Providence]. Finder please send to H. P. Lovecraft, 259 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.

As such, its offices would have been a visual fixture in his early mental map of the city. These offices were new at the time he would have begun to aspire to publication in a newspaper. As we can see here, the offices seen in old postcards date only to 1903, when Lovecraft was around age 13 and would have been becoming increasingly aware of the wider life of his city…

And here we see the offices from the sidewalk…

The lower floor was actually retail, and one card reveals their nature: Hall & Lyon, “the largest drug store in America”. It was one of a city chain of four Hall & Lyon drug stores at that time.

The upper floors were evidently illuminated when the offices were most busy, at night. The offices would not have been empty at this time. Journalism for a morning edition was then a nocturnal affair, and a journalist might work 8pm – 4am. Much of their work would then be reprinted, tweaked and updated, in the evening edition.

In 1918 Lovecraft commented to his friend Galpin re: the unusually large staff and number of pages, compared to a typical U.S. city daily of the period…

dailies hereabouts are inclined to run over that [standard 8-page] size to a considerable extent. The Evening Bulletin has never published less than 18 pages within my recollection, whilst it frequently runs up to 48. 30 is the average number.

He was still reading it 1922, even when away from city. In 1922 he wrote to Kleiner that he would… “read the file of the Evening Bulletin which had accumulated during my absence.” Joshi also states he read it while in New York City…

For the entirety of his New York stay, he subscribed to the Providence Evening Bulletin, [also] reading the Providence Sunday Journal (the Bulletin published no Sunday edition).

At 30 to 48 pages, this would have been a substantial daily read. Though we know he skipped the police reports and court reporting entirely. Given that ‘crime and grime’ can be a substantial proportion of local news focus, this must have reduced the time needed to read the paper.

But he probably read it closely, since he felt the papers were of “the very highest class” for local city papers (they sound like an equivalent of the UK’s Wolverhampton Express & Star in its glory days, perhaps). Indeed, he never discovered one that he thought was a better city paper. However he disliked the “poison of the vilest kind” which they sometimes carried as advertisements (in this particular case those of a “notorious beer-brewing corporation of St. Louis” which promoted an anti-prohibition message via a series of paid-for articles).

The paper must have partially made up for this, in Lovecraft’s mind, by doing something unthinkable for a city newspaper of today. Publishing what a modern newspaper reader would consider the ‘ultimate horror’… poetry. Sometimes he was even a paid contributor and (even more unthinkable today) paid for poetry, as when he had $5 for his lengthy poem “Providence” in the 1920s.

Here we see a good wide view of the 1903 building as the young Lovecraft would have known it…

Another card seems to be later, with a ‘5c & 10c’ store established opposite, changing women’s fashions, and a military recruiting station flying the flag. One feels closer to the First World War in this picture. Could this even be the recruiting station at which Lovecraft tried his best to enlist?

I can’t find any mention that the paper carried a comic-strip, spot cartoons, or even a ‘Sunday funnies’ page. So he would not have been enjoying things like Krazy Kat every day. Indeed, he wrote to Kleiner in 1917 that “the New-England dailies [newspapers] of the first rank do not use the conventional ‘comics’.”

The Journal thrived, and moved to larger offices in 1934. In the 1940s one of its journalists would become, essentially, Lovecraft’s first biographer.


The Library of the Rhode Island Historical association states… “The Library has complete runs of both editions on microfilm.” And for Lovecraftians, “A partial card file index (1915-1934) to the Journal is in the Reading Room.”

Note also that there is online access… “Full-text of locally-written articles from 1829-present can be searched, emailed, or downloaded from the Providence Journal on Newsbank”.

Meanwhile, on DeviantArt…

11 Thursday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Abutova has a new “Colour Out of Space” digital paintings series.

Regrettably the link to the full series is on a platform called Behance, which appears to be for Adobe subscribers only.

Also, a multi-book Randolph Carter as a French-Belgian ‘BD’ graphic novel. Volume One is due 5th June 2024. Presumably in French in the first instance, and perhaps an adaptation rather than just the use of the name? The artist is Jovan Ukropina.

Mad scientists in early Wells

10 Wednesday Apr 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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In the latest edition of the journal Brno Studies in English, “Mad scientists in H.G. Wells’s early fiction”. Freely available in open-access.

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