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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

The Miskatonic Scholarship 2019

05 Tuesday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Unnamable

≈ Leave a comment

“The Miskatonic Scholarship is awarded each year to a promising writer of Lovecraftian cosmic horror”. It enables an author to attend… “The Odyssey Writing Workshop … an acclaimed, six-week program for writers of fantasy, science fiction, and horror held each summer in New Hampshire [on the east coast of the USA].”

“Contact Odyssey Director Jeanne Cavelos (email jcavelos@odysseyworkshop.org with ‘Miskatonic Scholarship Application’ in mail header-line) for the Miskatonic application form, which is due 1st April 2019.”

Applicants must demonstrate financial need in a separate application.

New book: H. P. Lovecraft: Vida y Obra Ilustradas

05 Tuesday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

≈ Leave a comment

New from Spain, some sort of illustrated life of Lovecraft. H. P. Lovecraft: Vida y Obra Ilustradas weighs in at 280 pages but doesn’t appear to be a graphic novel. It seems to be a heavily illustrated book, pitched at the Spanish-reading comics-buying / young adults market…

This book offers an illustrated journey through the life and work of the dark Providence Solitary, from his precocious and strange early fictions to the abominable masterpieces of his maturity.

That sounds like the stories, as well as the life, are being illustrated. The book is also on Amazon UK, without a “Look Inside…” flash.

10,000-word survey of Lovecraft RPG publishing in 2018

04 Monday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

≈ 3 Comments

The Cthulhu Reborn blog has completed a handy and succinct “helicopter” overview of all the Cthulhu/Lovecraft-related RPG releases of 2018. Including pointers to some rather polished new gaming magazines. The survey is now complete, and will thus move on to review individual titles. My Tentaclii blog doesn’t cover such game-books, unless they’re also of use as reference works for writers. But I’m pleased to find someone who does, and who provides a highly informed annual overview which helps non-gamers to keep a finger on trends and sensitivities over in the publishing gamer-verse…

Cthulhu in 2018: A Retrospective, part 1

Cthulhu in 2018: A Retrospective, part 2

Cthulhu in 2018: A Retrospective, part 3

Cthulhu in 2018: A Retrospective, part 4

Fine work. I ported all four parts into Word (a simple copy-paste to Word also auto-imports the pictures) and got a 10,000-word PDF for sending to my Kindle.

For those short of time, the three most interesting points for non-gamers are:

1) the new full-colour magazine, whose cover is seen above, which may well interest artists and writers as well as gamers.

2) there’s now a full-cast high-quality audio production of the all-time role-playing gaming classic Masks of Nyarlathotep, so that non-gamers can now enjoy it too. Select the “MP3’s only” option in the easily-overlooked dropdown box, which has a £27 download option for the six episodes.

3) there’s now (finally, after more than thirty years) a £20 introductory starter-pack for total newcomers to the Call of Cthulhu RPG game, with a rule-book of a mere 24 pages and various other starter bits and pieces.

Caballistics, Inc. complete

03 Sunday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Caballistics, Inc. was a Lovecraftian strip in the famous British comic 2000 A.D.. Acclaimed, it ran 2003-2007 but abruptly terminated before the grand finale in 2007.

Now there’s a new 300-page trade paperback The Complete Caballistics Inc., which is due in mid February. It collects all the strips, and adds a newly produced finale. Print only for now, though presumably an ebook version will be out soon.

A mysterious reclusive rock star recruits a team of paranormal investigators to delve into Lovecraftian things and cults. All done in a rather British Doctor Who manner, and with nicely stylised art. The same artist went all the way with the strip, and 2000 A.D. didn’t swop in new artists.

Arkham Studios Lovecraft statuette

02 Saturday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Currently on eBay (not from me), a very pleasing small Arkham Studios Lovecraft statuette, although with the hand-held hat broken off.

Jean-Paul Laurens

01 Friday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Unnamable

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Jean-Paul Laurens, “A Funeral” from c. mid-1870s-early 1880s. Laurens had a macabre streak and was known as “the painter of the dead”, though his online representation today suggests colour paintings rather than shadowy etchings similar to this one. This is my 3,800-pixel rip of a picture now in the public domain under CC0, but which was also locked inside a ‘zoomify’ viewing system. So feel free to use it as a book cover or as the basis of a new paint-over using Photoshop or Krita etc.

Friday “Picture Postals” from Lovecraft: the Providence Post Office

01 Friday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

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Following last Friday’s Rhode Island ‘letter carrier’ postcard, this week… the Post Office itself. I don’t know that there was any sub-Post Office up on College Hill, and I’ve never heard tell of one. So I presume that Lovecraft would have been familiar with strolling down the hill to his city’s new main Post Office, after it opened circa 1908. It was replaced in 1940.

On opening, circa 1908:

Seen below about ten years later, settling in to its surroundings and greening up, though now overshadowed by new commercial buildings that have sprung up…

The interior obviously had an interestingly curvy and almost ‘gloopy’ feel to it, which offset the uprights:

I can find no explicit mention by Lovecraft of using the Providence Post Office, in the searchable material I have access to. Those were the days of strong postal censorship, and letters might be opened. So presumably it was best not to mention the building, if his local postal service was working as intended? Yet the wider postal service and its constant use loomed large in his professional and amateur life, as well as for his general correspondence. He does describe the Washington Post Office, though, and in terms that would seem to echo the building in Providence…

Now came stamps — bought at a post office next the station where a grandly cloistral air animated an interior of vast size and drowsily ornate dimness.

Tentaclii in January

31 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings

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Well, another month has nearly gone on Tentaclii. Snow and crisp ice powders the ground below Tentaclii Towers, and the sky across the valley is an icy blue. But thankfully my typing fingers are warm, and in January 2019 the blog had 7,000 words of daily blog posts + many pictures.

Including: my new discovery of details and pictures for Lovecraft’s encounter with a bas-relief maker in Salem prior to “The Call of Cthulhu”; details of where one might (perhaps) find a published Wortman cartoon showing a good portrait of Kirk (of the Lovecraft circle) & his Chelsea Book Shop; a new pictorial survey of the Rhode Island School of Design including my newly-found picture of the Greek and Roman sculpture gallery interior as Lovecraft knew it in his boyhood; many notes and links for new books and scholarly essays and papers; details of a new free high-quality graphic novel of Lovecraft’s life; and several links to relevant online archive and in one case free audiobooks. Free research tools for independent scholars were also noted, with Paperwork being open source software for searching inside your PDF collection, and my JURN open access search-engine has returned to its former URL. There were also posts and links relating to the comics artist Moebius, to R.E. Howard, and one for Poe as a character in fiction.

If you can support Tentaclii on Patreon, please, then that would be very welcome and encouraging. The end of January saw new Patrons emerge from Norway and France, and so I now have 8 patrons giving $52 a month. All appear to be Tentaclii readers, as my hopes appear to have been unfounded that patrons might also be found among the readers of Digital Art Live magazine or users of JURN. Despite the quality of those two projects.

If you can spare just $1 a month via Patreon, please, it would be very welcome. Or you can just promote Tentaclii to your forums and groups, or do the same for one of my books. Many thanks!

New forum: Terres Lovecraftiennes

31 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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I’m pleased to see Terres Lovecraftiennes, a new Facebook Group dedicated to Lovecraft’s life and times. It’s on-topic, well illustrated and moderated. All readers of Tentaclii will want to join this Group. Facebook auto-translates the Group for me, and it’s readable in English.

Lovecraft on DA this month

31 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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A few Lovecraft items I noted being posted this month on DeviantArt, just in case you were looking for an active Lovecraftian illustrator.

Clothes Maketh Man by Sinkevic

Brawl by CaptainElfufel.

Uthar kittees + Lovecraft monster mash-ups may be trending…

Azafloof (Azathoth-kittee) by ProdigyDuck

Cathulhu by MonicaRavenWolf

The man who called himself Poe

31 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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On Archive.org to borrow, The man who called himself Poe (1969). Stories and poems with Poe as a character.

Also on Amazon, used. It appears never to have made it to a paperback, or become one of the Gollancz yellow-jacket budget ebook reprints of recent years.

The Perennial Apocalypse: How the End of the World Shapes History

30 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Odd scratchings, REH, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

Those interested in the sweeping intellectual and emotional influence of Spengler on the 1920s and 30s might be interested in a new long review of the out-of-print book The Perennial Apocalypse: How the End of the World Shapes History (1998). Spengler’s ideas and their popular interpretations touched enduring writers such as H.P. Lovecraft and R.E. Howard. In science-fiction, Asimov’s ideas about psychohistory also spring to mind. Thus this new review seems relevant to mention here. The review states that the book looked at…

Spengler alongside a long tradition of historical models that all pointed towards an “end of history.” These summaries of historical narrative modes are the best parts of the book. The project of The Perennial Apocalypse is more ambitious than to provide summaries, though. […] The central argument of The Perennial Apocalypse is that prevailing historical models of how history should go, must inevitably go, play their part in shaping events. But history almost never proceeds in the predicted fashion as a result.

A fascinating idea, re: how intellectual doom-mongering and an associated wrong-headed consensus among the gullible classes and journalists, might act as bumpers on the fast-moving pinball-table of emerging historical events. It’s something I discuss from time to time, over on my 2020 blog, and there are other books on it such as Herman’s The Idea of Decline in Western History.

Yet, while the reviewer finds in the book an interesting and well-written discussion of the structural commonalities of such predictions, he also finds few examples of their strong influence on the flow of history…

Reilly never managed to give many thorough examples of this kind of process at work. The Perennial Apocalypse ends up dwelling far more on the stuff of the great totalizing narratives of history than how they manifest in intellectual spheres and end up steering society.

Too many variables in the mix, perhaps, which in a way is kind of encouraging. Since it might lead to the supposition that no matter how much the cultural elites try to ‘put bumpers on the pinball table of history’ or tilt the table to ‘correct’ it by pounding on it with their fist, they can’t ultimately beat the inbuilt structural elements of the table. Elements which inexorably channel the probabilities of the ball’s direction across an implacable and unreachable table-base. The pinball always ends up in the hole at the bottom of the table.

The book is said to be discursive and goes beyond its main thesis, to detour into…

obscure 19th century millenarian scientific romances, H.P. Lovecraft, theosophy, Christian eschatology, and the evils of the worlds envisioned by Arthur C. Clarke.

It sounds fascinating. The original promotional blurb ran…

In every culture, history is a story, and the end of that story is the end of the world. This work describes the surprising similarities among the various forms that the ‘end of history’ has taken around the world and throughout time. Further, it explores how the image of the end has affected actual historical events, from the rise of millenarian cults to the evolution of the idea of progress.

Regrettably the book now appears to be totally unavailable, unless one pops up on eBay or Abe. There’s not even an Amazon listing for it on either Amazon UK or USA. Although the table of contents is still available along with a free bit of Chapter 2. A good example, I’d suggest, of how certain early self-published POD books are likely to become the real collectable ultra-rarities for the mid 21st century book collector.

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