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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

Ask Lovecraft: Adjectives

25 Monday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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A new Ask Lovecraft: ‘Adjectives’. Apparently they’re “a word which qualifies a noun”? Nope, I’m still none the wiser. I attended a Birmingham comprehensive school (read: “crap”) under socialism and left for years of shop-work at age 16. So far as I recall, we never covered such things in the classroom. Never learned it, never will…

The Book of Iod

25 Monday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Nocturnal Revelries extracts Henry Kuttner’s The Book of Iod: The Eater of Souls and other Tales from the vaults and gives it a new review. This was one of Robert M. Price’s usefully affordable ‘cycle’ collections, made for wide distribution by RPG company Chaosium in the mid 1990s.

Not Derlethian formula and not… “hugely original, but they are least varied” […] “Some of the stories are so shamelessly Lovecraftian that they almost read like rewritten versions of Lovecraft’s work. “The Black Kiss” comes directly from “The Shadow over Innsmouth”. “The Salem Horror” is “The Dreams in the Witch House”. “Hydra”, “The Secret of Krallitz” and a few of the other tales also felt remarkably familiar. Still though, Kuttner was about 21 when he was writing these tales, and after he wrote them, he’d send them to Lovecraft in the post. […] Kuttner stopped writing Lovecraftian horror a few years after Lovecraft died, but he continued to write for another 20 years or so. I know Ray Bradbury thought very highly of his writing.

With a little contrast adjustment, an eBay listing supplies the complete TOCs…

Editor & Publisher (1901-2015)

24 Sunday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Now online and useful for researchers of the literary and pressman life of the 1910s-1930s, the complete run of the U.S. trade magazine Editor & Publisher (1901-2015). Also photos of writers and publication offices, and these are not too badly damaged by the microfilming process.

Sax fiend

23 Saturday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, a scan of The Armchair Detective, Spring 1980. Including a short but engaging personal account of all the shoe-leather and touring of obscure bookstores needed to find Sax Rohmer (Fu-Manchu etc) books in the 1960s and 70s.

Here in the UK Rohmer does not enter the public domain until 2029. But American buyers can get budget-priced Tantor (aka Trantor) audiobook readings of the first three Fu-Manchu books.

The dope on Bolton

23 Saturday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Yup, the master if still alive, and judging by the news headlines he appears to be living in the elusive town of Bolton as an elderly dope-dealer…

Walls of R’lyeh: A Tribute to Howard Phillips Lovecraft

23 Saturday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Walls of R’lyeh: A Tribute to Howard Phillips Lovecraft. A multi-band compilation album from Gates of Hypnos, a Russian curator released via a Polish label, and dated December 2020.

Difficult to find out more, but described in passing by one sonic observer as in the ‘rasp ambient and noise’ sub-genre (who knew?). Here that serves to power soundscapes which evoke some of Lovecraft’s famous landscapes. There are samples to listen to, which on hearing are actually rather more approachable than the daunting sub-genre tag might suggest. Although the final track does evokes the Plateau of Leng via a constant wall of warbling static, seemingly without even any fleeting vocals.

In like ambient vein, and rather more listenable, is a recent ambient concept album by Air. They released a Music for Museum album a few years back as a limited-edition vinyl gatefold album, which is probably why I missed it. It’s somewhat similar in concept to Eno’s famous Music for Airports, but evoking wandering through a big museum. The four best tracks are on YouTube, where they effectively form an E.P. version…

Reverse Bubble.

The Dream of Yi.

Integration Desintegration.

Octogum.

‘Picture Postals’ from Lovecraft: 17th November 1931

22 Friday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Night in Providence, Picture postals

≈ 4 Comments

Currently up for sale at Abebooks, a lesser Lovecraft postcard. Judging by the 10.30pm postmark, it was likely written on the evening of 17th November 1931, and then posted with others after a night stroll. Assuming he was at home at Barnes Street, this raises the interesting question of exactly where the nearest pick-up mailbox (with a late 10.30pm collection) was and how far he would have to walk from his home?

On the card “HPL” writes a brief note…

He congratulates Coates on the recent edition of Driftwind, and the frontispiece of the frequent little magazine which shows what sounds like a view of Montpelier, Vermont. Lovecraft seems to imply rapid change may be happening there and that the picture may have changed? This is not the view in question, if wide view it was, but it is perhaps indicative…

Lovecraft was at that moment very interested in how small isolated towns might change and perhaps for the worse. On his desk lay the pages that would become the famous story “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”, set to be complete two weeks later on about 1st/2nd December 1931. This concern fitted well with the mood of the times, as the third winter of the Great Depression began to grip the nation.

On the card Lovecraft then supposes that Paul Cook, fellow amateur and leading collector of weird books, will be visiting Coates at Thanksgiving 1931. Thus implying that Lovecraft has not had any letter recently from either to confirm this point. Lovecraft alludes to his own usual winter hermitage with the final line… “If it were mid-July I’d surely [join?, enjoy?] him!” and thus assumes that Coates is well aware of his aversion to cold… and to a Vermont winter in particular.

The front of the card is not show or described at Abe. But it was published by the Berger Bros. of Providence, suggesting a view of Providence. Indeed it was… a quick search found the front on the seller’s own store as a good scan, and it shows the new Industrial Trust Building at night.

The November issue of Driftwind was 44 pages including a “Check List of Publications of Driftwind Press”, including H.P. Lovecraft’s The Materialist Today, later to become one of the rarest of Lovecraft’s publications. Issues of Driftwind earlier in the year had been the first to publish sonnets from the Fungi From Yuggoth cycle, and more would follow.

Protected: The words from R’lyeh

21 Thursday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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Nyarlathotep

21 Thursday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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H.P. Lovecraft’s “Nyarlathotep”, newly read and animated by Norwegian motion-graphics designer Kim Holm and Romanian illustrator and metal musician Costin Chioreanu.

“Nyarlathotep” on YouTube.

John Carstairs, Curator of the Interplanetary Botanical Gardens

20 Wednesday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

≈ 7 Comments

During the Second World War H.P. Lovecraft’s friend and fellow writer Frank Belknap Long penned a series of pulp entertainment science-fiction tales of one John Carstairs. Carstairs was the Curator of the Interplanetary Botanical Gardens… and occasional Botanical Detective. Young, but dapper and eminent. As you might expect, weird and wonderful mobile plants feature heavily. As such, I guess the hero’s spectacle-wearing probably serves both for the close-inspection of leaves and flowers, and as useful eye-protection against venom, deadly pollens and trailing stingers. Long was likely drawing on his own real-life fascination with the rearing and keeping of fancy fish (see the Lovecraft letters), and possibly an affection for the many hothouses of the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens. Perhaps, after Lovecraft’s death, he later also raised a collection of carnivorous plants?

The series ended along with the war in summer 1945.

A few years after the end of the war, as paper rationing eased, it was partly collected in a nice 1949 hardback. I’ve colour-shifted the hardback jacket toward red, as I can’t believe a publisher of the late 1940s would issue a boys’ book in pink. It must have faded.

In 1959 it was issued as a cheap British paperback, to launch a branded series of fantasy reprints, and with a cover keyed to both the ‘six-gun cowboy’ and Superman crazes of the time. So I find that my statement a few posts ago, that Long only ever had the two Panther paperback collections here in the UK, was wrong. He also had this.

A L.W. Currey page for the book describes the contents as “a fix-up novel”, so I’m guessing new linking passages might have been added?

The tales obviously don’t satisfy hardcore detective-story buffs, if one review is anything to judge by. But a decade ago pulp fan Jerry House reviewed the one-volume reprint of this series…

For me, the great thing about these stories is the sheer inventiveness of the many vegetative creatures that Long has created. Their diversity is stunning. As a writer, Long could blow both hot and cold, and there’s far more heat here than cold. This may not be everyone’s cup-of-tea, but if you like pulp — and say ‘to heck with a lot of logic’ — give this one a try.

Sounds fun. The series is partly free at Archive.org, if you want to sample some. In order:

“Plants Must Grow”.

“Snapdragon”.

“Plants Must Slay”. (also found in the anthology Saint’s Choice of Impossible Crimes)

“Satellite of Peril”.

“The Ether Robots”. *

“The Heavy Man”. *

“Wobblies in the Moon”.

“The Hollow World” (long novella)

* = not in the 1959 reprint book, according to the TOCs. None of the missing are in The Early Long, and only “Wobblies in the Moon” is in one of the ebook ‘megapacks’ on Amazon.

Ramble House currently has the full set in ebook for $6, though regrettably not on Amazon. The page blurb for this states that “The Heavy Man” and “Wobblies in the Moon” had been left out of the 1949 book. But the table-of-contents for both print editions has “The Heavy Man” and “The Ether Robots” as being left out. Can the TOCs for both have been astray? The ebook’s new introduction also states that “the second and third stories were reversed in sequence”. Who knows? Anyway, the ebook has the order correct, and I’ve followed its TOC order in the above links.

The ebook introduction by Richard A. Lupoff is also interesting for a brief insight into Lovecraft. Lupoff recalls one long rooftop conversation with Long…

Our conversation drifted to other topics. These included his friendship with Lovecraft, and the relationship between Lovecraft and his arch-nemesis, the German-American agent George Sylvester Viereck. “It took only the mention of Viereck’s name and Howard’s face would turn beet red, his neck would swell until you thought he was going to burst, and he would practically foam at the mouth!”

One wonders what might have caused such resentment? Viereck was a Massachusetts writer who became a notorious ‘agent’ of the German state. Most likely it was his First World War pro-German publishing activities that would have set the Anglophile Lovecraft against him…

During the First World War he edited a German-sponsored weekly magazine, The Fatherland with a claimed circulation of 80,000. In August 1918, a lynch mob stormed Viereck’s house in Mount Vernon [a suburb of New York City], forcing him to seek refuge in a New York City hotel. In 1919, shortly after the Great War, he was expelled from the Poetry Society of America.

The Reception of Ancient Egypt in Science Fiction

19 Tuesday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Call for workshop papers: The Reception of Ancient Egypt in Science Fiction. For a workshop conference to perhaps be held in the UK in early July 2021, if the ever-rolling lockdowns allow it….

The ways in which Egyptological scholarship informs science fiction in particular still remain to be explored. The aim of this workshop is to explore the reception and reconstruction of Egypt in science fiction, fostering a dialogue among Egyptologists, cultural historians, literary scholars, and creatives.

New book: Renegades and Rogues

18 Monday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

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Renegades and Rogues: The Life and Legacy of Robert E. Howard is officially available in full from tomorrow (it’s been partly available via Google Books page-scans since early November). Author Todd B. Vick has a new blog post on why he wrote the book…

Renegades and Rogues establishes a solid foundation for current and future fans and scholars providing them with an objective, unexaggerated, unromanticized examination of Robert E. Howard’s life and work. It includes the vast amount of new data that has been uncovered over the last ten years presented on blogs with limited readership.

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