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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

New book: Robots That Kill: Deadly Machines and Their Precursors

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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A new book from McFarland, Robots That Kill: Deadly Machines and Their Precursors in Myth, Folklore, Literature, Popular Culture and Reality.

The blurb makes it sound more appealing than the usual academic slab…

This book describes real-world killer robots using a blend of perspectives. Overviews of technologies, such as autonomy and artificial intelligence, demonstrate how science enables these robots to be effective killers. Incisive analyses of social controversies swirling around the design and use of killer robots reveal that science, alone, will not govern their future. Among those disputes is whether fully-autonomous, robotic weapons should be banned. Examinations of killers from the Golem to Frankenstein’s monster reveal that artificially-created beings like these are precursors of real 21st century killer robots. This book laces the death and destruction caused by all these killers with science and humor. The seamless combination of these elements produces a deeper and richer understanding of the robots around us.

… but there are no reviews yet, that I could find. It’s way over-priced in paper in the UK (£44 paperback), compared to the USA ($40 paperback, about £26).

Herbert West: Reanimator – a two-hour reading

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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This week’s The SFFaudio Podcast #526 is a full two-hour unabridged audiobook reading of “Herbert West: Reanimator” by H.P. Lovecraft, read by Jim Moon. Apparently it’s a re-run of a Hypnogoria podcast that I can’t immediately find and may no longer be available. “Herbert West” was of course the serial ‘shocker’ that Lovecraft wrote for Home Brew.

Looking for the Hypnogoria original of this audio reading, I was pleased to discover Hypnogoria: Microgoria #65 – Shiver and Shake and the Creepy Creations of Ken Reid. 33 minutes of podcast surveying a British master of fun cartoon monster-creation.

Ken Reid has a series of handsome book re-issues, Creepy Creations Vol 1., Faceache Vol 1: The First Hundred Scrunges, and Ken Reid’s World Wide Weirdies Vol. 1. His work will be fondly remembered by those of a certain generation.

I wonder if anyone still has that old cardboard “dial-a-monster” picture-frame from that time, which one could get through the mail and I for one had a copy of (long lost, now). It was an early generative work, as millions of unique combinations were possible, there being circular dials which would swing a variety of eyes, hair, chins, noses etc into the picture-frame portrait. They were designed so they would all more or less seamlessly blend together.

Protected: Providence Art Club Interior

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

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New book: A Place of Darkness

22 Wednesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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An interesting sounding new book of cultural history from Kendall R. Phillips, A Place of Darkness: The Rhetoric of Horror in Early American Cinema (Spring 2018). It steps beyond the movie industry’s early history and surveys the wider currents which each distinct cultural milieu both drew on and drew around itself…

“He shows how early cinema [1890s onward] linked monsters, ghosts, witches, and magicians with Old World superstitions and beliefs, in contrast to an American way of thinking that was pragmatic, reasonable, scientific, and progressive. Throughout the teens and twenties [1910s and 20s], Phillips finds, supernatural elements were almost always explained away as some hysterical mistake, humorous prank, or nefarious plot. The Great Depression of the 1930s, however, constituted a substantial upheaval in the system of American certainty and opened a space for the reemergence of Old World gothic within American popular discourse in the form of the horror genre [the famous Universal monster movies, 1931 onwards], which has terrified and thrilled fans ever since.”

It’s being well reviewed. Sublime Horror has a sturdy review, and also a free one-hour podcast interview with the author.

Book And Magazine Collector on Lovecraft

21 Tuesday May 2019

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

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New on Archive.org, Book And Magazine Collector #193 (2004) with a good short potted introduction to Lovecraft’s genuine rarities and his basic publication history. Also the (then) not-so-rare. Oh, to have had Selected Letters Vol. 1 for just £15!

New book: Mud and Starlight: The Alan Moore Interviews

21 Tuesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Newly published, albeit with a pug-ugly cover, Mud and Starlight: The Alan Moore Interviews 2008—2016. 372 pages of rare interviews, many apparently no longer available (defunct blogs) or difficult to obtain (obscure fanzines).

The Amazon UK “Look Inside” won’t let me see the contents page, but Amazon USA will…

The White Tree

20 Monday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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It’s interesting to see that the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society / Dark Adventure Radio Theatre are branching out into new HPL-alike audio adventures. Their The White Tree runs 72 minutes with their usual full-cast and full-FX approach, and the story sees…

The police inspector who once probed the mysteries of the Cthulhu cult on a case that leads him once again into the foreboding bayous of Louisana.

It’s © 2016 and on release seems to have been CD-only with a prop-pack. But I’ve now noticed it because it’s been released to Audible for download, dated “26th March 2019”.

New book: Songs of Giants

20 Monday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books, REH

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Nearly published, Songs of Giants is a sumptuously illustrated…

“collection of some of the very best poetry written by three giants of pulp literature; Robert E. Howard, Edgar Rice Burroughs and H. P. Lovecraft.”

Available here and set to ship in June 2019.

Added to Open Lovecraft

19 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* E. Berndtson, Mortal Minds and Cosmic Horrors: A Cognitive Analysis of Literary Cosmic Horror in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Out of Time”. (Undergraduate dissertation for Halmstad University, Sweden, February 2019. In English).

* Y. Garcia, “Monstros Sagrados e Ciberculturais: H. P. Lovecraft e sua mitologia na cultura contemporanea”, Galaxia No. 39, September-December 2018 (In Portuguese with short and rather basic English abstract, title translated as “Sacred and Cybercultural Monsters: H. P. Lovecraft and his mythology in contemporary culture”).

* J. Engle, “Cults of Lovecraft: The Impact of H.P. Lovecraft’s Fiction on Contemporary Occult Practices”, Mythlore, Vol. 33, No. 1, 2014.

Lovecraft’s Public Library

19 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

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My new-found picture of the reference section of the Providence Public Library, in use by patrons. Published April 1916, so perhaps made 1915. It’s from one of the early Google Books scans and has bad un-correctable moire. I can’t get it larger or less fuzzy.

One could almost imagine that the lad seen on the far right of the picture is a 25 year-old H.P. Lovecraft. The hair-parting and the look of the ear are both correct. Lovecraft’s obvious lantern jaw might be there, but it might not. Lovecraft wore eyeglasses at this time, but it’s difficult to tell if this lad is wearing glasses or not. The feature that suggests this may not be the young Lovecraft is the dark shade and cut of the collar on his camel coat or jacket, which thus becomes two-tone — this being rather too jaunty and not sober enough for his known tastes in menswear. Although we do know that in 1915 Lovecraft became enamoured of ‘the dandy’, a figure he later associated with Edwardian frock-coats and their velvet collars, so who knows now if that phase of his interests temporarily affected his taste in clothing?

Still, even as a ‘stand in’ this young man is a close match, and thus very indicative of Lovecraft’s undoubted youthful presence in the room at other times.


I also found a later picture of the Public Library exterior in its urban context. The library is in the middle-distance on the left, with the Biltmore Hotel in the far distance, and what looks like a small theatre in the foreground on the left. One can just about see that there were young trees around the library, by circa the early 1920s.

The trees can be better seen here in cards. They look fine at the start when small, but look rather spindly and struggling circa 1927…

New book: Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei and to Emil Petaja

18 Saturday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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S. T. Joshi’s blog has updated. Among the Lovecraft-related news in his latest long post, the Lovecraft Annual for 2019 is done and is thus presumably forthcoming later this summer, as are “volumes of Lovecraft’s letters to Donald Wandrei and Emil Petaja; to Wilfred B. Talman and Helen V. Sully”. Joshi now flies to France to participate in events there surrounding the publication of Je Suis Providence, the French-translation of his monumental H.P. Lovecraft biography.

No sign of a listing yet for the contents for the new Lovecraft Annual, but Hippocampus has H. P. Lovecraft: Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei and to Emil Petaja listed at $25 after a small pre-publication discount. There’s also an explanatory note that this book has the same content as the older and now-expensive Mysteries of Time and Spirit: The Letters of H. P. Lovecraft and Donald Wandrei (2005) but adds…

120 new pages of Lovecraft’s letters to Howard Wandrei and Emil Petaja. … In addition, a rare interview of Donald Wandrei is included, along with poems, essays, and stories by Petaja.

Map of the Providence parks and green spaces circa 1910

18 Saturday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Maps

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From The southern gateway of New England, 1910. Map possibly drawn up 1903, when H.P. Lovecraft would have been about age 12 to 13, and still roving far on his bicycle.

And the 1916 update, less visually pleasing but with new additions and with the colour key explained in the small-print. Lovecraft now a young man of about age 25, having long since given up his bicycle and row-boat in favour of zipping about on trolley-cars (trams).

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