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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

More scampering

06 Wednesday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Another quick scamper around the tunnels of academia…

* “Science and Madness: Echoes of Freudian Psychoanalysis in the Works of H.P. Lovecraft”, an M.A. dissertation. “Available for download on Thursday, April 25, 2024”.

* H.P. Lovecraft’s monsters of modernity read through J. J. Cohen’s ‘Seven Monster Theses’. Another Masters dissertation, from 2022 and also embargoed, but with a substantial abstract. As well as the oft-cited racial fears…

“The study finds that Lovecraft’s monsters are in part influenced by religious uncertainty following the First World War, the scientific advancements of Einstein’s theories of relativity, and the economic uncertainty of the American Great Depression” and at a deeper level “laissez-faire capitalism and Judeo-Christian thought”.

* In Indiana, the 2023-2024 IDAH HASTAC Scholars include a reseacher looking at… “the role of magic in weird fiction, particularly that influenced by H.P. Lovecraft. As part of this work, Sam utilizes computational text analysis methods such as topic modelling and document classification.”

Mining Lovecraft

05 Tuesday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers

≈ 2 Comments

A possible new French movie of interest, released in November 2023…

If horror cinema occupies a special place in the American cinematic landscape, in France, it’s another story. The proposals for such a thing have been regular since a “gore” revival in the 2000s, but in recent years the flame has rarely been lit in France. However, in the heart of a mine in the north of France, the young director Mathieu Turi has dug up a very flammable new nugget [in the form of his new movie]. Turi first introduces his spectator to the atmosphere of the coal mines over a splendid thirty minutes build-up [in which French miners in 1956 must take a professor down to take samples], in order to build a controlled atmosphere [around which] Turi gradually builds a cryptic Lovecraftian aura.

This appears to be the young director’s third movie.

Tentaclii in February

04 Monday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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A short month, and a chilly one. My new employment requires venturing out of the Tentaclii Towers grounds, and — lacking the requisite brazier-heated coach and fast horses — I have been re-acquainted with the delights of the English weather. Despite what hysterical cultists would have you believe, the English spring weather is definitely not “boiling” so far as I can tell. It’s set to be sub-zero with a heavy mist tomorrow, as I write.

In this month’s ‘Picture Postals’ posts I clambered up the mysterious Newport Tower in search of Vikings; I glimpsed the lower depths of Brooklyn Heights, which finally led me to a good artistic vision of what Lovecraft would have seen from atop those same heights; I gazed down Fulton Street in earlier times (which seemed to me to link with Lovecraft’s “The Street”); and peeped at the new excavations alongside the List building at Brown University (the site of Lovecraft’s house at 66 College Street). In another picture based post I wondered at the similarity of Lovecraft’s bibliophile ‘Great Race’, in “The Shadow Out Of Time”, to the Surrealist “Exquisite Corpse” of 1927.

For Valentine’s Day I examined Lovecraft’s one-time epistolary pseudonym ‘Valentine Boiling Fitz-Randolph Byrd’.

In scholarly work I found four new items. I also noted the use of Lovecraft for a new “Psychoanalysis of Wet Dreams”, which led me to dig up Lovecraft’s suitably soppy parody poem on the topic. I noticed that Fungi from Yuggoth: An Annotated Edition is back in print. In forthcoming books, S.T. Joshi announced a forthcoming volume of letters sent to R.H. Barlow, and also remarked on a new French screen documentary on Lovecraft.

In new books I noted: The Weird Tales Boys (2023) and Long Memories and Other Writings (2022) on Frank Belknap Long. Also the forthcoming artbooks Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book: Weirdly Illustrated by Michael Bukowski; and H.P. Lovecraft: Zoomorphic Manual. In old books I was pleased to learn of the existence of The Annotated Tales of Edgar Allan Poe (1981), now on Archive.org.

My occasional highlighting of free AI ‘LORA’ image-generation plugins continued, and I linked to an AI generated video adaptation (Lovecraft’s cosmic “The Poe-et’s Nightmare” from 1916).

Also in freeware, I was pleased to recommend AnyTxt Searcher for scholars. Also free, though requiring a hefty and expensive graphics card for your PC, Nvidia released “Chat with RTX”. Which appears to be an easy way to locally build an in-depth ‘H.P. Lovebot’ AI chatbot from his letters and essays. Now all we need is the humanoid robot HPL to put it in. Ready when you are, Mr. Musk!

Definitely not freeware, a complete set of Weird Tales was put up for sale on eBay at around $150,000. Which if you have a mere three bitcoins lying around, would actually be quite affordable. Sadly I only have a tiny fraction of one bitcoin, worth about $80 at the last count.

I updated my PDF of letters from E.H. Price to Lovecraft, which triggered a small but pleasing round of new downloads. Also for the Lovecraft Circle, I was pleased to find a good map for the Conan tales. I’m a little surprised there aren’t more such maps, and that I had to dig it up from 1975. In audio I noted R.E. Howard’s Weird Tales horror stories had arrived on Librivox.

I also posted on “Brian Stableford as editor and scholar”, and sorted out which of Asimov’s many ‘robot tales’ are said to be the best to start with. In Tolkien, I made more progress with issue #8 PDF ‘zine version of my Tolkien Gleanings, which should be out in a few weeks and weigh in at 100 pages.

And… the blog passed 5,000 posts.

loci numinosi

03 Sunday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New to me, the term “loci numinosi”. Wonderful.

Found in a descriptive blurb for the new open access conference-proceedings Cult Practices and Cult Spaces in Hittite Anatolia. Half the volume is on… “the significance of various [sacred] places, such as rivers, loci numinosi, roofs, [etc]”

The term seems to have been invented relatively recently by Hittite historians, to describe places where a ‘numinous’ deity might have been found, ranging from a typical temple altar or throne to ‘the catch-bag’ of a day’s hunting. Possibly in a sacred grove. The term is thus somewhat more humdrum than it first appears. Borrowing lustre from the more widely-known idea of the genius loci, which means the more ineffable (but also protective or “tutelary” as Lovecraft calls it) spirit of a natural place.

Still, the delightful new term loci numinosi is definitely one for imaginative authors to consider borrowing. One might even make a slight tweak to loci luminosi to indicate the repository of glowing Lovecraftian crystal, a high niche illuminated by giant burnished mirrors, a sacred grove of bio-luminescent fungi, or a dark place into which light can only enter at certain key moments of the astronomical cycle.

Stable Diffusion 2.1 768 and Lovecraft

03 Sunday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Lovecraftian arts

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Does Stable Diffusion 2.1 768 know what Lovecraft looks like, with a simple name prompt of ((H.P. Lovecraft)) ? After all the hoo-ha about celebrity pictures and name-tagging being removed from the training of SD 2.x? Well… yes, sort of. The results are not bad, considering how few good pictures there are of him. But not great.

Under the hammer

02 Saturday Mar 2024

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Heritage Auctions is hosting an auction consignment from fantasy author Neil Gaiman on 14th March 2024, which includes Sandman artwork, Watchman artwork, and a Moebius original.

The sale will benefit The Hero Initiative which supports veteran comic-creators in need, and the Authors League Fund which helps impoverished… “professional authors, journalists, critics, poets and dramatists”.

I hadn’t known about these two before, and they sound very worthy. If you are perhaps thinking of making or varying your will soon, then I’m sure they’d welcome bequests.

Also noticed, newly up for sale from James Cummins Bookseller of New York, some items from Lovecraft’s library…

Digging up Lovecraft?

01 Friday Mar 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals, Scholarly works

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A new project at Brown University, the Archaeology of College Hill. Taught, appropriately enough, more or less right alongside Lovecraft’s old garden, by the sound of it and by what can be seen in the photos.

The students have…

began an archaeological excavation of a green space next to Brown’s List Art Building … [the old] 58 College St. … In the late 1930s, it housed the now-inactive Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.

This was the closely adjacent building, close enough for Lovecraft to observe students from his windows, as his sunsets lowered into dusk and one might see into other houses before the curtains were drawn. The place featured in “The Haunter of the Dark”…

Students in the Psi Delta house, whose upper rear windows looked into Blake’s study, noticed the blurred white face at the westward window on the morning of the 9th, and wondered what was wrong with the expression.

Close enough for students to also see Lovecraft’s (Blake’s) expression while at his desk. There was no “Psi Delta” chapter in Providence, according to Annotated Lovecraft. It was thus Lovecraft’s polite gloss on the real Alpha Tau Omega. Presumably he had no wish to antagonise his direct neighbours, should they come to read the tale. As well they might. Yet the Tau Omega is referenced a little later in the story…

A youth in the Tau Omega fraternity house thought he saw a grotesque and hideous mass of smoke in the air just as the preliminary flash burst, but his observation has not been verified.

One hopes the current Brown students may move just a few yards back toward the List building in the future, and thus begin to excavate the site of Lovecraft’s garden. Now there’s an idea for a Mythos story.


Also relating to the List building, here’s one which may interest pychogeographers more than archaeologists. Just over 40 years after Lovecraft’s death, a 1978 meditation by Debra Shore on the top floor of the cramped and apparently rather spooky List Art Building. This is the modernist building the edge of which is seen in the above photo, and which stands on the site of Lovecraft’s home at 66 College Street. The peice for the Brown Alumni Monthly seems oblivious to the shade of Lovecraft, although obliquely evokes The Rats In the Walls, Pickman’s Model, Hypnos and others, for those who know their Lovecraft…

Located at the top of the building, where the stegosauric [i.e. dinosaur] ribs soar over the Providence skyline, rising massively from the Hill, is the painting Studio. [In which …] A sextet of crabs (blue, purple, green, gold, maroon, burnt orange) scrabble on a canvas, covering letters — which spell underneath, WE DREAM. […] A plaster head labeled “Phrenology” sits on a table. The skull is quartered, then divided further: the sections numbered. […]

The place is a mess, the floor lined with paper towels, cigarette packs, stretcher strips, empty turpentine cans, paper, cups – the debris of doing art. The floor is spattered with paint, scarred and splotched, scratched and marred. The walls have become a canvas, too, a backboard for design ideas to be batted against, an easel for a canvas to be stretched across, a sketchpad. Even the windows have become stained.

The sky, through one long slit window, is a subtle gradation of pastel hues, a value-study called sunset, a pale wash. Through this window, smeared with paint, the city glows, bustles, empties, rests. My reflection mirrors me; behind, the easels wait, the colors deepen in hue. The light flows in, and out. A new piece of cut canvas is draped over a new wooden frame, ready to be stretched and primed. Long strips of wood, like tallest reeds, lean against a wall. In the studio at dusk, a single painter paints. The others have packed up and gone home. The easels stretch toward the sky. A saxophone wails on the radio. Night comes.

Brian Stableford as editor and scholar

29 Thursday Feb 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

The venerable British SF author Brian Stableford has passed away. I can’t speak to his fiction, though I recall reading his SF books in the early 1980s and I know his range later included Lovecraftian Mythos tales (The Innsmouth Heritage and Other Sequels, etc al), fantasy tales (collected in Fables & Fantasies from Necronomicon Press) and acclaimed genre pastiche and mash-ups (Sherlock Holmes and others). Here I try to piece together a very basic overview of his scholarly works. Others will doubtless do a far better job in time, for one of the most prolific British writers. One hopes they’ll also say a word or two about the fine cover-artists he must have enjoyed having from time to time…

In 1979 he made his name as a critic with a study of the works of fellow SF author James Blish, A Clash of Symbols: The Triumph of James Blish. So far as I can tell, he never wrote on Lovecraft but a taste of his wide range of interest can be found in the contents list for his Slaves of the Death Spiders and Other Essays on Fantastic Literature (2017). With essays on H.G Wells and Dracula, SF of the 1980s, and also the infamous British 1990s censorship case of Lord Horror, plus his musings on the modern profession of science-fiction writing as a profession. He wrote at length on the latter topic in Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction. Several other essay collections on the craft, and DIY guides to writing SF, can also be found.

He was most interested in the deep roots of science-fiction, and became the authority of seminal but forgotten figures in the early ‘scientific romance’ such as Birmingham’s Sydney Fowler Wright (Deluge, The World Below and others), writing introductions to new editions, collecting and publishing S. Fowler Wright’s Short Stories, and editing books with a wider scope such as Scientific Romance: An International Anthology of Pioneering Science Fiction, the multi-volume scholarly book-series Scientific Romance in Britain 1890-1950; plus the later New Atlantis: a narrative history of the scientific romance.

He was also interested in the intersections with decadence, with historical collections such as Decadence and Symbolism: A Showcase Anthology, and at least two volumes of the Dedalus Book of Decadence. Exemplary early drug literature he collected in Snuggly Tales of Hashish and Opium. Recently he produced the representative collection Weird Fiction in France, and The Dedalus Book of British Fantasy (19th century).

He collected sea tales of alluring sirens in The Snuggly Sirenicon and Fays of the Sea, made an anthology of early femme-fatalle stories, and in Tales of Enchantment and Disenchantment wrote a history of faerie as a lead-in to “exemplary anthology” of such early tales and with a focus on the female ‘fay’.

In his later years he produced anthologies of proto-science fiction such as News from the Moon, and volumes of translations of early French science fiction such as Nemoville. His translations of early French imaginative authors would fill a small library, and his The Plurality of Imaginary Worlds: The Evolution of French Roman Scientifique provides the guide-book. Side-interests included early proto-robots, evidenced by the book Automata which collected stories from the 19th century featuring such ‘automata’ devices.

I see he had bibliographic articles published in the Book & Magazine Collector, introducing collectors to the likes of R.E. Howard and M.P. Shiel.

One can also find his name as editor (and probably also writer) on volumes such as The A to Z of Fantasy Literature; Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia; the Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction Literature; Dictionary of Science Fiction Places, and others.

Being British he was also interested in our own SF history, as seen in pieces such as “A Brief Economic History of British SF magazines” (in Space, Time, and Infinity: Essays on Fantastic Literature, 2007). Possibly there are more such out there.

That’s it for a brief survey. Doubtless I’ve missed a lot, but hopefully I’ve also given others some clusters to build on. Or just titles to read. He wrote a lot, but was not publicised a lot — and so you may well find titles above that you had no idea existed.

Lovecraft would approve…

29 Thursday Feb 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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In parts of New England you can now pay your public-library fines in cats.

All wet

29 Thursday Feb 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

A paywalled chapter in the new book Hydrology and Its Discontents, “A Psychoanalysis of Wet Dreams”. Academia is still peddling Freud, Jung and Lacan into the 21st century, I see. But what’s this…

To chart a course through these hydrologic horrors, we invoke the spirit of H.P. Lovecraft, master of cosmic horror.

Well that’s a start, I suppose. I wonder if the author is aware of a Lovecraft ditty on the topic?

“(Wet) Dream Song”, a parody of a poet of amateur journalism called E.A. Edkins and “signed” by him in inverted commas, though definitely by Lovecraft…

“Oyster stew” here presumably being a euphemism for male masturbation. Which perhaps reveals an underlying reason for Lovecraft’s detestation of sea-food?

The “clamour of flowers / drove one quite frantic” on the beach is probably also a euphemism for bathing youth. One recalls Camus, evoking the beach of Oran in Algeria…

Oran also has its deserts of sand: its beaches. [ covered with flowers in winter, and girls in summer…] the sharp blue of the sky, everything makes one fancy summer — the golden youth then covering the beach, the long hours on the sand and the sudden softness of evening. Each year on these shores there is a new harvest of girls in flower. Apparently they have but one season. The following year, other cordial blossoms take their place […] (Personal Writings)

On the reverse of the card, presumably included with a letter and thus the correspondent is lost, Lovecraft writes… “I will illustrate the kind of [amateur pseudo-decadent] bilge I have in mind by by composing a parody here and now, currente Corona (*) and without apologies to any possible original or originals.” Which seems to imply that he was familar enough with Edkins’ work to parody it impromptu. The various dates, however, indicate that Lovecraft would not have gained his familiarity with Edkins’ work by revising it.

* meaning, with the current of ink still flowing from his Corona pen nib?

1920s Corona nib.

Lovecraft’s correspondent would likely have been attuned enough to see the subtle wit is his picking the word currente for a poem on the topic, in relation to a flowing pen-nib.

Forthcoming: Letters to R. H. Barlow

28 Wednesday Feb 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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S.T. Joshi’s blog is back online and has updated. Among the news is a forthcoming (2025)…

volume of Letters to R.H. Barlow. Barlow was in correspondence with a fascinating array of individuals, both in and out of the weird/fantasy/science fiction field, including H. G. Wells, A. Merritt, George Allan England, C. L. Moore, Ernest A. Edkins, August Derleth, and many others. But, aside from his letters to Derleth and to Donald and Howard Wandrei, not many of his own letters survive. The letters he received — many of which are found on a set of three microfilm reels made after his death by his literary executor, George T. Smisor — are full of interesting matter, especially relating to events following Lovecraft’s death in 1937.

Also news of a new two-hour Lovecraft screen documentary from the French, which has so far been seen at “several French festivals”. Apparently an English subtitles version is being prepared. Joshi shows the pleasing promotional poster for the new film.

Call: an oral history of bookselling in America

28 Wednesday Feb 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Bookstore Chronicles. Being an oral history of bookselling in America, as told by the nation’s own booksellers. The call for participants is still active and they appear to want audio only. One option there is to… “record a self-interview and upload your audio file”. Or if you know an old bookseller you think should be interviewed, pop over with an audio recorder for an afternoon’s chat.

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