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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

The Pulpster calls…

13 Saturday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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The Pulpster is now calling for ads and articles about historical pulp magazines and their writers. Ad space can now also be booked…

If you have a proposal for an article, please contact editor William Lampkin and let him know what you have in mind. Articles and artwork must be submitted by early May 2021. You can reach Bill via email at bill@thepulpster.com.

If you’d like to advertise in THE PULPSTER, please write to the magazine’s publisher, Mike Chomko, at mike@pulpfest.com. He can provide pricing and print specifications.

New addition, Tentacles over Brooklyn

12 Friday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

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A new addition to today’s ‘Picture Postals’. I’ve managed to catch a glimpse of the elusive giant squid, and also a picture of the first Invertebrate Hall as it existed until c. 1927. By 1928 it had been moved into another Hall.

The first Invertebrate Hall at the Brooklyn Museum, later moved wholesale to another hall c. 1927 and opened again by 1928.

This is as Lovecraft would have known it until c. 1927. Both the Giant Octopus and Giant Squid are seen, though it’s still not a good view of the squid.

‘Picture Postals’ from Lovecraft: Tentacles over Brooklyn

12 Friday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, New discoveries, Picture postals

≈ 2 Comments

Tentacles in the Brooklyn Museum, 1931. Found while flipping through Science and Invention magazine for March 1931, newly on Archive.org. An initial search suggested there was also a giant squid, as the modern book Brooklyn Museum of Art: Building for the Future talks of their having once been natural history galleries and a specific section for… “Invertebrates housing not only display cases of specimens but also large models of a squid and an octopus suspended overhead”.

The first hall, moved wholesale to another hall and re-opened by 1928. This is as Lovecraft would have known it until c. 1927.

The first question was, did H.P. Lovecraft know the Museum from 1922 onward? Yes, of course he did. He saw it as a tourist first, and then ‘did it’ systematically and thoroughly later in 1922. Its galleries and the adjacent Japanese Gardens became a regular haunt when he was in New York. Another question was, was it always the “Brooklyn Museum” or did it have another or formal name? Indeed it did, being also known as the Brooklyn Institute. Pictures? Yes, here is a rare eye-level card showing it about a decade earlier. Most of the other cards are later, gaudily coloured and vigorously airbrushed.

Were there other attractions there? Well, a big attraction was the cost. Entry was free on most days, and the place was also open in the evening on Thursdays. By circa 1930 he probably knew the place well, but he was also well aware of the new items being accessioned. He did the Museum solo in May 1930, seeing the new ‘Colonial furniture and interiors’ wing which newly offered complete rooms arranged for Lovecraft’s lingering delight. In 1933 he “…did the Brooklyn Museum with Sonny” — Lovecraft letter to Morton, 12th January 1933, when they focussed on the “Dutch” section. I would suspect that this may also have been new.

But what of the tentacles, and the “Cthulhu” period? Regrettably there appears to be a lack of vintage postcards from the Museum, showing the interior, still less the Invertebrates section. Still there is one negative of a record-picture of the Hall of Invertebrates in 1928. Below I have newly enlarged and colorised it. The picture makes the room appear smaller than it was. The cabinets are man-high, not at child-level as they might be today.

1928, after removal from the second floor, east wing, to the first floor, west wing.

The hanging giant octopus was there before “Call of Cthulhu” was written, as confirmed by the book Guide to the Nature Treasures of New York City (1917). Also the giant squid…

Models of the octopus and squid occupy the last wall case at this end of the hall and should be compared with the giant octopus and squid suspended from the center ceiling and the marine painting above.

Thus it would be plausible to suggest that this (and the squid) could have played into Lovecraft’s conception of Cthulhu… “The cephalopod head was bent forward, so that the ends of the facial feelers brushed the backs…”.

1920 saw the addition of a ‘Pacific case’, a fine diorama with glass models. Possibly these were in the closed wooden cases seen at the back of the 1928 photo above. As such the picture below exemplifies the sort of detailed and accurate ‘undersea’ scene available in this Hall.

Here is the full description of what Lovecraft would have seen there circa 1922. This also notes the microscope views and many glass re-creations…

“… invertebrates and plants in the eastern galleries [on the “second floor” until 1927, the on the “first floor, west wing” after that]… the Hall of Invertebrates of the Brooklyn Museum (Room 7 on plan) is next entered, where the sponges and corals, worms, mollusks, crustaceans and other types of animals lacking a backbone (invertebrates) are exhibited.

Among this invertebrates are the sponges and corals, from all parts of the world, are systematically arranged in wall cases on the west, north and south sides of the hall, and in various floor cases special groupings have been made of sponges and corals of particular beauty or interest or of unusual size.

Other invertebrates are specimens of the Protozoa, or one-celled animals, the simplest forms of animal life, are shown in the first floor case on the left (north) side of the hall, by the aid of micro-scopes, and also by enlarged glass models. The sponges are the simplest forms of animals whose bodies consist of more than one cell, for the cells, although arranged in two layers, act each independently. Varieties of lime sponges, glass or silicious sponges and horny sponges are shown, as well as fresh-water, deep-sea and boring sponges, and sponge spicules under the microscope.

Models of coral, showing the anatomy of the polyps and their relation to one another, are seen in the second floor case on the left, which contains also models of the freshwater polyp hydra and other related forms. In the adjacent wall cases, specimens of mushroom, staghorn and brain coral and other forms are shown. A very large specimen of brain coral from the Bahamas and a specimen of staghorn coral, one of the largest pieces of branching coral ever collected, are exhibited in floor cases in the center of the hall.

Among the mural paintings in this hall of the Brooklyn Museum, representing some of the more striking invertebrates as they appear in life, is one depicting a coral reef in a tropical sea, and on the south wall in the center of the hall a large window group shows a coral reef close at hand and the animals that frequent it. Other mural paintings show an octopus at home, the formation of a mangrove swamp and other typical shore scenes of the Atlantic coast. Proceeding down the left side of the hall, the starfish and sea urchin families occupy the next case, and the development and anatomy of starfishes and sea urchins are illustrated by drawings, dissections, models and specimens of various ages. Abnormal specimens and specimens showing regeneration of rays in a starfish also are shown. The various types of sea urchins occupy the eastern side of the case. The worms in the next cases include the serpulid worm of the sea, the horsehair worm and a model enlarged and dissected; the branchiopods, related to both worms and mollusks, are shown here.

Crustaceans, in the next case of invertebrates, are represented by some one hundred species, including the crayfish with an enlarged model of dissection to show the anatomy, and a section of mud from a river bank showing a crayfish group at home, together with crabs, lobsters, shrimps, barnacles, horseshoe crabs and others. In the wall case at this point, the giant spider crab and the locust lobster of Japan, the largest species of living crustaceans, are shown.

The systematic series of shells, which includes characteristic examples of the principal divisions of mollusks and gives a general impression and synopsis of this group of animals at the Brooklyn Museum, is arranged in two floor cases on the right (southern) side of the hall at this (western) end. The largest specimens are in the upper part of the case, and the extensive study collections are arranged systematically in drawers below. Fine specimens of the nautilus and argonaut, representing the higher mollusks, may be seen, also the paper nautilus of Japan; a particularly interesting specimen is the naked mollusk from Naples, which appears to have no shell because the shell is internal.

An exhibit of land snails and of shells from Lake Tanganyika occupies a position in the systematic series of shells and shows specimens of the eggs of marine mollusks. The ship-boring bivalve teredo and its work in destroying ship bottoms are exhibited in the case next on the east; sections of wood show the damage done and method of work, and photographs show the anatomy of the animal. Other boring mollusks are exhibited here also, and in the upper part of the case are habitat groups of the edible snails of southern Europe. An exhibit of pearl shells from the pearl fisheries …

The marine animals of the coast of Long Island and New England, from high tide to a depth of 7,200 feet, form an interesting exhibit in the last floor case on this side. Among the specimens may be mentioned the oyster drill, showing the drilled shells, egg cocoons and stages of growth of the animal, and mounted specimens of the pipefish, sand flea and other shore creatures. Models of the octopus and squid occupy the last wall case at this end of the hall and should be compared with the giant octopus and squid suspended from the center ceiling and the marine painting above.

Passing into the Insect Hall (Room 8 on plan) …”

Ah, the Insect Hall. What monstrous wonders might he have seen through microscopes in there…?

“… dear to the small boys of other generations”

11 Thursday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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Now online, a complete run of The Story Paper Collector (1941-66). This was a British title for collectors of the pre-comic-strip era of boys’ story magazines. As such it has some crossover into heroic historical-adventure and even some proto science-fiction, though it looks like interest in Billy Bunter type public-school stories predominate. The final issue has a short obituary for Lovecraft correspondent Arthur Harris and reveals he had contributed a number of articles. The website also has runs of several other titles in the same line.

A recent book has been published on the topic, Edwardian Comic Papers (2021) by expert collector Alan Clark, lavishly illustrated with colour plates.

The young Robert Bloch

11 Thursday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

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The young Robert Bloch at the typewriter keyboard, circa his Lovecraft correspondence period.

The track to Tentaclii Towers

10 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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The track to Tentaclii Towers.

Feel free to use as a CD cover etc, add ravening glowing-eye wolves etc. I have it at 3600px if needed. Creative Commons Attribution.

Lovecraft was right, part 451

10 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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“Real-time dialogue between experimenters and dreamers during REM sleep”, in the journal Current Biology…

“… the researchers attempted to communicate with people while they were still dreaming … placed electrodes on the participants’ heads … Four independent lab groups in the U.S., Germany, France and the Netherlands conducted four separate experiments. The researchers used several techniques across the experiments to communicate with dreamers during REM sleep … If dreamers received and understood the question or message during a lucid dream, they then responded with a set of distinctive eye or facial movements that were interpreted by the electrodes.”

Apparently morse-code is used as one communication method. But it’s not just some postgrads trying to grab headlines with some fudgy research, and Cell is not a predatory ‘you pay, we publish’ journal. A journalist at Live Science queried “Robert Stickgold, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School” about the new paper and he is said to have called the study “groundbreaking … Two-way, real-time communication between researchers and lucid dreamers immersed in REM sleep offers a new and exciting window into the study of dreams and dreaming”. Fair enough, it seems legit then. And thus makes for an interesting comparison with what Lovecraft was suggesting just over a century ago…

from Lovecraft’s “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” (1919)… “[long interested in investigating dream-life and] mental communication by means of suitable apparatus, I had in my college days prepared a set of transmitting and receiving instruments somewhat similar to the cumbrous devices employed in wireless telegraphy at that crude, pre-radio period. […] in my intense desire to probe into the dream life of Joe Slater, I sought these instruments again; and spent several days in repairing them for action. When they were complete once more I missed no opportunity for their trial. At each outburst of Slater’s violence, I would fit the transmitter to his forehead and the receiver to my own; constantly making delicate adjustments for various hypothetical wave-lengths of intellectual energy. I had but little notion of how the thought-impressions would, if successfully conveyed, arouse an intelligent response in my brain; but I felt certain that I could detect and interpret them. [The “head-bands” device is fitted to the sleeping Jo Slater]. At this juncture my brain became aware of a steady external influence operating upon it. I closed my eyes to concentrate my thoughts more profoundly, and was rewarded by the positive knowledge that my long-sought mental message had come at last. Each transmitted idea formed rapidly in my mind, and though no actual language was employed, my habitual association of conception and expression was so great that I seemed to be receiving the message in ordinary English.”

FHTAGN!

10 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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The German Lovecraft Society is now able to provide Germans with the full FHTAGN as a book, this being…

a pen & paper set of [RPG] rules under an Open Game License, with which commercial and non-commercial projects can be implemented by third parties without the need for a separate license or consent. The volume is 172 pages and contains all the rules that Game Masters and players need for exciting hours in the cosmic horror universe of H.P. Lovecraft.

Apparently based on Delta Green.

New book: Progression of the Weird Tale

09 Tuesday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi’s new essay collection The Progression of the Weird Tale is now available in an affordable £2.60 Kindle ebook. The second half is substantially Lovecraft and Barlow, plus a critical assessment of two novels by Frank Belknap Long and memoirs of several fellow Lovecraftians. Also many short encyclopaedia entries, but judging by the one on Arnold Bennett they only cover supernatural novels not short-stories.

His latest blog post also reveals a worthy new mammoth project, A World History of Atheism, expected to take about six or seven years. Sounds great. Grab the graphic novel rights now.

Recently on DeviantArt: Lovecraft the man

08 Monday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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A few personal picks from the many recent ‘Lovecraft the man’ pictures, as posted on DeviantArt…

H.P. Lovecraft by Dvazart.

2020 by perimido. I guess the skeleton penguins are ‘Mountains of Madness’.

Ach-Pe-El by gjsx51.

H.P.Lovecraft – caricature by miguelzuppo.

HPL’s bathroom by Zeephra. As a physical sewn tapestry. Based on a pixelart version.

Inktober, 2020: H.P. Lovecraft by Snipetracker. Specifically, Lovecraft and Sonia while he was writing “Under the Pyramids”. You’ll recall that the story interrupted their Honeymoon.

H.P. Lovecat by JulianDemiurgo.

H.P. Lovecraft by Nick-OG.

“… only in the patriarchs did that rigid face with horror-bulging eyes strike any chord of memory.”

07 Sunday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Grandpa Whipple and others, rejuvunated through the miracles of technology.

Likely to be using the new Deep Nostalgia service at MyHeritage.

“About the middle of August I returned to Arkham and reopened my long-closed house…”

06 Saturday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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The NecronomiCon Providence convention, bundled into “a queer mixture of rods, wheels, and mirrors” and whisked through time to August 2022.

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