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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

Overrun with giant Centipedes!

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ Leave a comment

900 pages of Centipedal goodness! Yes, Amazon is now listing H.P. Lovecraft — a huge chunk of hardcover H.P. Lovecraft edited by S.T. Joshi, and published by the Centipede Press Library of Weird Fiction. A postman can be crawling to your doorstep with it on 10th Dec 2013 🙂

lovec

Also due soon, according to S.T. Joshi’s blog (18th June 2013), are similar Centipede volumes of…

“Edgar Allan Poe; Algernon Blackwood; William Hope Hodgson; Dennis Etchison; John Metcalfe; Sax Rohmer; Robert W. Chambers; J. Sheridan Le Fanu; E.F. Benson (2 vols.); W. C. Morrow; Carl Jacobi”

RK – Rheinhart Kleiner: A Memoir, scanned PDF

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

Here’s a new PDF edition of RK – Rheinhart Kleiner: A Memoir. A new annotated version of a mimographed pamphlet first issued by James Guinane in 1951. My special thanks to Dennis Weiler for generously acquiring a copy of this scarce booklet, and for emailing me the scans needed to make this new annotated version.

Download PDF.

I’ll get this on Archive.org soon too, although yesterday they were down all day for maintenance.

Captured Bird now online

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers, Lovecraftian arts

≈ Leave a comment

One of the most “must see” screenings at NecronomiCon 2013 seems to have been the film The Captured Bird. Now the Bird has finally escaped from the festival circuit and is available online for just $5.99 for the deluxe, or $2.99 for the original short…

“The Captured Bird and ALL of the extra features on the DVD available for instant streaming and HD digital download! Storyboards, concept art, production stills, audio commentary, making of doc, horror film school interviews, director’s diary, Jovanka’s second short film Self Portrait, hours of extra content”

TCB_TeaserPoster_FINAL2

The Shuttered Room

11 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

≈ 2 Comments

A rather good professional-quality reading of “The Shuttered Room“, the Derleth posthumous collaboration of 1959.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdarfZFLdeM&w=420&h=315]

Albert August Sandusky (1896 – c.1934?) of Cambridge, Mass.

11 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 7 Comments

I had another look at Albert A. Sandusky, a rather mysterious friend of Lovecraft. We don’t have a birth date, and only have a c.1934? death date for him. He lived in Cambridge, Mass., and this cutting from the Cambridge Chronicle, 7th May 1910, has him performing in a ninth-grade school play…

CambridgeChronicle7 May1910

It seems that, in America, “ninth grade” in May is likely to mean most of the class will have recently hit 15 years of age? If so then that would put his birth date at c.1895. Update: thanks to Miss Allen in the States for pointing out that it’s more like 14. So c.1896.

The same newspaper has him in the city’s school graduation lists in June 1915, where he is named as Albert August Sandusky (which I think is the first time that Lovecraftians have known his middle name?). Sadly this new middle name doesn’t lead anywhere in the online archives, but it might prove useful to those who have access to commercial geneaological databases.

So when the amateur journal The Torpedo (Sept 1913) called him the “youthful editor and publisher” of his Boys’ World magazine, he would have been aged around 17.

There was a Bertha Sandusky who made her way through the Cambridge school system some years ahead of Albert. She is recorded, on her marriage in June 1913, as “of Elm Street” and the daughter of August Sandusky of Cambridge. I’d suspect — given the name, and the fact that Elm Street was also where the school play (see above) was being performed — that August Sandusky may also have been the father of Albert August Sandusky. If so, then the father has left no other trace online.

Kenneth W. Faig Jr., in the Books at Brown Lovecraft special issue, mentions (p.56) that Sandusky became a policeman.

Lovecraft on a rollercoaster

10 Tuesday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 4 Comments

Imagine H.P. Lovecraft trying all the fairground rides at the beach, and then as a finale hurtling down the biggest roller-coaster. It happened, perhaps several times. In November 1921 his fellow amateur Mrs. Miniter wrote up a report of the Boston Convention of amateur journalists of July 1921. This had taken the amateurs to Boston’s Revere Beach amusements park, Boston’s equivalent of Coney Island…

… he [Lovecraft] tried all the soporific stunts at Revere” … “…to Revere Beach, where Mr. Lovecraft dropped eighty-five feet and was all over.” (Lovecraft Remembered, p.83).

wp1

George Houtain expanded on a Revere Beach visit, in a memoir of Lovecraft…

… we all journeyed to Revere Beach. Here Howard Lovecraft and Albert Sandusky did the eighty-five-foot-drop switchback three times in succession and complained bitterly of the tameness of it all. The greatest fun was with [the ride] “Over The Falls” [possibly this was earlier “Neptune’s Frolic”? — see picture below]. After passing through various chambers of trick floors, we were escorted singly and in pairs to a little elevator, where sitting down we expectantly waited either for the elevator to drop or a curtain to go up and the show to commence. Before we could adjust our thoughts, the whole front suddenly gave way, the seat propelled us forward , and in a second we were bounding down the most billowy waves one could imagine. Picture, if you will, the philosophical form of one Henry Padget-Lowe, Edward Softly, Theobald Jr., H.P.L., popping out and coming bouncing toward us. It was a screaming scream.” (Lovecraft Remembered, p.88-89).

His rollercoaster companion Albert Sandusky was the editor of Boys’ World, about six or seven years younger than Lovecraft and so much given to slang that Lovecraft called him “Wisecrack Sandusky” on paper. “Lovecraft met him frequently during trips to the Boston area”, apparently, although little else seems to be known about him other than his early involvement as a boy printer for Lovecraft 1915-1916, and his editing of the Quill magazine for the Hub Journalist Club c. 1923.

Lightning_Revere_Beach_postcard_cropped

rb15

chutes

Here are some of the other attractions Lovecraft could have enjoyed, including a palmist, Hell Gate, Neptune’s Frolic, Dragons Gorge, Japanese Ping-Pong, a “Fatal Wedding” theatre show (a grand guignol?), an animal show with monkeys, the Virginia Reel, The Whirlpool, and more.

rb5-1

$(KGrHqJ,!oIFIFnKuCRJBSGp(V5nNQ~~60_57

$(KGrHqVHJBsFHeFsfLqvBR4KJ!SYnw~~60_57

dragonsg

rb2-1

rb3-1

Wonderlandboston1917

wp20

wp3

It’s also known that Lovecraft visited Coney Island, the world-famous set of amusements, at least twice while living in New York. We also know he enjoyed several attractions there, including the $100,000 Fun House called “The Pit” which had opened in 1923.

Driftwind and Walter J. Coates

09 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

Lovecraft scholars will occasionally come across mention of the amateur journal Driftwind and the Driftwind Press. This is what the issues looked like (from a new eBay listing)…

driftwind

Chris Perridas also has other different covers on show, grabbed from eBay over the years.

The East Montpelier Historical Society has online a detailed historical essay on the magazine and its editor, including several photographs.

Find a Grave has other photographs of Walter J. Coates, from the family…

walter-j-coates

His 250-copy limited edition of his own poetry, Mood Songs (1921), is now scanned and online. The Walter John Coates Papers are now held in the University of Vermont Libraries Special Collections.

Supernatural Horror hyperlinked

08 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Alphabetic listing by authors of stories referenced by H.P. Lovecraft in his essay “Supernatural Horror in Literature”. With hyperlinks to the texts themselves.

suphorr

Lovecraft Remembered

07 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

I’m pleased to say that I’ve finally bagged an affordable UK-shipping copy of Lovecraft Remembered, which arrived this morning…

hpl-remembered

More Open Lovecraft

07 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

* Marshall Buchanan (2012), “Horror in Seneca’s Thyestes and Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”“. (Student paper written for Latin 5014 class at Department of Classics, Ohio State University).

* Mark McGurl (2012), “The Posthuman Comedy“, Critical Inquiry 38, Spring 2012. (Discussion of Lovecraft in relation to the academic canon and ‘outsider’ writers, on pp.542-547)…

   “an equal part of his interest as a writer is in the troubling shape taken by his limitations. [which] open up, at the level of daily social practice, to a compelling vision of a writerly existence — compelling because so extraordinarily grounded and collegial, so generous in the expense of personal time. … sharing work, sharing imaginative terrain, and freely helping each other toward publication … Working sideways from [amateur] journalistic endeavor into the literary community in which his literary efforts took shape, we are tempted to see the generic institution of the weird, too, as a kind of virtual college, a weird college. … His mistake was to think that the relative weakness and evanescence of the values shared by his community of literary underdogs meant that they were in fact worthless.” [whereas they now seem the forerunner of our own emerging open/remix culture and fan cultures].

Helvete: a journal of black metal theory

06 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Black metal fans who are looking for a journal in which to place an article on Lovecraft’s influence may be interested in a new academic open access journal Helvete: a journal of black metal theory…

rev1

More Open Lovecraft

04 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Added to the Open Lovecraft page…

* Patricia MacCormack (2010), “Lovecraft through Deleuzio-Guattarian Gates”, Postmodern Culture, Vol.20, No.2, January 2010.

* Carlos Corbacho Carrobles (2013), “H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Call Of Cthulhu”: an intermedial analysis of its graphic adaptation“, JACLR: Journal of Artistic Creation and Literary Research, Vol.1, No.1, September 2013.

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