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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Housekeeping

Off the daily posting schedule for a while

17 Thursday Jun 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

≈ Leave a comment

As the summer (and much reading and writing) beckons, I’m taking Tentaclii off the daily posting schedule from tomorrow. There should still be several posts a week here, but don’t expect the usual regular daily posts for a while. Daily posting will return in due course.

May on Tentaclii

01 Tuesday Jun 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings

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After a chilly May, a pleasant English summer is finally a’ coming in, and the verdant greenwood once again embraces Tentaclii Towers. Down in the moat, small fluffy goslings occasionally vanish into the savage jaws of a lurking pike. Curiously iridescent insects emerge from their wintering holes. Servants at the Towers become irritatingly frisky.

One especially frisky servant has been my PC. So frisky that the old fellow keeled over and died, sadly. But I’m pleased to say I lost no books or other recent work. I should probably now be mercenary and start a ‘new PC for Dave’ crowd-funder. But I doubt it would get anywhere near the £1,200 ($1,700) needed for a reasonably future-proof PC. So in the meantime I’ve fallen back on an old cupboard-hauled PC and have ordered a £70 SSD drive to give it a speed boost. That’s where your kind Patreon donations have gone this month, rather than on a book or two.

Volume two of Lovecraft’s Letters to Family and several other Letters books still await my reading, as (when not PC-wrangling) I’ve been immersed in reading and taking notes on Tolkien: maker of Middle-earth and The Worlds of J.R.R. Tolkien. These have been waiting for over a year to be properly read, and I’d now dug out the magnifying glass needed — the fonts are often infinitesimally small and especially on the vital footnotes for Worlds.

In June there may well be a long review of the last Lovecraft Annual here, as I now only have the long final ‘zombies’ essay to get past (I have no interest in zombies, the ‘monster for the unimaginative’) and then the reviews to read and make notes on.

New books discovered and noted on Tentaclii in May included: H.P. Lovecraft et le jeu video in Spanish and French; and The Werewolf In The Ancient World. Found via S.T. Joshi’s blog were the short books Lovecraft, l’Arabe, l’horreur and Lovecraft: sous le signe du chat, and I did a little more digging to discover what these were about. Also noted here were the journals St. Austin Review and Modern Age, re: their current willingness to carry articles about suitably interesting fantasy writers. In paid ‘Lovecraft & circle’ journals I noted the releases of the Italian Studi Lovecraftiani #19, and Zothique #6 & #7 — #7 being an R.E. Howard special issue. My “Fairytales” issue of the free Digital Art Live magazine also appeared this month.

My regular ‘Picture Postals’ posts looked at Lovecraft and: the appeal of Georgian doorways; the neo-gothic Radiator Co. building in New York City; and his favourite non-weird artist Nicholas Roerich. A long post for a Patreon patron surveyed “HPL at the movies”. Also posted was a newly enlarged and colourised picture of 169 Clinton St. in 1935.

In freebies at Archive.org, I spotted the worthy three-volume Dictionary Of Mythology, Folklore And Symbols (1962). This is newly available in downloadable PDF. Also free over at SFFaudio is a haul of tales determined to be newly ‘public domain’. I plucked the items of most interest from their list, and noted five from Frank Belknap Long. I added more links to free scholarly work at my Open Lovecraft page.

In bargain-spotting, I noted that the volume of Lovecraft-Barlow letters are available again in paperback and now at a very reasonable price. Presumably Florida University Press have wised up to print-on-demand, or else has produced a new print-run. The Barlow letters are now a good affordable ‘starter’ for those considering dipping a toe into the Lovecraft letters.

In comics and graphics novels I found several old ‘Lovecraft as character’ items, both new to me. These were Charles Cutting’s major graphic novel Kadath, or, The dream quest of Randolph Carter; and Alex CF’s one-off Lovers #1. In art I also noted that Armel Gaulme is selling off his “The Rats in the Walls” fine pencil illustrations.

In celeb news, Alan Moore announced his un-retirement, and del Toro won his legal case over supposed ‘plagiarism’.

In audio, Horrorbabble provided worthy new free readings of the Whitehead-Lovecraft tale “The Trap” and the Lovecraftian story “Far Below”. Dark Adventure Radio Theatre announced their paid CD of The Horror in the Museum, but the release will not be until Lovecraft’s birthday in August.

That’s it for this month’s round-up. Please support me via my Patreon, it really helps me out. Especially when my PC blows up. Thanks.

How to find your posts list at WordPress.com

26 Friday Mar 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

≈ 1 Comment

Why do UI designers have to constantly make things worse? WordPress.com has had a back-end makeover, and the dates have vanished from the back-end’s listed posts. Only after seven days do you start to see dates, and then without the year. Only after the current year to you start to see the year-date. Scheduled posts are now on a separate page from the normal posts, and have no dates listed against them. It’s hardly ideal.

Thankfully, bits of the sensible old UI are usually left working in WordPress.com, but you just have to find them. In this case the link to the former format — dates and times all visible at a glance, all posts inc. scheduled listed on one page and in order — can now be found thus…

It’s back!

04 Monday Jan 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Lovecraftian arts

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Tentaclii returns… a week earlier than planned.

A Christmas break

13 Sunday Dec 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

≈ 1 Comment

I’ll be taking a break from Tentaclii over Christmas and New Year. I hope you’ve enjoyed the years of daily postings, until now. There may be occasional postings popping up here, if someone important keels over after too many mince-pies. But otherwise Tentaclii should return to normal daily service on Sunday 3rd January 2021. Indeed, there’s already a ‘Picture Postals’ post cued up for the Friday of that week.

In the meantime, you may consider perusing the vast Tentaclii archives of 3,500+ posts.

September on Tentaclii

30 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

Our Indian Summer ends and the year turns. Increasingly cold gusts buffet Tentaclii Towers. Things crawl. Moths become crawling larvae that inch their way up walls, to wrap themselves in silk. Spiders crawl into houses and skitter around the bath-tubs. Chill winds send dry leaves crawling and tumbling over the paths. A new virus-hysteria also crawls over the land, very probably needlessly. The sturdy grocers who supply Tentaclii Towers bewail their empty shelves, where once there were walls of toilet-rolls and Dettol. Still, the ginger beer remains in-stock, and a good supply of this is now lining the cobwebbed cellars of Tentaclii Towers, thanks in part to my Patron patrons.

My Patreon total still stands at $69 a month from 24 patrons, as it did last month. But at least the total is not going down, at a time when many people are cancelling monthly subscriptions. This month my patrons have enabled me to bag two useful bargain-priced books. H.P. Lovecraft: Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei was found as a half-price £10 copy inc. shipping, as an Amazon Warehouse deal. Mauling by warehouse werewolves had apparently caused “severe damage” to the covers, but when the book arrived in the Amazon locker it was fine. Just a very slight and gentle crease in one corner of the front cover, hardly to be noticed. This new book immediately yielded up another piece in the jigsaw puzzle that is the life of Lovecraft’s friend Arthur Leeds. I had already established his late presence at Coney Island, but this was further illuminated by Lovecraft’s remark to Wandrei that Leeds had become associated with a human freak show. One then wonder if Lovecraft ever dropped in on this show, on some New York visit? It was a proper full-on freak show, and there are now at least two New York history books devoted to it.

I was also able to bag an eBay bargain, a copy of the Lovecraft Annual No.2 for 2008. This had somehow turned up in a thrift-store, way out on the plains of middle-America. Smaller thrift-store chains can have nice prices, as they don’t operate in the “we know the price of everything, add $10 on top, and just auto re-list it until it sells” mould. They want to ship ASAP, so they can make room for the next consignment of kind donations. They were willing to sell for a mere $10, inc. shipping across the Atlantic. Nice. The book should emerge from the hoary hold of a transatlantic tramp steamer any day now.

In other book news this month, I noted a new ebook edition of H.P. Lovecraft in Britain. This led me to discover that the original might still be available in paper from the author, and at a very nice price too. S.T. Joshi kindly revealed the next three titles set for the ongoing Letters series: “Letters to Hyman Bradofsky and Others; Letters to Woodburn Harris and Others; Letters to Richard F. Searight and E. Hoffmann Price.” The new expanded Letters To Rheinhart Kleiner and Others is being polished now and should be the next to ship, later in 2020. Spurred by the Kleiner letters being listed at Hippocampus, I was pleased to prise from the archives a fine light poem by Kleiner. This evoked the 1921 experience of visiting the early news-reel and travelogue cinema shows, and in a way it offers some additional context for Lovecraft’s circa-1922 emergence into the social world. His world was also widening at the cinema.

R.E. Howard books were not forgotten. I was pleased to hear of a new updated and expanded edition of the old Starmont Guide Robert E. Howard: A Closer Look, and I also noted a curious new book on Conan’s ‘philosophy’. My Patreon patrons were also alerted to the sale of a large and desirable Howard collection by mail-order, with items sensibly priced.

In scholarly journals from the continent I played catch-up with the Italian Studi Lovecraftiani journal for 2020 and 2019, and also gave English readers the translated contents lists for these volumes. For the 2019 edition this entailed quite some digging into various Italian blog posts, as there’s no simple list. I found another open journal, AILIJ : Anuario de Investigaciin en Literatura Infantil y Juvenil (2001-2019, ‘Research Yearbook on Children’s and Young People’s Literature’).

In continental books, the Italians are set to ship Io Sono Providence: la biografia di H.P. Lovecraft, this being the second volume of Joshi’s biography. The Italians also have a substantial new book on Kenneth Sterling and Lovecraft, by a past contributor to the Lovecraft Annual. In French I found in open access the academic book Fantastique et Evenement: Etude comparee des oeuvres de Jules Verne et Howard P. Lovecraft.

My own scholarly posts were rather light. But I took a look at Lovecraft’s pursuit of the Perkins line in his family-tree, and posted a much more substantial survey of Lovecraft and voodoo.

Tools for scholars are also of interest to some Tentaclii readers and I noted the release of the useful PDF Index Generator 3.0 (generates ‘back-of-the-book’ indexes), and showed how to keep the free DocFetcher running (generates a local index of folders of documents, enables keyword searching of these). For bloggers I gave many tips on setting up the free Open Live Writer, useful for those fleeing the ‘Block editor’ at the free WordPress.com blogging service. Also of possible interest to wranglers of words is my new free booklet of useful regex, the My Little Regex Cookbook, for Notepad++. My own JURN academic search-engine (open-access only, with a focus on arts and humanities) has now completed a back-end overhaul and link-check and is thus once again ready for the ‘back to university’ crowd. I also have a new link-tree which provides a handy list of my other non-Lovecraft projects, including JURN.

There was a ripple of science items this month. Fred Lubnow produced a new blog post, “Some Notes on the Biology of the Shoggoths”. There was a call for papers for “Science Fiction in the Museum”, a link to a new “Ancient Earth Globe” interactive website, and a podcast on the strange world of the lichens.

My regular Friday ‘Picture Postals’ feature once again dug into Lovecraft’s College St., and the second of these posts literally ‘dug in’ — with a look at the 1935 demolitions. For this I was able to pair record-photographs with art from Stacey Tolman, to reveal Tolman’s exact locations. Another ‘Picture Postals’ post also led in a roundabout way to another interesting local artist, H. Cyrus Farnum, via initial consideration of an all-night coffee shop in Providence. Another more general College St. post, “Between Waterman and College Streets”, considered if an evocative Athos Zacharias 1950s lithograph might (or might not) show Lovecraft’s final home.

Various forthcoming Lovecraft events were noted. NecronomiCon 2021 has appointed its poet laureate. There was an update on Hungary’s National Lovecraft Meeting 2021, plus details and a poster for Germany’s Cthulhu Fest 2021. Give the current behaviour of the second-wave virus (spreading, but seemingly not very deadly at all) it’s quite possible these will happen face-to-face. Or at least with some cool hand-made cultist face-masks.

In audio, Cadabra Records released a “Behind the scenes” video for their new 6 x L.P. boxed-set vinyl for H.P. Lovecraft’s “At the Mountains of Madness”, and I noted that their “The Loved Dead” vinyl LP is still available. Psilowave Records is getting in on the act, with a new two-LP “The Dunwich Horror” on coloured vinyl. Several Lovecraft-heavy album releases were noted in the heavy metal genre. There was more from the Voluminous podcast which is reading extracts of Lovecraft’s letters, and on YouTube I found a new and full reading of Lovecraft’s seminal expression of cosmicism “The Poe-et’s Nightmare”.

In the graphic arts, a popular Tentaclii post surveyed a wealth of recent Lovecraft graphic novels, and here I was especially pleased to discover the Lovecraftian graphic novel Weird Detective (2017). There was no DeviantArt art survey this month. Post-Inktober will be a better moment to make such a survey. But various archival bits of art were brought to light, and from Archive.org I was delighted to dig up “Lurker in the Lobby #3” by Kennon James, which depicted Lovecraft’s one-time job as a cinema-booth ticket-clerk. Where is the rest of this set, in this original form? Finally I noted that the H.P. Lovecraft Archive now has a handy new page linking to ‘Lovecraft’s Drawings’ as scanned and online in the Brown repository. These run from “Nude, Bearded Lovecraft” to “Kittens at Play”, all as drawn by Lovecraft himself.

That’s it for this month. Please consider becoming my Patreon patron.

Open Live Writer: how to find your scheduled posts

11 Friday Sep 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

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WordPress.com is currently ditzing back and forth between the old and the new posting systems, so it looks like it really is time to move to Open Live Writer for blogging. One feature is a little tricky for new users to find, in this free offline blogging software. A list of your scheduled posts. Turns out you can get the list, but there’s no labelled way to it. You need to know to click once here…

C2020-09-11_145412

This then opens up the panel seen below, and then you drop down the list to click on your full blog name.  A full list of the last 50 posts are then speedily retrieved via RSS, and they include forward / scheduled posts in the correct order and (unlike the new WordPress) with dates that make sense when compared with the Windows taskbar Calendar.  You can then click on one of these to edit, save, change date and time etc.

2020-09-11_145448

It’s also useful to know that Ctrl + J loads Windows Explorer to pick a picture to upload to a blog post. The default ‘pick’ folder is Pictures.

WordPress ditches the old classic editor

09 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

≈ 1 Comment

Ugh, so now all free WordPress.com blogs have to use the horrible new “Block” blog-post editor and admin interface. Designed by a blockhead for blockheads, but the look of it. It appears to have been enabled and enforced for all, today. Congratulations, WordPress, you’ve made a great system impossible to use by forcing an essentially un-usable interface on users. It used to be that you could still get a redirect to the old Classic editor, via a useful bit of UserScript. That’s now kaput, and if it’s not for you then it soon will be.

There is a “Classic Block” theme which tries to make the new “Block” editor look a bit more like the old one.  So it’s either get a paid version of a free WordPress.com blog that can get that, “or else”, it seems.

I’ve found the “or else”. I am currently writing this with Open Live Writer, and thanks to Major Geeks for vectoring me straight onto that. (Major Geeks is a very useful old-school freeware directory, just make sure to avoid installing the iffy Malwarebytes Anti-Malware desktop Windows software from them).

Open Live Writer is a 2017 open-source fork of the older and well-loved Microsoft Live Writer, and it works fine with this free blog and and needs no API key.  I like it the more I use it.  Saves posts offline, retrieves the blog theme and categories and suchlike. Can see previous and scheduled posts with dates that make sense when compared to the Windows taskbar calendar (unlike the Scheduled post view for the Block editor). Spellchecker. It’s happy about code tags, as you can see with this amusing bit of Regex…

(/(^.*$)/g, '"$1"')

… and much more. I just wish it had the ability to mute the bright white background and an ability to make the font a bit bigger when writing a post. It does have font size controls, but they appear to be about how big the text is that you see, not that I see.

If I post as a draft to the blog, then update a draft post in Open Live Writer, does it update the draft at the blog?  Yes it does.  Wonderful.

So all I need now if to see if there’s any accessibility software for Windows that can increase font size and enforce a dark mode (or an ‘invert’ mode) at a per application level.

2020-09-09_1836342020-09-09_1836022020-09-09_183701

The raw code view, useful for pasting in links captured in ready-formatted HTML link form.


Update: I’ve fixed the two problems with Open Live Writer.

Dark mode: My choice of colour inverter is the Windows freeware NegativeScreen. Very nice, a super-lightweight system-tray utility. It even does Sepia (Win + Alt + F7, or right-click on the system tray icon) for a steampunk feeling and quite good readability in Open Live Writer.

Font size: As for zoom of the Open Live Writer fonts… it’s built into Windows, no need to use a magnifier. Just hold down Ctrl and use the mouse scroll wheel to zoom in and out. Crtl + Zero to reset. Who knew?

It’s a Lulu

13 Thursday Aug 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, New books, Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Thanks to Andrew for trying to order some of my Lovecraft books in paperback, and thereby discovering that some of the Lulu.com links were dead. The context here is that print-on-demand service Lulu.com recently had an utterly disastrous site makeover, causing chaos and much loss at the back-end of the service. Many authors, including myself, are still locked out of the service after several months. Book pages and author pages are slowly getting back to normal, and on checking I found that remaining “404” URLs were for…

* Walking with Cthulhu: H.P. Lovecraft as psychogeographer, New York City 1924-26.

* Ice Cores: essays on Lovecraft’s novella ‘At the Mountains of Madness’.

* And my very first Historical Context book, just a collection of the early blog posts really, and not comparable to the later footnoted books… Lovecraft in Historical Context: Essays.

So those three links are now fixed, both on old posts and over on the Tentaclii sidebar.

Other book pages at Lulu appear to be back to normal, and books are now printing/shipping fine.

Open Lovecraft updated

22 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

On the Open Lovecraft page, I’ve removed about thirty links to PDFs on Academia.edu. PDFs there can no longer be downloaded by the public, only by the service’s members or via a search at Google Scholar. The lock-down of the PDFs appears to have happened in the last couple of weeks. My thanks to Dave Higgins for letting me know about this. If scholars want PDFs to be truly open in future, I suggest using a proper public repository instead of closed services such as Academia.edu.

The Dark Man, enlightened

15 Wednesday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, REH

≈ Leave a comment

Thanks to GreyIrish for the table-of-contents for The Dark Man journal on Robert E. Howard and pulp writers. My post of earlier today has now updated to give readers the TOC.

‘Lovecraft on the Web’ Directory – updated and repaired

03 Friday Jul 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping

≈ 1 Comment

I’ve gone through the ‘Lovecraft on the Web’ Link Directory on this blog by hand, rather than the Linkbot check it had last time (that was late 2018, I think). The links list has been pruned, repaired and fixed.

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