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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

The Mythic, the Fantastic, and the Alien

13 Thursday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

The Mythopoeic Society’s scholarly Mythcon 51 is a hot ticket! No really, it’ll be hot. Hot as in… Albuquerque, New Mexico, from 31st July – 3rd August 2020. Although the place is apparently at a high altitude, which means it won’t also be humid. The 2020 theme is “The Mythic, the Fantastic, and the Alien”, which opens it to musings on Lovecraft and his circle. Registration is now open, but no call for papers yet.

Sharp Corners of the Earth

12 Wednesday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ 1 Comment

Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth is a classic videogame from 2006, and despite its age and glitches one would expect to find it in any ‘top 20 Lovecraft games’ list. I’m pleased to see that a 5.5Gb HD textures mod has just landed for it.

All textures are original, so the atmosphere is preserved, upscaled to 4x resolution with neural networks. All game textures are upscaled.

Also, Hyperborea Live (Italian sword & sorcery) has just posted a long appreciation of the game, “I Miti del Tubo di Ilario Gobbi – Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth”. In Italian, but a translator-bot is only a click away.

Talk: Lovecraft in the Merrimack Valley

11 Tuesday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

H.P. Lovecraft Returns to Buttonwoods…

Haverhill native and author David Goudsward is presenting “H.P. Lovecraft in the Merrimack Valley,” Thursday, April 2, 7 p.m., at Buttonwood’s Museum, 240 Water St., Haverhill.

In Quebec

11 Tuesday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

A small commemoration of Lovecraft’s epic trek to and around old Quebec, and also his subsequent extended travelogue and (effectively) guide-book.

Never have I beheld anything else like it, & never do I expect to! … I can scarcely believe that the place belongs to the waking world at all. A mighty headland rising out of a mile-broad river & topped by a mediaeval fortress—city walls of cyclopean masonry scaling vertical cliffs or towering above green table-lands — great arching city gates & frowning bastions — huddles of pointed red-tiled roofs & silver belfries & steeples — archaic lanes winding uphill or lurking in the beetling shadow of precipices…

The walls in landscape context.

Lower and Upper Town, Quebec.

A lane in Lower Town in the 1920s.

View over Lower Town in the 1950s.

The Complete Poetical Works of Edgar Allan Poe

10 Monday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

≈ Leave a comment

New on LibriVox, The Complete Poetical Works of Edgar Allan Poe, including a cast of voices where required. Also includes a Memoir and three essays.

Clark Ashton Smith as an early admirer of Tolkien

09 Sunday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

≈ 3 Comments

DMR has a new blog post, “When Klarkash-Ton Read The Book of Westmarch”, musing on precisely why Clark Ashton Smith was an early admirer of The Lord of the Rings, in those fallow decades before the book was properly understood by its early fans or was taken seriously by some perceptive critics. I can add a few useful dates and some historical context, which DMR lacks. For instance, in the year Smith died the reviewer Philip Toynbee in the Observer newspaper (6th August 1961, then a leading UK Sunday newspaper) was pleased to note of Tolkien’s works that… “today these books have passed into a merciful oblivion”. Even when the book gained fans in a big way circa 1966, they often deeply mis-understood it, or just saw its surface layer. Many critics seemed to assume it was set on another planet. Thus Smith would likely have regarded Tolkien as akin to Lovecraft in his then-obscurity and tight cadre of (often befuddled) fans, and without even a Derleth to champion him.

DMR suggests that, in what must have been a close reading, Smith had especially noted Gandalf’s passing revelation — made in the context of the secret council on the Pelennor after the defeat of the Witch King — that Sauron “is but a servant or emissary” of a greater evil. At that time Smith would not have been able to discover more about this unknown master in The Silmarillion, as that monumental book was only published in 1977. Thus Smith was seemingly left free to imagine something very dark and chthonic indeed. Such is the implication of the interview with Smith’s friend, linked in the DMR article.

Also interesting is DMR’s suggestion that Smith might have found a distillation of a rooted ancestral homeland in The Lord of the Rings, since…

As with Tolkien, Smith’s father, Timeus, was an Englishman — and Clark’s mother was of predominantly English stock. Did Timeus Smith imbue his son with an interest in the Green and Pleasant Land?

Timeus Ashton-Smith was apparently the son of a wealthy iron manufacturer, in the years before the transition to steel, and one wonders exactly where his formative years were spent before he became an adventurer? Nothing online can tell me the answer to that. But if he grew up in the industrial West Midlands, then that would give Smith another tie to Tolkien via Birmingham.

DMR adds about another eight very likely points of linkage between Smith and Tolkien, or perhaps a better phrase would be ‘natural sympathy’. I think I’d enjoy reading DMR’s blog post as an expanded and footnoted article in a journal, with a dating framework added and a brief survey of the many “horror” elements in The Lord of the Rings that would have appealed to Smith, something DMR doesn’t mention, from the Barrow Downs to Shelob’s Lair. One might also briefly note how the studied lack of tub-thumping Narnia-style Christianity would have eased Smith’s journey into Middle-earth.

Gallery of Screams 2020

09 Sunday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

Seemingly on tour in the UK in 2020, “H. P. Lovecraft – A Gallery of Screams 2020”. Including Harrogate Theatres on 6th June 2020…

Adapted and Performed by R. M. Lloyd Parry … who has spent the last 13 years enacting the M. R. James Project, a series of one-man shows based on classic English ghost stories. Here he crosses the Atlantic to pay tribute to James’s exact contemporary — a stranger, sadder man but one with an arguably even greater talent for bringing nightmares to life.

Also to be found in Cheltenham in April, so I’m guessing a ‘early spring to midsummer’ tour of the UK’s theatrical hotspots? The same actor also did the acclaimed The Time Machine a few years ago.

Fanciful Tales

08 Saturday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Here’s a crisp look at a Donald A. Wollheim Vol. 1, No. 1 magazine from 1936, with Lovecraft on the cover though without a cover illustration. Presumably Lovecraft had a copies of Fanciful Tales in the mail, as he was still alive at the Autumn/Fall of 1936. This scan is from the facsimile published by Necronomicon Press in 1977.

The issue is on Archive.org in full, albeit with a unsatisfactory and blurry scan, or perhaps it was hastily made by a hand-held digital camera with macro…


Also, Wormwoodiana brings news of a new issue of Biblio-Curiosa, dedicated to articles on “unusual writers” and “strange books”.

Custom portrait by Josh Ryals

07 Friday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ 1 Comment

Dagonhills unveils his new custom H.P. Lovecraft portrait, painted by Josh Ryals.

Mushrooms: The art, design and future of fungi

07 Friday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

On now in London, the exhibition “Mushrooms: The art, design and future of fungi”. Plus catalogue. 30th January – 26th April 2020.

Sadly it can’t be paired with “Fabulous Beasts” at the Natural History Museum, which runs 22nd May 2020 to 3rd January 2021.

An Invitation to Cross Plains

06 Thursday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., REH

≈ Leave a comment

The Cromcast: An Invitation to Cross Plains. Departing from the usual story format, the podcast…

talks with Robert E. Howard super-fan, ‘Indy’ Bill Cavalier!

In the dark about The Dark Man

06 Thursday Feb 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

Curious… Amazon UK and USA each have a listing for a paperback of The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies, issue 10.2, dated 15th December 2019. It appears to be live (not a pre-order) and available to purchase in paperback, but offers no table-of-contents and nothing else has appeared online about it.

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