United Amateur, September 1915
28 Thursday May 2020
Posted in Odd scratchings
28 Thursday May 2020
Posted in Odd scratchings
28 Thursday May 2020
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
Here’s the cover for The Colour Out of Space edition (Penguin Science Fiction) due in August 2020, ready for what would have been the ‘I got my student-grant!’ season. At first glance it seems a prime example of how marketeers think that slow cerebral science-fiction can’t be sold to the masses — except by misleadingly implying ‘there’s steamy sex inside!’ Eager readers hoping for ‘hot romps in the hay-loft’ may be disappointed.
Penguin may claim it’s actually a mutant seed-grain, if you sort-of squint hard at it. But that’s obviously not how potential readers are intended to see it on the shelves of the bookstore. Still, I suppose we and the designer should be grateful — at least there’s no Stephen King quote spoiling the cover. And the penguin trademark is actually kind of Lovecraftian, if you recall the giant-penguins in At The Mountains of Madness.
27 Wednesday May 2020
Posted in Historical context
“Lovecraft and the Stars” by E. Hoffmann Price, in The Arkham Sampler #6, Spring 1949. In which Price indulges in some humorous astrological flummery and boondoggling as he makes up notes for Lovecraft’s astrological birth-chart. But he also slides in quite a few biographical angles, from one who had known Lovecraft in person and by correspondence.
According to Joshi’s Bibliography, it was never reprinted, though there is the later “Astrological Analysis” by Price in the 1970s HPL zine.
Amateur Correspondent, May-June 1937 has E. Hoffmann Price’s “The Sage of College Street”, not reprinted in Lovecraft Remembered but now collected in the new Ave atque Vale.
26 Tuesday May 2020
Posted in Podcasts etc.
I’m glad to see that Librivox is branching out into full-cast unabridged readings. Their second volume of such has just been released. Since most stage actors and live musicians are likely to be unemployed for a while now, I’d expect to see the appearance of many more full-cast unabridged readings, ideally with music and FX. They seem the obvious route to converting talent to income, and can be done while working together online via home studios. The exemplar here is Phil Dragash’s The Lord of the Rings.
These, however, are free…
Vol. 1 offers Sherlock Holmes. Vol. 2 also offers another Sherlock Holmes, “The Purloined Letter” by Edgar Allan Poe, and “The Stolen Bacillus” by H. G. Wells. Some are rather rough, and lack sound balancing and a producer’s touch.
26 Tuesday May 2020
Posted in Historical context, Kittee Tuesday, Scholarly works
In 1932 Lovecraft wrote to his friend Moe, recalling once again the lost-lost days of 1900 when he had been ten years old. One of the items recalled in his stream-of-consciousness flow was… “the new cat book by Agnes Rapplier”.
Rapplier was a conservative Catholic essayist and reviewer, who also wrote popular books. The “new cat book” must be her The Fireside Sphinx: A Cultural History of Cats which appeared in 1901. Thus Lovecraft mis-placed it a little amid the tumble of memories, as a book of 1900.
It is just the sort of erudite yet breezy book that would have delighted a precocious lad who doted on cats, with chapters on Egypt, Dark Ages hysteria, and cats in his beloved British Isles. It is full of little stories and brisk histories. The book is simply footnoted as The Fireside Sphinx (without its subtitle indicating its non-fiction nature) in the Moe letters, and does not appear in my edition of Joshi’s Lovecraft’s Library. But, as a formative childhood book, it should probably be listed in a future edition of the Library.
Being out-of-copyright it could also make the basis of various new media productions, trimmed down a bit, from dramatized audiobook to graphic novel. Although note that archaeology is starting to dramatically change the story of ancient domestic cats in Europe — that bit would need to be added/updated.
When did Lovecraft have it and read it? A quick search suggests The Fireside Sphinx was probably issued October 1901 with an eye to the Christmas market. Thus it was perhaps a family gift, possibly to his mother or more likely to the young Lovecraft himself at Christmas 1901 when he was aged 11. By my calculations Lovecraft would then have been a doting cat-owner for several years and the kitten Trigger-ban, that had been presented to him as a “tiny black handful” at about age seven, would have fully grown into an adult pet cat by Christmas 1901.
25 Monday May 2020
Posted in New books
25 Monday May 2020
Posted in Historical context
Archaeologists have discovered a leather rodent from Roman Vindolanda in Northumberland. Sadly they don’t say if it was discovered inside the walls.
24 Sunday May 2020
Posted in Odd scratchings
≈ Enter your password to view comments.
24 Sunday May 2020
Posted in Scholarly works
* J. Wierzbicki, “Silent Listening, The Aesthetics of Literary Sounds”, Resonance: The Journal of Sound and Culture, Vol. 1, Number 1, 2020. (Discussion of sounds in Poe and Lovecraft).
* P. Jarvinen, “The Social Outsider: Generating Horror Through External and Internal Alienation in “The Outsider” and “The Music of Erich Zann” by H.P. Lovecraft”. (April 2020 undergraduate dissertation for Tampere University, Finland).
* A. de Sena, “Frankenstein de Mary Shelley e “O Intruso” de H.P. Lovecraft: Simetrias”, in Figuracao de Personagens Monstruosas, DialogArts, University of Rio de Janeiro, 2020. (Sees parallels between Shelley’s Frankenstein and “The Outsider”. In Brazilian Portuguese. Book chapter, book title roughly translates as ‘The Figurations of Monstrous Characters’).
* J. Franca, “Fundamentos esteticos da literatura de horror: a influencia de Edmund Burke em H. P. Lovecraft”, Caderno Seminal Digital, Vol. 16, No. 14, June-December 2010. (In Brazilian Portuguese. Edmund Burke’s influence on Lovecraft’s Supernatural Horror. Graduate Journal of the University of Rio de Janeiro.)
23 Saturday May 2020
Posted in Historical context
23 Saturday May 2020
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings
Have a VR headset handy? Let’s Virtually “Wander” in Lovecraft’s Providence and Beyond…
“Please send a message to me on Facebook at WillHartCthulhuWho1 or contact me here on my blog, if you’d like to meet in Virtual Reality in “Wander,” to see some of the many Lovecraftian sites that can be visited this way, or in “vTime XR,” for a virtual four-person Lovecraftian meeting.”
23 Saturday May 2020
Posted in Odd scratchings