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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

Inside the Botanic Gardens glasshouses

03 Friday Mar 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

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This week on ‘Picture Postals’, a peek inside the glasshouses of the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens. The ornamental Japanese Gardens there became one of the key places that Lovecraft loved the most in New York City, a refuge from the harsh city outside. I’ve previously had posts here on the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens – part one and part two and I noted various influences, including on his New York friend Belknap Long via Long’s wartime “Curator of the Interplanetary Gardens” series of sci-fi plant yarns for boys.

The glasshouses were very near the Japanese Gardens, on the terraces that ran into them, and we know from the letters that Lovecraft went inside.

Seen here before, my newly colourised view of one of the conservatories (aka glasshouses, greenhouses, hothouses or now just ‘houses’) as seen in 1936. Probably the “Palm House”.

But now we can follow Lovecraft inside. Here we see an admittedly later view, on the painted cover of New Yorker magazine from 1950. It appears to also be the “Palm House”.

There was also an “Economic House” (fruits and useful produce), which has this superb 1927 archival view of the interior by Louis Buhle. Near perfectly timed for showing us what Lovecraft encountered in the mid 1920s. I’ve here colorised it…

As with the boys seen here, Lovecraft was early fascinated with such things and recalled…

“In childhood I used to haunt such places [florists’ shops] about February, when the strain of hated winter became unbearable. I liked to walk through the long greenhouses & imbibe the atmosphere of warm earth & plant-life, & see the vivid masses of green & floral colour. One of my early doggerel attempts was a description of an hypothetical glass-covered, furnace-heated world of groves & gardens …” (Selected Letters Vol. III, page 138).

Something which would appear in the alien gardening of his seminal science-fiction story “The Shadow out of Time”…

“The omnipresent gardens were almost terrifying in their strangeness, with bizarre and unfamiliar forms of vegetation nodding over broad paths lined with curiously carven monoliths. Abnormally vast fern-like growths predominated; some green, and some of a ghastly, fungoid pallor. Among them rose great spectral things resembling calamites, whose bamboo-like trunks towered to fabulous heights. Then there were tufted forms like fabulous cycads, and grotesque dark-green shrubs and trees of coniferous aspect. Flowers were small, colourless, and unrecognisable, blooming in geometrical beds and at large among the greenery. … Fungi of inconceivable size, outlines, and colours speckled the scene in patterns bespeaking some unknown but well-established horticultural tradition.” — “from The Shadow out of Time”.

His poetry is abundantly seeded with arboreal nooks and verdant pastoral scenes, although except for a few strange fungi these are usually cultivated within the fences of poetical convention. Part of the attraction of such garden places was often the sense of their being frozen in time…

“I am very fond of gardens — in fact they are among the most potent of all imaginative stimuli with me” [real] “old-fashion’d gardens, stone walls, sloping orchards, and picturesque lines of barns and sheds became so overwhelmingly pervasive that one felt almost opprest for lack of opportunities for instant lyrical utterance. Here, indeed, was a small and glorious world of the past completely sever’d from the sullying tides of time” (Selected Letters III).

In the Wandrei letters (p. 252, 253, 265) we also encounter various extended musing on his ‘ancestral’ memories of deep woods, forests, including “vast-boled, low-branching, palaeogean forests”. But his ideal was a cultivated dream-garden, as if encountered deep in his Dreamlands…

“the experience of walking (or, as in most of my dreams, aerially floating) through aethereal and enchanted gardens of exotick delicacy and opulence, with carved stone bridges, labyrinthine paths, marble fountains, terraces, and staircases, strange pagodas, hillside grottos, curious statues, termini, sundials, benches, basins, and lanthorns, lily’d pools of swans and streams with hers of waterfalls, spreading gingko-trees and drooping, feathery willows, and sun-touch’d flowers of a bizarre, Klarkash-Tonick pattern never beheld on land or beneath the sea.” “… a type of dreamlike scene which I have always envisaged as a sort of imaginative phantom — The Gardens of Yin, as it were” (Selected Letters III).

“There is somewhere, my fancy fabulises, a marvellous city of ancient streets & hills & gardens & marble terraces, wherein I once lived happy eternities, & to which I must return if ever I am to have content.” [Returning down] “bewildering avenues to all the wonders & lovelinesses I have ever sought, & to all those gardens of eld whose memory trembles just beyond the rim of
conscious recollection”. (Selected Letters II).

He was lucky enough in his life to encounter two real ornamental gardens that came very near to his ideal.

A new short yarn by Lovecraft’s friend Everett McNeil

02 Thursday Mar 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New discoveries

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I found a new short yarn by Lovecraft’s friend Everett McNeil. Sadly it’s not an unknown fantasy to add to those in his Dickon Bend-the-Bow and other Wonder Tales, but rather one of his early wry ‘backwoods America’ yarns titled “The Reporter and the Bear”. It appeared in The Atlanta Constitution for 2nd July 1899, and has popped up now because Archive.org has been ingesting newspapers on microfilm. Thankfully it’s readable. In my biography of McNeil, Good Old Mac (2013) I listed this as known but not seen…

The Reporter and the Bear”, Salt Lake Herald, July 1899

Now it can be read again.

The Man with a Thousand Legs (1927)

01 Wednesday Mar 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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New on Librivox, a public domain reading of Frank Belknap Long’s “The Man with a Thousand Legs” (Weird Tales, August 1927 — warning: full-view header illustration is a plot-spoiler).

“… a completely unrepentant shocker from 1927 that calls itself ‘The Man with a Thousand Legs’ and lives 100 percent up to its title.” (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, 1973)

“… that marvel of many viewpoints, ‘The Man with a Thousand Legs'” (Pulp Magazine Thrillers, 1998)

“… we must remember it was written in 1927, and is rather good SF for that period” (Luna Monthly, 1972)

A couple of years ago Dark Worlds Quarterly had a long appreciation and summary of the tale. The tale’s fragmentary pieced-together structure and its opening illustration (see that full heading after reading the tale) might seem at first glance to be bouncing off a reading of Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”. Although to Weird Tales readers it might have appeared that the February 1928 published “Cthulhu” was actually following Long, rather than other way around.

As Dark Worlds usefully points out there was a later slightly revised version of “The Man with a Thousand Legs” in Magazine Of Horror And Strange Stories (August 1963), which removed a few touches that made it sound dated in the early 1960s. Later it was included in the Arkham House collection of Long’s stories, The Rim of the Unknown (1972). Presumably that was the 1963 version.

“Erich Zann” adapted by Roy Thomas

28 Tuesday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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Dark Worlds Quarterly has a fine new survey, with a few predictably gory examples, of vintage Lovecraft in Black & White. This being a survey of b&w comics that have, over the decades, adapted various Lovecraft tales.

I especially liked the look of the opening splash page for “The Music of Erich Zann” adapted by Roy Thomas, in the short-lived Masters of Terror #2 (September 1975). Masters of Terror was a b&w magazine-format comics anthology published under Marvel’s Curtis cover-imprint, offering reprints.

I tracked it down online and found the same (final) issue also had “Pickman’s Model”, again adapted by Roy Thomas…

A rather good “Zann” reprint then, but from where? A little digging finds it was originally in colour under the title “The Music From Beyond” in Marvel’s regular-sized Chamber Of Darkness (issue #5, June 1970). This issue had nice Kirby pencilled cover-art, and a Kirby tale inside, so is collectable and thus pricey today.

Astounding set

27 Monday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Currently on eBay, no bids. Low starting prices, and he ships from the UK. The condition looks less than astounding, but some may be interested.

Miller meets metal

26 Sunday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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“Ahah”, I thought, “this new metal album’s cover artwork is a superb emulation of ‘Ian Miller channelling Lovecraft'”.

Turns out, it’s actually by Ian Miller himself. His blog has the full cosmic vista…

Encyclopaedia Metallum reviews the album Anthronomicon, by the band Ulthar, and immediately finds…

“We’re off to battle right away against the Lovecraftian hordes!”

After that, it’s apparently much of the same old-school metal pace right through to the end. Delivered with all of the skill of a leading Californian metal band on their third album.

Turns out this is not the first cover Miller’s done for them. A little more digging discovers their two earlier albums with Miller covers…

The orange one reminding me instantly of the art for one of Miller’s classic 1970s paperback covers for Panther. Is this the picture that was lost and had to be recreated? Anyway, if you don’t fancy framing the album cover(s) then this one can be had as a fine art print direct from Miller.

400 and counting

25 Saturday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

Congratulations to S.T. Joshi who posts that he’s now approaching his 400th book, not counting the various ‘revised and expanded’ editions.

He notes that…

My edition of the letters of Clark Ashton Smith, Donald and Howard Wandrei, and R.H. Barlow is also close to ready

Interesting. Presumably the letters not sent to Lovecraft or other major correspondents such as Derleth or R.E. Howard?

He’s also headed to New York City soon, to do research relating to the letters of Lovecraft’s friend Frank Belknap Long. He further notes his…

proposed volume of [early Lovecraft collaborator] Winifred Virginia Jackson’s collected poetry. David E. Schultz has already done an incredible amount of work on this project, but some of her poetry remains elusive.

Thus if you have any unique Winifred Virginia Jackson poetical items tucked away, now’s the time to speak up.

Winter and spring

24 Friday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Picture postals

≈ 1 Comment

This week on ‘Picture Postals from Lovecraft’, a glimpse of the winter we’re now leaving behind. Here’s a rare view looking up College Street in a New England winter after snow. Lovecraft would later live at No. 66 College Street, at the top of the rise seen here.

With thanks to the Providence Public Library, picture extracted from the John Hutchins Cady Research Scrapbooks Collection. Here newly colorised and contrast balanced.

Lovecraft would increasingly dread having to venture out in very cold weather. Though he did, well wrapped-up.

He once penned a little-known Dunsanian fragment based around the idea of winter and spring…

… And it is recorded that in the Elder Times, Om Oris, mightiest of the wizards, laid crafty snare for the demon Avaloth, and pitted dark magic against him; for Avaloth plagued the earth with a strange growth of ice and snow that crept as if alive, ever southward, and swallowed up the forests and the mountains. And the outcome of the contest with the demon is not known; but wizards of that day maintained that Avaloth, who was not easily discernible, could not be destroyed save by a great heat, the means whereof was not then known, although certain of the wizards foresaw that one day it should be. Yet, at this time the ice fields began to shrink and dwindle and finally vanished; and the earth bloomed forth afresh.” (Lovecraft’s unused ‘transcription from the Eltdown Shards’, Selected Letters V, March 1935)

And here is his beloved Angell Street with the leaves off, but about to “bloom forth afresh” as the earliest spring starts to bud on the trees…

View down Angell Street, Providence.

Up and down this colonial hill [College Hill] I have walk’d ever since I could walk at all — and it has always exerted upon me the greatest possible fascination, even though my native part of Angell Street is somewhat farther East [along the hill], in a decidedly newer (middle and later Victorian) district. Let no one tell me that Providence is not the most beautiful city in the world! Line for line, atmospheric touch for atmospheric touch, it positively and absolutely is! Colour, shade, contour, diversity, quaintness, impressiveness — all are there” (rhapsody on his return home to the city, Selected Letters II, May 1926).

Bookshops of Arkham

23 Thursday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts

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In the Bookshops of Arkham, an eight-hour YouTube series of Call of Cthulhu ‘actual play’. Just in case you were curious about such RPG things.

And, as for props for such things, I found a nice 1904 card which might serve to aid in visualisation of settings. The shop on the right of the row being a possible book shop.

It’s a pity that city bookshops and galleries don’t (didn’t) get photographed, as 80 or so years later they’re of great interest due to their connections with famous writers and artists.

Deleuze on Lovecraft

22 Wednesday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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The Deleuze Seminars, ‘A Thousand Plateaus’, given 1975-1976 in Paris and filmed for a ‘French philosophy as it is lived’ project of the period. Now online.

[He] focuses on the molecular multiplicities defined through their dimensions, specifically their maximal dimension that is the borderline. […] his extended example comes from H.P. Lovecraft [and he later] refers to Lovecraft’s story, “The Outsider”, which provides a term to describe the peripheral status in molecular multiplicities, “the one you don’t expect”, the unnamable, and from which another borderline can be acquired. […] A third, very brief fragment commences in mid-quotation from Lovecraft (located in print in A Thousand Plateaus, p. 251) that provides Deleuze with way to discuss the possibility of numerous dimensions possessed by molecular multiplicities. This brings him to propose the plane of consistency or the rhizosphere as the common intersection of all these multiplicities by a plane.

Henry Kuttner

21 Tuesday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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New on archive.org, Collected Fiction of Henry Kuttner, ordered by date across 8,400 pages. Including his Lovecraftian tales and his poem “H.P.L.” for Lovecraft.

The young Kuttner at an early SF convention.

For a short overview of his best Mythos tales see Shawn Ramsey’s “Henry Kuttner’s Cthulhu Mythos Tales: An Overview”, Crypt of Cthulhu #51 (Hallowmas 1987). Also the anthology The Book Of Iod (1995) which collected ten Mythos tales by Kuttner and added an introduction by Robert M. Price, a collaboration, and one tale by Price himself. The book Discovering classic fantasy fiction: essays on the antecedents of fantastic literature (1996) has an essay of wider scope, “Henry Kuttner, Man of Many Voices”.

The Lovecraft letters to Kuttner were first published in the early 1990s, and these are now to be found at the back of the volume H.P. Lovecraft: Letters to C.L. Moore and Others.

Also on Archive.org is The Best Of Henry Kuttner (1975) from Doubleday with an introduction by Ray Bradbury (the influence was ‘Kuttner influencing Bradbury’, rather than the other way around), and The Best Of Henry Kuttner Vol. 1 (1977) from Mayflower in the UK, with a very different story list.

Many of his magazine covers can be seen in date order at Dark Worlds Quarterly’s survey which starts with Henry Kuttner Part 1 – 1936-1939.

Kuttner’s ‘repeating character’ series are: the Hogben tales of a family of weird mutant hillbillies; and the Galloway Gallegher series about a brilliant but penniless inventor who can only invent when drunk, and when sober finds himself at a loss to explain his new inventions. We see him here considering a fabulous (but also fabulously vain and preening) robot he’s created.

Fragments of Kitab al-Azif at Harran

20 Monday Feb 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New at the HPLHS Store, Miskatonic University Monograph: “The Discovery of Fragments of Kitab al-Azif at Harran”. In the years before 1920…

Scholars from Cambridge and Miskatonic universities collaborated on a series of archeological digs in what is now southern Turkey. Excavations at the site of Harran made several unusual discoveries, chief amongst them is a fragmentary medieval document in Arabic. Professor Henry Armitage correlated the translated fragments with a passage in Miskatonic’s incredibly rare occult tome: the Necronomicon.

Said to be shipping at the start of March 2023.

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