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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Monthly Archives: July 2025

HPLinks #48 – Lovecraft and music, new and old comics, D&D 5.5e Lovecraft, and more…

31 Thursday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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HPLinks #48.

* The Great Dangerous Books podcast this week on H.P. Lovecraft & The Apocalypse. Discussing the… “philosophical implications of Lovecraft’s stories, particularly the themes of knowledge, reality, and the human condition.”

* In France, the 23rd Festival de Bourgogne (seems to be in Burgundy, France) is to offer a two-day “The World of Lovecraft” event in late August 2025…

Films by Marc Thomas Charley and Martine Chifflot will introduce the world of Lovecraft to mark his birthday on 20th August 2025. Three short biopics, and bio-fiction films in the evening. The 21st August meeting will then address the themes of witchcraft, documentaries, and Lovecraftian fiction. Two documentaries, three biopics, and audience discussions will take place before another evening screening, which will feature a documentary by Marc Charley, “The Curse of the Feathers,” a true case of witchcraft, followed by a new black-and-white version of Lovecraft’s “Dreams in The Witch House”. “Ritual” will be shown that evening. Followed by discussions with the audience, these screenings revive the spirit of the Festival’s film club by presenting inventive art-house films. A moment of sharing, discovery, and emotion for all in the Chauffailles cinema.

* In the latest Cryptology #3 (Spring 2025), Lovecraftian Will Murray has an article on the Charlton horror comics. I recall some of these titles fondly, when they were unusual items found in the dusty bargain-boxes of British comics shops.

Writer Will Murray does the first part of “A Requiem For Charlton Horror”, looking at their early horror titles with a selection of covers.

* Also in comics, Broken Frontier reports this week that Gou Tanabe’s Comics Adaptation of Lovecraft’s ‘The Shadow Out of Time’ “is to be translated and published by Dark Horse” in English. Set for January 2026.

* Feuilleton has “Lettering Lovecraft”, meaning hand-lettering.

* DiGRA 2025 now has its papers and abstracts online. This year’s major videogames think-fest will offer papers such as “Tentacle to the Metal: Ecosophy, Metamodernism, and Splatoon 3″, “The Fractured Imbunche: a Study of Chilean Horror Games”, and (abstract only) “Ecology of Killer Insects and Violent Nature in Grounded”.

* Also in the world of games, Form of Dread has a new and very detailed and technical review of Cthulhu by Torchlight. This new gamer book is meant to transform the core tabletop RPG game D&D 5.5e into a Lovecraftian world.

The single biggest highlight of Cthulhu by Torchlight are the subclasses, which are among the better-designed out of all those that I have seen made for 5e. [But the] bestiary [is disappointing], specifically the statblocks of the Mythos Deities. These are genuinely underwhelming, having few options to influence the battlefield and generally being ‘bruisers with one extra trick up their sleeve’.

Not to be confused with Cthulhu by Gaslight.

* A fledgling attempt to pin down some of the linguistic specifics of a R’lyehian language.

* Forthcoming, a French edition of Encyclopedie H.P. Lovecraft, being the encyclopaedia by Joshi & Schultz. Due in mid October 2025 from Bragalonne, according to Amazon UK. 500 pages and newly illustrated.

* A very niche new survey of a subset of Lovecraftian tales, the illustrated Powerpoint presentation “Cthulhu Returns to Camelot: New Works of Lovecraft-Inspired Arthurian Fiction” (May 2025). Available from academia.edu, and note that a Google Scholar search will get you an open PDF download without having to sign up to academia.edu.

* Seeming to me to be relevant to Lovecraft’s travels and campaigns to keep venerable old buildings, and his sense of resigned loss when they were demolished, is the new journal article “Spectres of gentrification: Towards a hauntological framework for exploring the impacts of gentrification” (2025)…

Using a case study of a gentrifying neighbourhood in New England, this article describes the utility of the hauntological framework in understanding ‘more than material’ impacts of gentrification. Drawing on extensive ethnographic research, alongside photovoice and walking interviews with long-time residents, this article describes how participants and residents are often haunted by the sense of individual and communal loss of their community’s future place in the neighbourhood. These ‘lost futures’ are often represented by the material changes, such as new buildings, and demographic changes, witnessed through the displacement of their neighbours, occurring in their neighbourhood.

* A new book chapter, “Empty horizons: Library music and the occult”, meaning stock ‘music library’ tracks which were licensed by production companies and broadcasters and used to accompany supernatural scenes. Part of the new book Anonymous Sounds: Library Music and Screen Cultures in the 1960s and 1970s (2025).

This essay focuses on a particular strain of library music that engages with the occult and the supernatural, produced at a time when there was a countercultural fascination with esoteric belief systems. New technologies such as the Moog and Arp synthesizers were able to create other-worldly sounds, the like of which had not been heard before

* And finally, in keeping with this HPLink’s focus on comics and music, “The Music from Beyond”. A Chamber of Darkness comic-book adaptation of Lovecraft’s “Zann”.


— End-quotes —

“Decidedly, Grandpa is an eye-man & not an ear-man! If any one thing killed my musical taste it was the violin-lessons I took betwixt the ages of 7 & 9. Back in ’97 I thought I liked music, but a year or two of classico-academic drill on a 3/4 size fiddle soured me completely. They wouldn’t let me scrape the tunes I wanted, but confined me to useful exercises & insipid folk-tunes out of a book. As a result, practicing became a hell, & the whole damn practicing became a hell, & the whole damn business drove me so close to nervous exhaustion that two physicians (I was little short of a neurotic semi-invalid as a kid) told my mother that a halt would have to be called. […] Today I can scarcely tell one end of a violin from another, & don’t recall a cursed thing about reading music” [i.e. from sheet music] — Lovecraft to Fritz Leiber, Jr., December 1936.

“Merely because the world is haphazard & imperfect, with certain satisfactory [aesthetic] adjustments attainable by only a part of the population, he jumps to the erroneous & irrelevant conclusion that nobody can attain such adjustments; that those who say they do merely pretend it, & that it is a waste of time to seek such a type of felicity. In other words, because some people can’t appreciate music, it is foolish for anybody to seek the pleasures of harmony.” — Lovecraft to Helen Sully, October 1933.

“I revel in absolutely frivolous light opera & musical comedy airs, I cannot bear serious Music with a capital M. However, I am not so narrow that I do not understand its aesthetic value, & I never laugh at it in the manner of Lord North and other celebrated anti-musical personages. So fond am I of light and catchy music, that I tried to write a comic opera when about ten years old!” — Lovecraft to Galpin, August 1918.

“Despite my vast ignorance [of music], there are musical compositions which tend to evoke from my imagination certain definitely visual concepts which could be expressed (had one the skill) either in poetry or painting.” — Lovecraft to Helen Sully, May 1934.

HPLinks #47 – vitalist Lovecraft, Lovecraft in the Po Delta, re-evaluating CAS, a new Lovecraft Atlas, and more…

24 Thursday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Maps, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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HPLinks #47.

* More Lovecraft + philosophy. New from Hungary, “Lovecraft, antimodernism and new vitalisms” (2025)… “H.P. Lovecraft’s oeuvre is considered as a specific genre iteration of antimodernist themes, but also as a formative influence on the philosophy of speculative realism.” In Hungarian from the Dept. of Philosophy at Zagreb, and freely available for download.

* Overthink podcast Episode 134: Weirdness with Eric Schwitzgebel, interviewing Eric about his philosophy book Weirdness of the World (Princeton University Press, 2024). With a substantial discussion of the book Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Philosophy.

* Aetherium Arcana blog has a new short article on “Lovecraft and the Unconscious Structure of Empire”, followed by the new longer essay “Self-devouring Racism: Subversion and Collapse in Lovecraft’s Mythos”.

* New from Spain in English and open-access, “Development of Expert Systems by means of Large Language Models”. The authors feed Lovecraft’s fiction to a leading AI LLM, and have it try to find and map connections. Freely available online, those the images are rubbish quality and partly unreadable even in the source zip. This is as good as they get…

* Strange Aeons has a Catalog and Contacts link-list for the Italian Lovecraftians. Seems to have first appeared in 2023, and was last updated on 23rd July 2025.

* Also in Italy, Wu Ming 1 on Lovecraft, appearing at the Lunatico Festival. On 25th July 2025 he presents his new novel featuring Lovecraft-as-character, and then… “the geographer Francesco Visentin and Andrea Olivieri will dialogue with the author”. Followed by a presentation of…

The graphic-musical project [that depicts] the imaginary journey of H.P. Lovecraft in the Po Delta in 1926, between hallucinated visions, esoteric confraternities and monstrous water creatures. Designed by the Italian-English musician Jet Set Roger and the Serbian cartoonist Aleksandar Zograph, preseting a concert event that merges music and literature in a game of cross-media references with the Wu Ming novel.

* Decadent Serpent considers “The Reevaluations of Clark Ashton Smith”. Part of the discussion is of “The Quest of Iranon” by Lovecraft, compared to “Xeethra” by CAS.

* Black Gate has a long event-report with excellent photographs, “Post Oaks and Sand Roughs: A first trek to Howard Days” 2025.

* A useful new survey article of all the “Biographies of Robert E. Howard”, issued prior to the new and well-reviewed biography from the University of North Texas Press.

* Forthcoming in French, Atlas Lovecraft, a 180-page book that sounds like a cartographic atlas for Lovecaft. Due in October 2025 from reputable publisher Bragelonne.

A completely unprecedented atlas offering tangible geographic and cartographic representations of the emblematic places of Howard Phillips Lovecraft. An illustrated work in colour presenting plans of Providence, the State of Massachussetts, Arkham, Innsmouth, Kingsport, Dunwich and its region, a map of the Antarctic Expedition and a cartographic statement of mountain areas… [etc]

* And finally, a LoRA add-on for Flux, meant for generating images of whimsical toon Happy Shoggoths. Not on CivitAi, thankfully — since (as of today) the go-to site for creative AI is effectively banned here in the UK. I’m happy now that I nipped in just in time with my Windows 11 Superlite upgrade, and thus I now have the SD 1.5 turbo LoRAs, SDXL, Flux Kontext and Wan2.1 all downloaded and set up with workflows and ComfyUI to run them.


— End-quotes —

“I have always been fond of maps & geographical details (I’ve drawn a map of “Arkham’ to keep my local references straight), & my lifelong antiquarianism has caused me to lay zestful stress on historic backgrounds & traditional architectural minutiae.” — Lovecraft to Fritz Leiber, Jr., February 1936.

“I used to row [in a boat] considerably on the [River] Seekonk, which you’ll find on your city map … and also on general maps of R.I. Often I would land on one or both of the Twin Islands — for islands (associated with remote secrets, pirate treasure, and all that) always fascinated me.” — Lovecraft to Duane Rimel, April 1934.

[Lovecraft is delighted to find that he can circumnavigate the city of Charleston entirely via its many graveyards …] “the President of the Charleston Garden Club some time ago form’d the notion of mapping out an idyllic cross-town walk which might include as many as possible of these with a fair degree of continuity.” — Lovecraft, “An Account of Charleston”.

[Lovecraft rises to the very top of the highest building in New York City …] “The assembled clan’s first move was up — clean up to the top of N.Y.! It costs half a ducat [dollar] per rube [person], and is worth it. Loveman was dizzy, but your grandpa wasn’t — gawd knows how hard I worked when I was ten years old to conquer my native tendency to dizziness from altitudes! I walked on high railway trestles, and hell knows what not! But I digress. All Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Jersey City lay below, outspread like a map — in fact, I told Mortonius [Morton] that the city-planners had done an excellent job in making the place almost as good as the map in my Hammond Atlas at home.” — Lovecraft to Maurice Moe, May 1922.

HPLinks #46 – Lovecraft & Science conference report, CAS conference, Sonia update, Vondy letters, Tanabe and Stanley at work on new projects, and more…

17 Thursday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #46.

* In the journal Transatlantica, a new and detailed 5,000-word summary and conference report from the recent major international conference on Lovecraft and the Sciences, held at the University of Poitiers from 4th-6th December 2024. In French, but here’s the Google Translate link.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. Among other things, he has news of a one-day conference “The Smith Circle: A Clark Ashton Smith Conference”. To be held in Smith’s hometown of Auburn, California, at the Auburn Carnegie Library on 18th January 2026. Booking now.

* My thanks to Ken Faig for tipping me off to Sean Donnelly’s long article on the Vondy-Spink correspondence file…

I sat down with the file of Vondy-Helm letters and hoped to find some clues. After all, they both knew Lovecraft and they were writing to each other during the last 14 years of Lovecraft’s life. There must be some reference to him in all those letters.

* The Papers of Sonia H. Davis blog (on Lovecraft’s wife) has an update on 2025 Sonia Scholarship.

* New from the Italians, Potrebbe anche non esserci piu un mondo (2025)…

Lovecraft’s longest single letter, delivered to the Italian reader in the form of a book. Here is Lovecraft as a man who is sober and calm, full of healthy common-sense, an acute and resigned critic of the modern age and anticipator of the future.

Possibly the letter to Woodburn Harris, then? Although the blurb has it that the letter was addressed to an unknown recipient.

* A 700-page script? No problem, for the Dark Adventure Radio Theatre. Purgatory Chasm is their new audio production with a difference, a choose-your-own-adventure in audio with multiple storylines and music. The setting is 1922, when a geologist discovers mysterious glyphs and artifacts in a New England cave.

* Another excellent new reading of R.E. Howard’s ‘El Borak’ tales, “The Lost Valley of Iskander”. Free on YouTube. Note that the reader’s Patreon patrons are able to suggest stories to be newly recorded in future.

* Gou Tanabe has reportedly started work on his manga adaptation of Dexter Ward. Given the length and complexity, I’d imagine it might be offered across two or more graphic-novel volumes? Although, given the glacial pace at which his work reaches an official English translation, I guess we may not see it in English for three or four years yet.

* Another more long-term project should be underway relatively soon. Richard Stanley’s movie version of The Dunwich Horror is still planning to start filming in Providence in early 2026. The movie aims to be the follow-up to his acclaimed Color Out of Space movie, set well after the events of Color and making Dunwich into “a futuristic version of Arkham”. It seems that Stanley hopes to film on the Brown campus and on College Hill, in his words… “to actually shoot the beast on College Hill and on the Brown campus”, fees and campus politics permitting. So presumably digital CG / AI / FX will give the present-day Providence a makeover, transforming it into a future-Arkham. Sounds good.

* HPL in the 18th century.

* Call of Cthulhu Ireland (Chaosium, 2025) is… “an update of the 2012 Miskatonic University Library Association (MULA) Monograph ‘Mysteries of Ireland'” for role-play gamers. 230+ pages, a 1920s setting, and also likely to be of interest to writers (as a spur to ideas and plotting within this setting). Currently nominated for the 2025 ENNIES Awards for new RPG books. Doesn’t appear to be on Amazon, and is possibly only on DriveThru RPG (which flung a ‘captcha’ road-block at me on trying to visit, and thus I didn’t visit and they don’t get a link here).

* And finally, order now to beat a 5% price-rise at print-on-demand publisher Lulu. All the store’s print book prices go up by 5% from 1st August 2025, due to inflationary back-end costs.


— End-quotes —

“… according to O’Hart’s Pedigrees [Irish Pedigrees (1892)] [in my family-tree] my Caseys are descended from Baudoin Ui Niall (O’Neill), 137th King of Ireland. Begorra …” — Lovecraft to Morton, March 1933.

“My mother and aunts knew the daughters of Joseph Banigan from childhood, and found them really worthy in every respect. The grandchildren were my earliest playmates, though it made me shudder in my British soul to know ‘Dicky Banigan’, ‘Robert McElroy’, ‘Edmund Sullivan’, etc!! [… The Banigan mansion is now] one of the ‘show places’ of the neighbourhood, and excited Klei[ner]’s vast admiration when he was here. It is a Gothic manor-house of brick and stone, such as its peasant builder may have seen and admired at a distance in his boyhood in Ould Oireland. The grounds are extensive and beautifully kept, with hedges, trees, and stables of pleasing architecture. It lies almost exactly half way betwixt the house where I was born, and that which I inhabit. Altogether, I fancy the Irish have helped rather than harmed the locality!” — Lovecraft to Galpin, September 1919.

“One of the great puzzles of Northern ethnology is the origin of the peculiar facial & cranial type associated with the Gaelic Celt of western Ireland & northern Scotland — the type with upturned nose, long upper lip, heavy eyebrow-ridges, &c. This type has no known analogue anywhere else in the world, & the ethnologist is at a loss to determine how it arose.” — Lovecraft to F. Lee Baldwin, August 1934.

“Most conservative anthropologists think it unlikely that — despite the vivid legends of diminutive Picts and elfin brownies in Scotland, tiny fairies and subterrene leprechauns in Ireland, sinister underground ‘little people’ in Wales, and Robin Goodfellow’s merry crew in England — any miniature race has ever actually inhabited the British Isles. We derive such tales entirely from the experience of our ancestors at a former stage of migration on the European continent.” — Lovecraft, “Some Backgrounds of Fairyland”.

HPL in the 18th century

12 Saturday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Lovecraftian arts

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HPL in the 18th century. Would he have been a College Hill gent as he hoped, or (more likely) a jobbing waterfront printer and local news-sheet editor?

No, not the result of the new Flux Kontext, which is a bit ‘off’ in terms of this sort of thing since it works from a single image. Also slow. Instead I made an SDXL LoRa of his face and shoulders, and used it with the superfast four-step SDXL checkpoint realvisxlV50_v50LightningBakedvae.safetensors   Considering this generates a 1024px image in about 3 seconds on a very modest 12Gb graphics card, the quality here is acceptable. Not superb, a little glitchy if you look hard for it… but acceptable. And yes, tweaking the prompt will cause him to smile. But I thought I’d spare the reader that.

The new Flux Kontext does have its uses though, including easy manga-fication of images.

HPLinks #45 – more Lovecraft philosophy, Hokusai, Pennell for SDXL, fine bindings, Carter by Tanabe, horror sound FX, and more…

10 Thursday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #45.

* In the latest edition of the journal Castilla: Estudios de Literatura, a review in Spanish of the Spanish book A Traves del Abismo: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (2024). (‘Through the abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’). The review is freely available online, under Creative Commons Attribution. The book is also reviewed in the latest 2025 issue of the open-access journal Brumal: Revista de investigacion sobre lo Fantastico.

* A new book-a-journal from Argentina, Ontologia Analeptica IV, H.P. Lovecraft: La Anti-vida y el destino cosmico (2025). (‘H.P. Lovecraft: Anti-Life and Cosmic Destiny’). The book is paid, and is currently available to buy.

Howard Phillips Lovecraft is one of the most decisive writers who speaks to our present moment. With his work he penetrated to the heart of the great civilization changes, progress and modernity that define contemporary times. In doing so he has become a prophet of the future of humanity. Therefore, his work is here analyzed from an eminently philosophical perspective, while also engaging closely with the literature.

* Deep Cuts takes an extensive look at “Lovecraft & Hokusai”, the Japanese print artist. Lovecraft — an appreciator of Japanese screen actors and arts since his teens — saw a 1934 exhibition of his prints in Providence, and heard a lecture on them…

a splendid lecture & special exhibition pertaining to my favourite Hokusai, & the entire [Art Museum, Providence] quarterly bulletin was devoted to the subject of Japanese prints”. (Selected Letters of H.P. Lovecraft, Volume V, page 127)

* Flame Tree Publishing is offering a 2026 Wall Calendar, Lovecraft: Illustrated by Jason Engle.

* The Yog-Blogsoth blog is in the midst of drawing and posting some of the more obscure creatures referenced in the Lovecraft mythos and beyond.

* New on YouTube, the explainer video “What is the Robert E. Howard Foundation?”. Also a fine new Josh Greenwood 84-minute reading of the ancient Irish tale “The Grey God Passes” by Robert E. Howard.

* Adam’s Notes / Eric’s Notes delves into “Robert E. Howard, Grettir the Outlaw, and the origins of two-fisted Weird Fiction”.

* PulpFest surveys “Fifty Years of The Man of Bronze”, anticipating the Doc Savage Doc Con 2025 and PulpFest combo in August 2025. In a fine example of local outreach, note also that the article states… “The general public is welcome to attend our afternoon and evening programming events free of charge”.

* Who knew? A Jack Kirby exhibition in Los Angeles, on now. “Jack Kirby: Heroes and Humanity” is a substantial exhibition at the Skirball Cultural Center, until 1st March 2026.

* The H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival 2025, set for 22nd-24th August 2025 in Providence. No tickets available yet, but it can’t be long now.

* The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society (HPLHS) announce their forthcoming The H.P. Lovecraft Experience, a sumptuous table-trembling volume of the Joshi-corrected texts, plus… “a reader’s guide to ten of the most significant tales”. Currently pre-ordering.

* Amazon is listing Gou Tanabe’s L’Indicible for release as a French hardcover on 4th September 2025. This appears to be his graphic novel adaptation of Lovecraft’s Randolph Carter tales, presumably minus the Dream Quest. Possibly with some biographical detours(?)…

Gou Tanabe brilliantly gives body to Randolph Carter, Alter Ego of H.P. Lovecraft … and through him express the thoughts and fears of the inventor of the cosmic horror.

* New on Archive.org, a scan of “Bibliography Of H.P. Lovecraft”, which was published in the journal Extrapolation in 1961. Long since superseded as a bibliography, but some may want it as an indicator of what was available to scholars by the early 1960s.

* And finally, need sound FX .WAV files for your project? An Archive.org .torrent has Stable Audio Open 1.0 WebUI Portable for Windows. This AI ingested all the public domain field-recording clips at Freesound, into a prompt-able local AI in a very simple interface. Tested and working on Windows 11. See the review for useful instructions for this standalone portable version. Not to be confused with a very similarly named music-generator.


— End-quotes —

“Fine bindings don’t make good text!” — Lovecraft to Kleiner, November 1936.

“Acquire as many books of the right sort as you can afford to house, for ownership means easy and repeated access and permanent usefulness. Don’t be a foppish hoarder of fine bindings and first editions. Get books for what’s in them, and be glad enough of that. Marvellous bargains can be found on the dime counters of second-hand shops, and a really good library can be picked up at surprisingly little cost.” — Lovecraft, “Suggestions for a Reading Guide”.

Though some items may be curiously unobtainable…

“A locked portfolio, bound in tanned human skin, held the unknown and unnamable drawings of Clark Ashton Smith.” — excised from an unpublished typescript for Lovecraft’s “The Hound”, before publication.

And don’t forget to buy some fire insurance…

“The flames devoured the volumes greedily — leaping up in strange colours and emitting indescribably hideous odours as the strangely hieroglyphed leaves and wormy bindings succumbed to the devastating element.” — Lovecraft recounts a dream he had, to Bernard Austin Dwyer in August 1933.

HPLinks #44 – Whelan in the Mountains, Howard Days recordings, sea serpents and saurians, and more…

02 Wednesday Jul 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc., REH, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #44.

* Deep Cuts this week examines “Black Thirst” by C.L. Moore and notes Lovecraft’s several reactions to the story when it appeared in Weird Tales in 1934.

* From the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, a Musical Engineering team issue a final report for 2025. Freely available online…

We chose the Cthulhu mythos as a conceptual anchor — not for its narrative, but for its emphasis on the “indescribable” and the unseen, which aligns with sound’s capacity to express fear beyond the visual realm. Guided by psychoacoustic theory, we designed two contrasting video clips with different sonic objectives.

* On SubStack, “The Life of Michael – artist Michael Whelan at 75”. Showing and discussing his painting “The Astrophysicist” (2008). Elsewhere, DMR brings news that Whelan is not resting on his 50 years of laurels, and that… “he is, at this moment, finishing up a glorious illustrated version of Lovecraft’s ‘At the Mountains of Madness’ for Centipede Press.”

* Broken Frontier reviews Gou Tanabe’s “The Colour Out of Space” graphic-novel in its just-released English translation. Spoilers-alert (for those who haven’t read the tale, which apparently includes at least one of Lovecraft’s most vocal critics).

* The latest The Good Friends of Jackson Elias podcast has a long discussion of “Art and the Cthulhu Mythos”, and the topics-list suggests the listener will enjoy widely-spiralling flights through esoteric dreamlands.

* From an Argentine journal, a new survey of “Nueva ficcion extrana Latinoamericana: hibridaciones narrativas, cine y juegos de rol” (‘New Latin American Weird Fiction: narrative hybridations, cinema and role-playing games’) (2025). Freely available online.

* Faunus 51 has been published, this being the scholarly journal devoted to Arthur Machen.

* A new scholarly overlay journal which may interest some, Libertarian Literary and Media Criticism. The editors welcome your news of items and links of interest.

* Lots of R.E. Howard audio material this week, in the wake of the annual Howard Days event in Texas. Recordings now online include “Bob Howard & the Spicy Adventurers” (from PulpFest, rather than Howard Days), “Robert E. Howard in 1935, Professional and Personal”, “What’s Up with REH?” (on new publications coming down the dark river), “Spear & Fang” (REH’s first published story), and “Bob’s Photos”. Also, new on YouTube is a good free reading of the Solomon Kane tale “Rattle of Bones” by Robert E. Howard. A weary Solomon visits a forest inn for the night, with a travelling companion.

* Talking of rattling bones, a free LoRA add-on for models based on the AI image generator SDXL titled Wizard’s Vintage Creepy Creatures. This is Wizard as in ‘the vintage weekly British comic’. This well-loved title may recalled by British readers of a certain age, who may also recall the ‘Ken Reid’s Creepy Creations’ splash pages.

Ken (or perhaps a company heavily inspired by him) was also into generative art long before anyone else, shipping a long-ago ‘dial a monster’ cardboard-constructed frame to toy shops. Cleverly constructed with knobbed-dials which changed the head, eyes, nose, mouth/chin parts, to assemble an ever-changing random ‘creepy portrait’…

I recall it fondly from boyhood, but have never been able to find any trace of it since it was jettisoned during a house move. Until a Facebook page popped up recently, from the owner of what must now be one of the rarest vintage toys in the world. He too had been utterly unable to discover anything about it, but he managed to obtain one after a long search.

* Talking of generative image-making, I’m currently testing the new free image-editing AI called Flux Kontext Dev run in ComfyUI. I find it excellent for difficult watermark removal (e.g. a slip of cellophane with lettering on it saying “DO NOT COPY”, placed over the image of an eBay postcard). But it’s too crude for auto-colorisation of b&w images, compared to online services such as Palette or Kolorize. That’s a pity, and its line-art/comic style-transfer also leaves much to be desired in terms of subtlety. It can however easily take a head-and-shoulders picture and envision the person in a new environment. Such as Lovecraft riding the ‘last bus to Innsmouth’, here made by using Khoi Nguyen’s digital sculpt of Lovecraft’s head as the seed…

I’ve yet to explore its similar full-body capabilities, which apparently include the ability to keep intact the character costumes in the seed image (e.g. full-body character concept-art).

* For the real Lovecraft, visit the Wisconsin Historical Society H.P. Lovecraft | Photograph page, as there they offer the option to purchase a large version. Hopefully without what looks like a dreadful bit of scanner-moire across HPL’s cheek. Though perhaps that’s there to stymie AI upscaling using Gigapixel AI. Or maybe just original protective cellophane. From their ‘Harold Gauer papers, 1935-2008’.

* Now that I run Windows 11 as my OS, I can also test various locally-run “LLM” AIs. Next up, installing LM Studio AnythingLLM MSTY and trying out some of the local AIs. Eventually ones for audiobook and music/FX production, and Zork-style ‘choose your own adventure’ text-RPGs. Not to mention eventually distilling a ‘Lovecraft reanimated’ AI chatbot. I know… it’s a pleasant summer (for once) in England and I should be jigging around and eating dodgy hot-dogs at music festivals etc. However, living the high-life costs $’s and AI is free. No contest, and no dysentery.

* Talking of audiobooks… Librivox has just released a Weird Tales Double Feature public-domain audiobook. This being “The Salem Horror” by Henry Kuttner and “The Black Kiss” by Henry Kuttner and Robert Bloch.

* In the latest edition of The Fossil, the worthy and long-running journal of the Historians of Amateur Journalism… “David Goudsward describes a sea serpent that was the subject of a 1923 story written by Sonia Greene [Lovecraft’s wife]”. Freely available online.

* Hot from Pulpfest, a recording of a panel on Pulp Paleontology”, on dinosaurs and dinosaur-hunters in the pulps.

* And finally, talking of digging up fossils… “Startling Percentage of Neuroscientists Say We Could Extract Memories From Dead Brains”, referencing a paper published in the open-access megajournal PLOS One. Maybe we could store them inside the Moon in future?


— End-quotes —

“A few days ago I went over to Anastasia Island […] Tall trees casting a sinister twilight over shallow lagoons — funeral garlands of trailing Spanish moss — and the whole ground surface alive with scaly, wriggling saurians” — Lovecraft visits an alligator island in Florida, May 1925.

“… many things I had lightly noted in the frescoes came back to me with new and terrible significance — scenes representing the nameless city in its heyday, the vegetation of the valley around it, and the distant lands with which its merchants traded. The allegory of the crawling creatures puzzled me by its universal prominence, and I wondered that it should be so closely followed in a pictured history of such importance. In the frescoes the nameless city had been shewn in proportions fitted to the reptiles. I wondered what its real proportions and magnificence had been, and reflected a moment on certain oddities I had noticed in the ruins. I thought curiously of the lowness of the primal temples and of the underground corridor, which were doubtless hewn thus out of deference to the reptile deities there honoured; though it perforce reduced the worshippers to crawling.” — from “The Nameless City”.

“I am not only a non-modern but a violent anti-modern. Intellectually I believe in nothing; aesthetically I believe only in the irradiate dreams of childhood. Sophistication I loathe and abhor with all the venom inherited from aeons of reptile and saurian ancestors in palaeolithic abysms of terrestrial history, and I even despise intellect when not directly concerned in the process of philosophical and scientific intellection. By this latter paradox I mean that I see nothing of beauty or pleasure in intellect, but only the hideous fascination of the forbidden Golden Door for the miserable Agib who stands before it.” — Lovecraft to Galpin, October 1921.


 

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