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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

New on DeviantArt

11 Tuesday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Kittee Tuesday, Lovecraftian arts

≈ 1 Comment

My pick of the new Lovecraftian art on DeviantArt, with a few that are also new-to-me.

H. P. Lovecraft Sticker by Kayemby. “I take commissions & sell funky vinyl stickers on eBay.”

Octocat by MorpheusLunae.

From “Under the Pyramids” by Gomro.

H.P.Lovecraft bust by tot-art.

Brain Case by d1sarmon1a.

Night ride by Nashotobi. Successfully evoking the nightscapes of Lovecraft’s New York years. From a forthcoming “occult noir graphic novel called Colton Crux, inspired by the work of H. P. Lovecraft, the movie Inception, and old Noir films”. This has been successfully crowdfunded, is on pre-order and is set to ship in spring 2021.

“The Whisperer in Darkness” by TotemOfHorror (“possible Nyarlathotep form”).

Holmes Lowell Longfellow page by SamInabinet. From his forthcoming Pickman Perspectives which appears to be a book.

Cast a Deadly Spell fan-art. (mis-scanned proportions on DA, corrected here).

“Dreams in the Witch House” by Ronanmc. Borrowing somewhat, but effectively, from Donald Sutherland.

E is for Elder Thing by Armorwing.

“The Haunter of the Dark” by Nele-Diel for the Cthulhuscape game.

“The Haunter of the Dark” by vsqs.

Not new, but new to me, Bast, Goddess of all Cats by Astanael. Part of his extensive Lovecraftian tarot deck in draft sketch from 2017.

Nyarlathotep by Fausto-XIII.

Fishman of Innsmouth by Indecline69.

Captain Marsh! by Wiggers123, who has others from Innsmouth.

“The Music of Erich Zann” by Urikedi.

Lost in the Void by TakeOFFFLy.

The Temptation of St. Lovecraft by John Sumrow, with a nod to Dali’s “The Temptation of St Anthony”.

The Plumpster

10 Monday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

The Pulpster #29 will be a plumpster…

almost twice as large as last year’s edition. Weighing in at 84 pages, plus covers

Shipping early September 2020 in paper, with lead articles on Ray Bradbury and Black Mask. Note that the above link reports some “slightly bumped” back-issues are available now for $10 each.

130 Years of H. P. Lovecraft

10 Monday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival presents… the screening event 130 Years of H. P. Lovecraft (streaming) on 22nd August 2020.

Telephones under the earth

10 Monday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 1 Comment

I’ve encountered an interesting item which perhaps throws a small sidelight on the use of the telephone in Lovecraft’s “The Statement of Randolph Carter” (1919). You’ll recall that a telephone is taken on the descent…

I promise to keep you informed over the telephone of every move — you see I’ve enough wire here to reach to the center of the earth and back!”

The telephone might sound like an unlikely thing to take down below. But wired long-distance field telephones were a known ‘thing’ at that time, not least because of their use in the war. A modified long-distance field telephone was also used in the very deep explorations of the pioneering explorer of underground rivers and lakes, E.A. Martel (1859-1938), then world famous.

Though Martel had quit the more arduous forms of exploring by the time Lovecraft was writing “The Statement of Randolph Carter”, back in 1912 Martel visited America for a celebrity tour of the caves and… “spent three days exploring in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky”. Mammoth Cave, you’ll recall, being a favourite location of interest to H.P. Lovecraft.

Here is Martel, mistakenly called “Hartel” by the American editor, dramatically profiled in a popular magazine article of 1923. The article details the use of his special telephone in circumstances not unlike that of Lovecraft’s story…

The article’s artist also shows the chest-mounted speaking-horn for the underground telephone. Presumably the backpack held the the coiled cable, ready to be spooled out, and the batteries.

Incidentally I see that there’s now a 2013 DVD documentary on Martel in German and French, being a substantial 1995 documentary film rescued from the archives. Note that… “In addition, a limited edition of the English version is currently available” for 19 Euros. The film won a number of awards at film festivals, and may interest some readers of Tentaclii. Martel also sounds like a prime subject for an as-yet unmade documentary graphic novel. France is quietly but strongly investing in its ‘soft power’ in the form of comics, partly to help reach the young ‘coming billions’ in French-speaking Africa, and it may be relatively easy to find French interest in such a project.


Talking of unearthly voices, I see that Archive.org now has a new TTS “read aloud to me” button…

Howard Collector #5-8, inc. “Who is Grandpa Theobold?”

09 Sunday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraft as character, Lovecraftian arts, REH

≈ 2 Comments

New on Archive.org…

Howard Collector #5, Summer 1964.

Howard Collector #6, Spring 1965. With the poem “Who is Grandpa Theobold?”, from a letter. This would count as another early use of ‘Lovecraft as character’, albeit not in fiction. I wonder what the likely year on this poem is?

Howard Collector #7, Winter 1965.

Howard Collector #8, Summer 1966.


Also new and of interest is a new Dark Worlds Quarterly survey of Robert E. Howard’s Bran Mak Morn in the Comics.

Putting The Science In Science Fiction

08 Saturday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

≈ Leave a comment

Heavy Metal magazine has posted a new 47-minute YouTube recording of a 2020 Comic Con Panel: ‘Putting The Science In Science Fiction’…

CEO of Heavy Metal Matthew Medney is joined by Biologist Kurt Broz, Aerospace Engineer John Connelly, and Science Educator Ben Dickow, as they explore the reality of science in science fiction.

Friday ‘picture postals’ from Lovecraft: the dockside

07 Friday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Picture postals

≈ 2 Comments

Providence, as if seen from a night-gaunt hovering above 66 College St. Available as an 8000px .TIF at the LOC.

This 1895 supplement the Providence Sunday newspaper at first appears to be a standard and rather dull city engraving of the period, until one zooms right in and sees the quality of the ink and wash work. Here we see a detail of the Providence river and dockside, the side usually shunned by postcard-makers…

In letters of the 1930s Lovecraft recalled the rigged sailing-ships of Providence, seen and admired in his youth but now departed.

In the heavy fog of late November 1923, his Providence friend Eddy introduced him to the sinister courtyards and back-alley labyrinths which ran back from the dockside seen above…

a squalid colonial labyrinth in which I moved as an utter stranger, each moment wondering whether I were indeed in my native town or in some leprous, distorted witch-Salem … there was a fog, & out of it & into it again mov’d dark monstrous diseas’d shapes … narrow exotick streets and alleys … grotesque lines of gambrel roofs with drunken eaves and idiotick tottering chimneys … streets, lines, rows; bent and broken, twisted and mysterious, wan and wither’d … claws of gargoyles obscurely beckoning to witch-sabbaths of cannibal horror in shadow’d alleys that are black at noon … and toward the southeast, a stark silhouette of hoary, unhallowed black chimneys and bleak ridgepoles against a mist that is white and blank and saline — the venerable, the immemorial sea”. (Lovecraft, heavily abridged from a letter to Morton, 5th December 1923).

Zooming further in we see a lone rower on the river…

As a sturdy lad, Lovecraft was for a short time an avid rower in a small boat, a period from which memories probably linger in the story “Dagon”. Lovecraft was (so far as we know) only boating around the corner on the Seekonk, rather than pulling past the sailing-ships and coalers as seen here. Still, the sight of a little rower is evocative of a freer time…

“I used to row considerably on the Seekonk … 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 letter to Rimel, April 1934.

“… men became fully aware that it had vanished from the earth!”

06 Thursday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

S.T. Joshi’s blog / site has been down and unreachable for five days now. For the time being I’m redirecting my ‘Lovecraft on the Web’ link to the copy at Archive.org, though regrettably their last recording of the site was in January 2020.

“Klei edits The Brooklynite now”

06 Thursday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ Leave a comment

Among the Lovecraft circle, Rheinhart Kleiner had once edited a monthly New York paper called The Brooklynite…

Klei edits The Brooklynite now, & if he can surmount the difficulties of his task — the thankless task of recording social gossip — he will produce a paper worth a more careful reading than most Brooklynites. — Lovcraft, letter to Galpin, 1918.

This paper was read by Lovecraft during 1918, as Kleiner appears to have sent a copy of each issue. The magazine’s approach might have strongly shaped Lovecraft’s perception and awareness of Brooklyn, in terms of his later settling there.

The modern Brooklyn Magazine ran a short profile of the magazine in 2013. This found the magazine still lively and fresh, and revealed that the Brooklyn Historical Society only has…

“issues span the years 1926 through 1930.”

Little changes in some areas of human experience, it seems. One article in the magazine, it was noted…

recounts the existential crisis that one writer endured while he was waiting to have a phone placed in his apartment. Titled “Number Please,” the author writes, “To pass through the seemingly simple procedure of having a telephone installed is usually enough to hurry a normal person through the throes of dementia.”

We have some idea of it via Lovecraft’s noting of its poetry in his critical columns…

The general frivolity of The Brooklynite is doubtless due to the fact that this publication is designed primarily as a relaxation for persons engaged in other and more serious activities.

Elsewhere, a rare copy for sale terms it the “Official Organ of the Blue Pencil Club”, and The Fossil for 2017 confirms…

Brooklyn’s Blue Pencil Club held regular meetings and sponsored The Brooklynite through many decades.

Lovecraft not only read it, but was published in it, though perhaps not under Kleiner — it appears the history of the editorship remains to be written. Lovecraft’s long poetic celebration of “Providence” saw print in The Brooklynite for November 1924, for instance. Later, a comic poem Lovecraft had written for a Blue Pencil Club meeting was published in The Brooklynite for January 1926. One wonders if the publication may have also served as some sort of inspiration for the later commercial and even spicier Home Brew thus, by a sideways shift, giving Lovecraft another publication in which to publish fiction?

Back in 2013 I noted here that the archives of Vassar College has a good run of this publication…

1917-1918, 1921, 1923-1944.

… but it appears that these have still not been digitised or inspected by Lovecraftians or the historians of Brooklyn. Possibly The Fossil might run an article surveying the history and phases of the publication, and thus encourage a public scanning and digitisation of the Vassar College run, perhaps combined with that of the Brooklyn Historical Society?

Alhazred’s travels

06 Thursday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

≈ 5 Comments

Found in an obscure Spanish arts ‘zine from the late 1987, newly on Archive.org. Punto y Coma, No. 8 had a long section on Lovecraft. Several articles but basic introductory stuff, by the look of it. Yet there is this unusual map, which attempted to trace the movements of Abdul Alhazred, the mad poet.

I seem to recall there’s at least one chunky novel that tells the ‘life story of Alhazred’, and I guess it probably has maps. But this map may interest some.

Experimental Musical Instruments

05 Wednesday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

Makers of strange Lovecraftian sonic devices may be interested to learn that a complete run of the journal Experimental Musical Instruments (1985-99) is now newly at Archive.org, with unified TOCs and article synopses. It appears to have been a practical journal by and for makers of working devices and instruments. Lots of practical articles on obscure and self-made instruments. For instance below we see the start of what appears, after much searching, to be the world’s only practical article on “clay bells” (April 1989).

Kittee Tuesday: a forthcoming cat game

04 Tuesday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Kittee Tuesday

≈ Leave a comment

We’ve entered the silly-season for news, and I’ll take what I can get. So this week’s ‘Kittee Tuesday’ post is a forthcoming videogame set on an uninhabited island in Maine, USA. It mixes “science fiction and alternative history”, and all the characters are… cats. What more could you ask from a game? Well, if you’re going to be a cat, perhaps that there are plenty of nice fat salmon basking in the shallows of the river…

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