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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: HPLinks

HPLinks #15 – Zann, R Lovecraft, a new Lovecraft philosophy book, Lovecraft and nostalgia, a new REH letter and more…

28 Thursday Nov 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, REH, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #15.

* In the latest Journal of The Fantastic in the Arts (35.1, 2024), “Beyond Worlds: Music, Literature, and the Fantastical in H.P. Lovecraft and E.T.A Hoffmann” ($ paywall). “Zann” is here compared…

with Hoffmann’s [story] “Ritter Gluck: Eine Erinnerung aus dem Jahre 1809” [ with discussion…] especially concerning the influence of German Romantic notions of music […] In Lovecraft’s tale, the unheimlich (‘uncanny’) is invoked through and by the romantic notions of music that the author utilizes to wrestle with language’s limitations in expressing the abstract, thus showcasing the importance of a musical approach to the fantastical.

* “Vascones, Pompelo and Calagurris in the three Versions of ‘The Very Old Folk’, by H.P. Lovecraft” a new book chapter, archived on Academia.org. In Portuguese. Relates to the previous 2019 article on the same topic, freely online in English, by the same author.

* A new issue of the open-access Journal of Gods and Monsters (Winter 2024).

* LovecraftR 1.2 on GitHub. Being Lovecraft’s stories pre-packaged for computational text-analysis using the R coding language. Regrettably the sources of the texts are not given. Thus, it’s uncertain if these are the gold-standard Joshi-corrected texts or not.

* Now free in open-access (was previously $ paywalled), the broad survey article “‘Awed listening’: H.P. Lovecraft in classic and contemporary audio horror” (2022).

* A new £135 academic philosophy book from Routledge, Reading Lovecraft in the Anthropocene: A New Dark Age, due in early spring 2025. If one looks past the book’s alarmist, tendentious and pseudo-scientific title (perhaps foisted on the German author by the publisher) then the book sounds interesting. The core of the blurb states…

the book traces Lovecraft’s gothic and decadent influences, examines materiality and its transcendence in weird fiction, and considers the posthuman and postsecular dimensions of his narratives. Through this, the study highlights Lovecraft’s role in navigating the challenges of a secular, disenchanted world, offering a ‘dark enchantment’ that echoes current philosophical concerns.

* Psychogeographic Review reviews the forthcoming book Ghost of an Idea: Hauntology, Folk Horror and the Spectre of Nostalgia (2025) which begins with Charles Dickens and then apparently… “closely consider[s] the works of other writers such as H.P. Lovecraft and Alan Moore” in relation to nostalgia.

* Futuramen blog brings news that there’s now a hardback for Lovecraft’s Collected Fiction: A Variorum Edition Volume 4 (Revisions and Collaborations). According to the post, the first three volumes were hardback but this fourth book had only been in paperback until now.

* Miskatonic Books still has copies of Arcana Viridia: An Occult Herbarium (2013) which sounds like a very unusual book of interest to some readers of Tentaclii. Apparently the handsomely-presented and illustrated book is the result of some 25 years of active field and desk research. A possible Christmas present?

* Deep Cuts blog looks at “Her Letters to Clark Ashton Smith: Annie E.P. Gamwell”. This being Lovecraft’s aunt.

* The Pulp Superfan surveys the Lovecraft-Eddy tales and memoir books currently in print from Fenham.

* Wormwoodania blog looks at the new Arkham House Ephemera: The Classic Years 1937-1973: A Pictorial History & Guide for Collectors.

* It seems the HPLHS will visit Australia in 2025, having been picked as International Guests of Honour for Chaosium Con Australia 2025. I assume they will receive travel tickets, a hotel room, and their own personal shoggoth… rather than it being just a virtual visit over the InterWebz.

* The latest issue #49 (November 2024) of The Paperback Fanatic has an article on the “UK Panther editions of Lovecraft” and also a “Guide to Conan Pastiches”. Available now, in paper only.

* A new Robert E. Howard Letter Dated to August 1932 has been discovered. The letter was sent to E. Hoffmann Price. Among other matters, REH discussed a sketch-portrait of Lovecraft.

* A new public-domain one-hour audio reading of “Red Shadows” by Robert E. Howard, at Librivox.

* Another text interview with the creators of the new HPL graphic-novel partial-biography of Lovecraft. In Italian.

* New to me, I find that acclaimed comics artist P. Craig Russell adapted Lovecraft, first published in badly-printed form circa 2003 and then pristine in Murder Mysteries and Other Stories: Gallery Edition (Titan, 2015). Apparently the story was “From Beyond”, though I can’t find any sample pages from the adaptation. The sumptuous 2015 oversized edition is now well out-of-print and is (from the sound of it) highly collectable.

* The new volume Dripping with Fear – Ditko Archives Volume 5 collects Ditko’s mystery-horror comic-book shorts, from 1958 onwards.

* A review of a new videogame at GameSpew. “Blood on the Thames is amateur theatre meets H.P. Lovecraft”, and the game is found by the reviewer to be a “wobbly but oddly appealing adventure”.

* And finally, Spectre Miniatures, the British maker of 1.1″ RPG miniatures, has released a new ‘machine-gun Mythos’ set along with some game rules…

The Mythos range is Spectre’s first release for ‘Supernatural Horror In Miniature’. Inspired by the works of H. P. Lovecraft, Mythos takes Spectre Operations players back to the weird world of Lovecraft’s 1930s America.


— End-quote —

“My favourite toys were very small ones, which would permit of their arrangement in widely extensive scenes. My mode of play was to devote an entire table-top to a scene, which I would proceed to develop as a broad landscape […] Toy trees — of which I had an infinite number — were used with varying effect to form parts of the landscape […] even forests (or the suggested edges of forests). Certain kinds of blocks made walls & hedges, & I also used blocks in constructing large public buildings. […] My people were mainly of the lead-soldier type [sometimes adapted and re-painted …] My mode of play was to construct some scene as fancy — incited by some story or picture — dictated, & then to act out its life for long periods — sometimes a fortnight — making up events of a highly melodramatic cast as I went. These events would sometimes cover only a brief span — a war or plague or merely a spirited pageant of travel & commerce & incident leading nowhere — but would sometimes involve long aeons, with visible changes in the landscape & buildings. Cities would fall & be forgotten, & new cities would spring up. Forests would fall or be cut down, & rivers (I had some fine bridges) would change their beds. […] Horror-plots were frequent […] There was a kind of intoxication in being lord of a visible world (albeit a miniature one) & determining the flow of its events.” — Lovecraft recalling his time circa 1900 as a boy pioneer of the ‘tabletop RPG’, in a letter of November 1933.


HPLinks #14 – Sonia as researcher, The Temple as radio drama, Tanabe in the Dreamlands, a tentacular takeover, and more…

21 Thursday Nov 2024

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HPLinks #14.

* A long new post on Lovecraft’s wife Sonia as a historical researcher. This was her paid role with the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, undertaken in 1933, and which temporarily brought Lovecraft and Sonia together again. This scholarly post draws on as-yet unpublished archives.

I found an eBay picture of the Museum’s staff entrance seen in 1950, at the same Brower Park site that Sonia would have known.

* Librivox have released a new ghost and horror collection of public domain audio. Includes free and re-usable readings of Lovecraft’s “Cool Air” and “Polaris”, and from the Lovecraft Circle Arthur Leeds’s “The Return of the Undead” and Frank Belknap Long’s “Men Who Walk Upon the Air”. The latter appeared in Weird Tales for May 1925, alongside Lovecraft’s “Erich Zann”. Also available on on Archive.org.

* Now available for purchase and download, the Dark Adventure Radio Theatre full-cast audio adaptation of Lovecraft’s “The Temple”.

* Fumito Logica reviews the new Italian graphic novel of Lovecraft’s life and death…

HPL’s anti-humanism was a desperate faith in the absurd, in a silent and indifferent cosmos, while he lived through an era that clung to habit and the superfluous. […] Yet his desperation gave him the ability to transcend his era, while remaining sitting in a cold room in Providence. He used the power of the word to cross the threshold of eternity, entering dimensions that seek to erase every residue of humanity. [The book] is an imaginative and intimate biography, material and evanescent. Taddei insinuates himself into HPL’s flesh, while Lacavalla paints his darkest nightmares without sparing himself.

Also, Italian paper Il Manifesto has an interview with the writer and artist (spoiler alert). Freely available online.

* Heavy Metal magazine’s blog surveys the Lovecraft Art of John Holmes, the British artist who painted the covers for the early 1970s Ballantine paperbacks.

* New on YouTube, Christian Matzke Interview: Creating H.P. Lovecraft’s Necronomicon, and also with some chat about his Alien Absolution fan-film.

* Newly listed on Amazon UK, the forthcoming book Les Chats d’Ulthar (‘The Cats of Ulthar’) by Gou Tanabe, set for release on 23rd January 2025 in French. Three Lovecraft tales of the Dreamlands are adapted by the Japanese graphic-novel master, “The Other Gods”, “Celephais” and “The Cats of Ulthar”.

* Metaladdicts brings news that the band “The Great Old Ones Release New Single ‘In The Mouth Of Madness'”, this being… “a haunting precursor to their forthcoming [Dreamlands themed] album, Kadath”. The album is due at the end of January 2025.

* Now published, Chaosium’s latest edition of Cthulhu by Gaslight Investigators’ Guide: Mysteries and Frights in the Victorian Age. This is the 2024 edition, presumably expanded and aligned with the latest core RPG game. I see the first edition was published way back in 1986, and that by 2012 there had been three editions. The book is possibly also useful for Mythos writers unfamiliar with the details of the British Isles in this period.

* From the HPLHS and new to me, The Providence Pack for Lovecraft’s Providence, including a wall-map sized reprint of the College Hill plat map. Again, potentially useful for writers as well as RPG players.

* Paywalled in the new gothic studies book Graveyard Gothic (2024), the chapter “Weirding the Gothic graveyard”. This discusses… “how Lovecraft uses the graveyard in “The Tomb” (1922), “Herbert West – ​Reanimator” (1922) and others”. At the end the author sees the later “The Call of Cthulhu” (1928) as “reshaping [the graveyard] through the prism of a very modernist artistic and scientific sensibility”.

* A forthcoming 1,100+ page hardcover claiming to be The Complete Fiction, Poetry, and Essays of H.P. Lovecraft. Set for publication in early December 2024 at nearly £50. The publisher is Revive Classics, which shovels public-domain classics into slick hardback covers at high prices… and gets disappointed one or two-star reviews. I’d be willing to bet that this isn’t complete. The legit Collected Essays set from Hippocampus runs to five volumes and some 1,500 pages in small type. The legit collected poetry is around 600 pages in a wide oversized book. There’s no way you could cram all that, plus all the fiction, into just over 1,100 9″ x 6″ pages. Buyer beware.

* New on Archive.org for download, Arthur Machen’s late novel The Green Round (1933).

This was a book read by Lovecraft, early in 1934. He found it meandering but was positive…

Have just read Machen’s new book — The Green Round — his first weird production in 17 years. It is really extremely interesting — with something of that persistent sense of unreal worlds impinging on the real world which many imaginative persons possess. In the casualness & unexplainedness of the phenomena represented, it recalls some of Machen’s queer prefaces to his earlier books”. — Lovecraft to Miss Toldridge, March 1934.

* And finally, science seemed to become more weirdly Lovecraftian this week. More so than usual, these days. An Oxford University expert speculated that the octopus species will in time take over the world, should humans somehow die off or leave for the stars. Plus our fledgling quantum computers can, it seems, be reliably powered by weird imaginary cats. A scenario that springs to mind, then: a post-human quantum computer powered by an octopus named Cthulhu, who is dreaming about imaginary cats (possibly from Ulthar). This octo-cat-powered computer is keeping ‘alive’ the AI-reconstructed personality of one HPL, while located in a crypt deep under an Earth that is being burned into its final cinder by the last stages of an expanding sun. Add a few time-travelling humans who suddenly arrive in the crypt, and must extract HPL from the tentacular embrace of Cthulhu before the planet burns. This may perhaps be a Lovecraftian RPG scenario of use to some readers. Or possibly just another crap episode of Doctor Who.


— End-quote —

In March 1934 Lovecraft gave tongue-in-cheek advice to his friend Morton, on the possibilities of writing a weird mystery tale for Morton’s mineralogist colleagues…

“… you could have a great mineralogical curator from Paterson [Morton’s museum in New Jersey] murdered by some spy of the American Museum – the latter institution being jealous of having its pebble section surpass’d. Later it could be discover’d that the assassin had left his photograph imprinted on some obscurely sensitive stone (if none exists, invent one!) that yields up its secrets only under a blend of inframauve light from a special fur-lined vacuum tube. Then, when the murderer has explain’d this away by saying he left the image on some other visit, in stalks Old King Brady the Petrological Pinkerton with a radio-active kind of feldspar or sparkill or solidified argon which restores the life-vibrations of the murder’d man. Up sits the great curator on his bier, and points his finger at the dastard from 79th street. “He done it!” “He done it!” But since the victim ain’t dead no more, the murderer is let off on probation — tho’ the American Museum is forced to transfer most of its treasures to the enlarged marble palace at Summer Street and Broadway [at Paterson]. […] For gawd’s sake don’t have puppet [pseudo-comic names] like Sir Stoneham Pyrites, Capt. Magnetite de Magistris, Prof. Boulder B. Traprock, etc., etc. cluttering up your pages! [As for the follow-on serial…] You could vary your locale and incidents magnificently; having unknown minerals found in crypts under aeon-old deserted cities in the African jungle, and all that. Then there are hellish stony secrets filtering down from the forgotten elder world — think of the Eye of Tsathoggua, hinted at in the Livre d’Eibon, and of the carved primal monstrosity in lavender pyro-jadeite caught up in a Kanaka fisherman’s net off the coast of Ponape! God! Suppose the world knew why Curator Konbifhashi Taximeto of the Wiggiwaga Museum in Kyoto committed hara-kiri after examining the fluorescent emanations of this unholy blasphemy through the differential spectroheliograph!”

In an earlier post at Tentaclii I discovered good evidence that Morton’s collection at Paterson excelled in collecting and exhibiting fluorescent — i.e. glow-in-the-dark — minerals. Hence Lovecraft’s emphasis here on the technology of special light + minerals. So far as I can tell, Lovecraft invented the word “inframauve”. Nice name for a swishy fanzine.


HPLinks #13: the Butler Asylum, sentient trees, a new CAS biography, some curious places on Europa, and more

13 Wednesday Nov 2024

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HPLinks #13.

Not much to find this week, between the post-Halloween hangover and Cthulhu actually winning the U.S. Presidency for once (or so one might think, judging by many swivel-eyed reactions). But here it is.

* One of the NecronomiCon’s Armitage Symposium talks has popped up online as a CC-By preprint, “Eldritch Institutions: The Birth of American Asylums, the Founding of Butler Hospital, and a Confrontation with Lovecraft”. Freely available for download.

Standard practices and procedures at the time of Winfield Scott Lovecraft’s and Sarah Susan Lovecraft’s hospitalizations will be showcased. Speculations on the effects of their treatment and death will be presented as they relate to Lovecraft’s fear of doctors and his writings.

Elsewhere, the medical humanities blog-a-zine The Polyphony outlines the ways of “Narrating Anxiety through Lovecraftian Horror”. Freely available online.

* New online via Springer’s website, but paywalled, the new academic book The Sentient Tree in Speculative Fiction.

* A new two-part interview with Tolkien / Lovecraft scholar Dale Nelson part one and part two.

* S.T. Joshi has announced he plans to “devote much of 2025” to writing a Clark Ashton Smith biography. He also links to two recent in-depth interviews on his Lovecraft scholarship, freely available on YouTube.

* Now available in Spanish, a translation of Blood & Thunder: The Life & Art of Robert E. Howard.

* On YouTube, a spin through the Robert E. Howard paperbacks published by Orbit in the UK in the 1970s. I recall I was most envious when I saw that a boyhood neighbour and local tough-lad had a row of these on his shelves.

* The Blasphemous Tome #13 is coming soon… “This new issue will contain a brand-new and gruesome Call of Cthulhu scenario from our own Matt Sanderson, as well as all the usual year-end features.” Available to their $5 Patreon patrons.

* Skulls in the Stars discusses what you might enjoy if you purchased the budget ten-story Book of Iod by Henry Kuttner, a young writer who was a late correspondent with Lovecraft.

* The journal Metal Music Studies ($ paywalled) is inviting… “short retrospectives on foundational and important publications, for the reviews section”. 1,000 to 1,500 words each. I imagine there must be some key ‘Lovecraft meets metal’ scholarship to note? Interested writers should contact either ross.hagen@uvu.edu or edwardbanchs@gmail.com for details.

* My quick survey of what might be entering the public domain in January 2025, drawn from items fitting the categories of ‘author died in 1954’ or ‘published in the U.S. in 1929’.

* Archive.org log-ins were back, last weekend, plus the very useful ability for scholars to ‘search inside’ their books and magazines. And today I see that uploading is once again available.

* During the writing of an article on discovering space images, I happened to have a look at the distant moon Europa (our best chance of finding alien life in the Solar System). I was impressed by the creative naming of the spot on the surface I randomly chose, which seems to simultaneously evoke both Lovecraft tales and the Dreamlands…

* And finally, here in the UK Wales Online bravely and rather hilariously ventures into the other famous Lovecraft, in “Life inside Wales’ last surviving adult shops”. Slightly more scary than “The Beast in The Cave”…


— End-quote —

“… humour is itself but a superficial view of that which is in truth both tragic and terrible — the contrast between human pretence and cosmic mechanical reality. Humour is but the faint terrestrial echo of the hideous laughter of the blind mad gods that squat leeringly and sardonically in caverns beyond the Milky Way. […] the world is indeed comic, but the joke is on mankind”. — Lovecraft in the Transatlantic Circulator, 1921.


HPLinks #12 – Arkham ephemera, Eddys expanded, Lovecraft as intellectual ‘extracosmic magma’, Chaosium in the UK, and more…

02 Saturday Nov 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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Welcome to HPLinks #12.


“Little Bobby Barlow, for all his scant 16 years, can remember a world & a phase of civilisation — the feverish, thoughtless, reckless age of the 1920’s — which is today as dead as Tyre & Babylon!” — Lovecraft letter to Toldridge, March 1935.


* Now published, Arkham House Ephemera: The Classic Years 1937–1973 (October 2024)…

The story of [the early Lovecraft publisher] Arkham House told in the ephemera is no less than the personal autobiography of the press. Year by year and sometimes month by month, see plans unfold — always to publish more books to keep readers and collectors coming back. In this ‘Pictorial History and Guide for Collectors’ each individually numbered item spotlights a shot of the cover or distinguishing interior feature. In full color. With additional selected information, so that any item can be recognized easily from any other.

* This week John Coulthart blogged on “Richard Taylor’s Lovecraftiana”, Taylor being the artist Derleth tapped for the dust-jackets of various Arkham House books.

* Talking of covers, I’d never until recently seen the cover of this 1983 Polish translation of Lovecraft. The unknown artist has made a pleasingly loose sans-Cthulhu combination of the broken ground of the risen R’lyeh, the mind-bending portal-door found there, and a cosmic sky-vista.

Unlike many cover artists, it appears he had actually read and considered the story he was illustrating…

… everyone watched the queer recession of the monstrously carven portal. In this phantasy of prismatic distortion it moved anomalously in a diagonal way, so that all the rules of matter and perspective seemed upset. The aperture was black with a darkness almost material. That tenebrousness was indeed a positive quality; for it obscured such parts of the inner walls as ought to have been revealed, and actually burst forth like smoke from its aeon-long imprisonment, visibly darkening the sun as it slunk away…” (“The Call of Cthulhu”).

* New in The European Conservative, the article “Rebuilding R’lyeh: Houellebecq, Lovecraft, and the Meaning of Architecture”. Freely available online.

* A 2023 Brazilian post-graduate thesis, O horror cosmico de H.P. Lovecraft como expressao da barbarie do mundo administrado (‘H.P. Lovecraft’s cosmic horror as an expression of the barbarity of the administered world’). Freely available in PDF here, with an English abstract. The work examines…

relations between the aspects of form and content used by [Lovecraft] and the forms of control and domination of nature marked by technological rationality, barbarism, and fear, characteristic of the living conditions found in the administered [i.e. bureaucratic] society. The main themes [found were] criticism of the occult; of the regression to barbarism in the context of war; the constitution of authoritarianism through patriotism; war neuroses; the disappearance of the intellectual type; the formation of sects and fanaticism; and the notion of imminent threat of the end. [Lovecraft] explores, through fear, the path of regression of society and the submission of its members to disastrous ideas and policies, as well as an attack on narcissism through the exploration of the sublime. In this way his work allows contact with fears that, if brought to consciousness and reflected upon, may reduce their harmful effects on the individual [reader’s psychological] formation process.

* From Spain, the new 2024 multi-author academic book A Traves Del Abysmos: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (‘Traversing the Abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’).

This chunky book costs a very reasonable 19 Euros from Amazon Spain. Had this been in English it might have been locked away at £120, by a big academic publisher aiming at a few hundred sales to academic libraries. It’s thus cheap enough to cut off the spine, scan to OCR and then auto-translate, if you needed to see it for your thesis etc. I have the contents pages auto-translated to English (the nice font and typesetting is lost), and here’s a translation from the blurb…

[Lovecraft resists] classification or explanation on a purely theoretical level. [He takes us] beyond the limits of what is human, making his literature a privileged threshold from which the most radical issues of philosophical reflection [can] emerge. The unknown relationships of time, space and matter; contact with extratemporal non-entities; the breakdown of existential certainty; the abyssal descents; the antediluvian languages; scientific revelations incompatible with what is human; the dream materialisations. Lovecraft [becomes] an extracosmic magma that flows though and illuminates the intricate network of the tensions running throughout modernity. Lovecraft’s manifestated ideas have permeated contemporary thought, prompting an important segment of thinkers to reflect on the unthinkable, talk about the unnameable and peer into the radical exteriority that surrounds the human world.

* The National Review magazine on “The Call of Lovecraft” ($ paywall). Possibly just another Halloween clickbait re-hash, of no interest to Lovecraftians? It’s difficult to know without seeing all of the article.

* Helios Press has announced a pre-order for a new expanded edition of The Gentleman from Angell Street. 140 pages in hardcover, compared to 70 pages in the previous paperback. I’m uncertain if it will contain the supposedly extant correspondence between HPL and the Eddys said to date “as early as 1918”, the existence of which was claimed many years ago by one of the Eddy descendants (see Joshi’s I Am Providence, page 465). But which was apparently not even shown to Joshi, and has never since been revealed. The blurb for the new edition does claim it will have new… “correspondence between and related to the Eddys and Lovecraft”. But that sounds to me like it could be letters sent ‘between the Eddys’, plus letters ‘related to Lovecraft’ — such as Clifford Eddy’s 1966 letter about Lovecraft (‘Knew Lovecraft’) which was published in The Providence Journal. That 1966 letter was not in the earlier edition. But all this is just my guess, based on the probability that, if we were to get actual new Lovecraft letters to the Eddys, then a lot more fuss would be being made about it in the blurb. I guess we wait and see. The book is due in 2025.

* Les Navigateurs, a new French ‘BD’ graphic novel by Caneva & Lehman. I see some good reviews, and apparently Lehman is a Lovecraftian who has made this book into a ‘Lovecraft in Paris’ tale. At least according to Marianne.net, which describes it as… “Lovecraft meets the waters of the Seine river”.

The preview pages make it look quite gritty-indie. And even less encouraging is the opening multi-page slog through some domestic teen-angst. Yet there is one page which hints the story may become more Lovecraftian later on…

* Veteran European comics publisher Humanoids plans to revive its venerable Metal Hurlant magazine title via a Kickstarter, as an English-language quarterly. The sci-fi comics magazine will aim to be… a “massive 272+page literary experience curated to theme, with all-new content from today’s best and brightest comics creators”, plus rare Moebius reprints. Given the recent big French ‘Lovecraft special’ comics-magazine, the re-launch would likely be Lovecraft-friendly. The crowdfunder is billed as “launching soon”, and currently has over 1,600 followers. Which bodes well.

* Cthulhu is wading over to the British Isles. Chaosium Con is to stage its first Call of Cthulhu RPG convention in the UK. Set for 2025.

* Cthulhu 2025, billed as a “massive” four-day camping and music festival at the start of May, and set to feature… “the best bass music artists in the country”. No nation specified, but I assume the USA and also that there may be a Lovecraft theme of some sort. But there are no further details as yet. Still, it may be of interest to some Lovecraftian creatives seeking an appreciative platform for their large-scale work.

* And finally, my new blog post on the short novel The Greatest Adventure (1929). With a bare-bones plot-summary, and some basic exploration of the unproven and probably-unprovable possibility that Lovecraft read this Antarctica novel before writing “At The Mountains of Madness”.


— End-quote —

“We are not nearly so well equipped for combating a varied environment [i.e. the natural variability of the earth as it moves through the ice-ages etc] as are the articulata; and some climatic revulsion will almost certainly wipe us out some day as the dinosaurs were wiped out — leaving the field free for the rise and dominance of some hardy and persistent insect species — which will in time, no doubt, develop a high specialisation of certain functions of instinct and perception, thus creating a kind of civilisation, albeit one of wholly different perceptions, (when other species view a given object, their ocular [i.e. seen by the eyes] image of it differs — sometimes widely — from ours) emphases, feelings, and goals.” — H.P. Lovecraft in a letter to his friend, the mineralogist and anarchist Morton, 30th October 1929.

HPLinks #11 – Germans and Germany, meteors on film, flaming politics, roaring music, and more

26 Saturday Oct 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, New books

≈ 2 Comments

HPLinks #11.


“… fat boars we shall tear limb from limb with our hands, and gnaw with our sharp teeth. Great Thor, but this is life! We ask no more! We know the cool of deep woods, and the spell of their gloom and the things void of name that lurk or may lurk in them. Bards sing them to us in the dark with great hoarse voices when the fire burns low and we have drunk our mead.” — Lovecraft empathising with the pre-Christian forest-life of the Germanic tribes, in a Christmas letter to Frank Belknap Long in December 1923. Selected Letters Vol. 1, page 275.


* There’s now a firm date for the forthcoming German book Kulturelle Spiegelungen zwischen H.P. Lovecraft und Deutschland (‘Cultural Reflections: H.P. Lovecraft and Germany’). Amazon UK lists it as 11th November 2024 in hardcover from WGB Academic. It appears to focus around the… “German influences [that] are extremely numerous in the writer’s stories, poems, letters and essays, [plus the] German characters appearing in the tales [and] Lovecraft as influenced by the First World War”. One wonders if it also considers the correspondents and friends who had various links to Germany in the inter-war years?

* In The Cape Cod Chronicle, “Chatham Orpheum Theater To Conjure Up ‘Strange Magick'”. Being an interview with the maker of a new film Strange Magick: A Documentary which reportedly strains to bring Lovecraft and the occultist Aleister Crowley together in history. Though billed as a ‘documentary’, from what I’ve read it seems to be best viewed as a ‘what if’ movie? For instance, the interview notes the source book used for Crowley in the USA, Secret Agent 666, which centres on Crowley in 1914 – 1919. We learn there that Crowley wrote columns for such [pro-German] weekly newspapers as The Fatherland [and in one of these] he is said to have “sowed rationalizations for destroying the Lusitania” (i.e. the notorious sinking of a British passenger ship). A paragraph or two after these apparent facts the reader is also given the name of Crowley’s propagandist… “employer, George Sylvester Viereck”. This combination of published sentiment and infamous paymaster would have made Crowley forever anathema to Lovecraft, even if they had indeed met or corresponded somehow. There is talk by the movie’s makers of “Lovecraft, Crowley’s and Little’s acquaintanceship”, but I’m uncertain as yet if it’s claimed that Crowley and Lovecraft actually met in person or perhaps corresponded.

* A documentary film directed by the German director Werner Herzog, which had escaped my notice, Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds (2020). The last film I saw from him was the Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010, documentary on the mysteries of Europe’s famous prehistoric cave-paintings) and I’m glad to find there’s another like it. His new film takes the topic of flaming meteorites, ‘shooting stars’, deep-impact craters and more. A new open-access paper in the journal RuMoRes draws attention to a possible Lovecraft influence on this film. Since it observes that both men… “use similar settings, such as remote places, frozen lands or volcanic areas, and extreme natural phenomena, such as the fall of meteorites”.

* New to me, Lovecraft et la Politique (2023), in French. A translated selection of his writing on politics and political philosophy, plus the new essay ‘Lovecraft: the Marx of nightmares’. Currently available in paper.

* New in the July 2024 edition of the journal Science Fiction Studies ($ paywall) “The Non-Euclidean Gothic: Weird Expeditions into Higher Dimensions and Hyper-Matter with H.P. Lovecraft”… “The first part of the paper reviews the suite of mathematical and scientific discoveries informing Lovecraft’s treatment of higher-dimensional and Non-Euclidean geometries in his mythos.”

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has a long report on a recent trip to Mexico. During which he bravely battled with our future insect-overlords, in the form of eating a dish of fried grasshoppers (“not terribly appealing”). He also endures a long trek to reach an “immense R.H. Barlow Archive”. There he was able to obtain addresses for, and then to see on Google StreetView, two former Barlow residences in Mexico.

* Joshi also reports that his own ‘Lovecraft as character’ tale “In His Own Handwriting” is now a free and authorised HorrorBabble audiobook on YouTube (36 minutes). It turns out to be a fun combo of the ‘shaggy dog’ / ‘what if?’ tale, written for an audience of learned Lovecraftians. Though with an ending I felt might have had more punch.

* S.T. Joshi’s chunky annual journal Penumbra No. 5 (2024) is now available from Hippocampus Press. Includes, among others, “John C. Tibbetts present[ing] an interview and analysis of the weird work of Brian Aldiss”, the 1960s/70s British science-fiction writer.

* An Interview with Eric Williams, who recently collected the best translations published by the old Weird Tales magazine, in a new book now available called Night Fears: Weird Tales in Translation (2023). In the interview he states…

“Weird Tales continues to dominate pop culture to this day. [Creators] all have Weird Tales in their DNA.

True. And Lovecraft in particular, who is often found to be thoroughly intertwined, once you know what you’re looking for. For instance I recently encountered Harlan Ellison’s two-issue stint with The Incredible Hulk (Avengers #88 crossing over into Incredible Hulk #140), which to my surprise opened with a Lovecraft quote and then went on to gleefully and freely mix several Lovecraft story-ideas (from “Cthulhu” the swamp-bachanal scenes, hideous idols connected across cultures, south Pacific co-ordinates, from “Pyramids” the giant paw, and for good measure Harlan also threw in an evolved-insect ‘space god’ who serves the unseen ‘Dark Ones’. There’s even a 1930s pulp ‘Lost Race tale’ princess).

Most of the nods-to-Lovecraft would have sailed over the heads of most readers at that time, unless they knew their Lovecraft as early as 1971. And I suspect that Harlan dashed off this creaky collage of a story in an hour or two. But it’s fun on the page, and is an example of a nod to Lovecraft in the classic Marvel Comics. I must have read it as a boy, though it seemed new to me in 2024.

* On DeviantArt from the artist, a sample preview page for the first Randolph Carter graphic novel. This made me look again, and I now see a January 2025 publication date for a Vol. 2.

* Also on DeviantArt, an impressive new AI-generated image from Anavrin-ai…

* New to me, Amazing Figure Modeler magazine #68 (2020), which was a Lovecraft special. The issue can still be picked up for a reasonable price on eBay…

* The Great Old Ones to release new studio album Kadath in January 2025. The concept album by the French metal band offers a… “descent into the Dream Cycle [of Lovecraft…] an odyssey through the realms that teeter between fantastical wonder and cosmic dread.” On YouTube there’s already a sample track, “Me, the Dreamer”.

* In the U.S., a university “Music Department hosts an eldritch performance”. This being a 60 minute opera/reading-performance of “The Dunwich Horror”, with an ensemble of classical musicians, no less. Sounds to me like they’re building up to a fully fledged screeching-and-wailing costumed opera performance, at some point in the future.

There were three scenes within the performance, each being about 20 minutes long. Each scene had their own setting and characters, with the performers rotating off of the stage in accordance with their characters in the opera. They also had costumes fitting their unique characters, and acted along with the words being sung.

* The blog Bibliotheque de H.P. Lovecraft looks at The Gamekeeper at Home: Sketches of natural history and rural life (1878), a book owned and presumably read by Lovecraft in the latter part of the 1920s. Though not listed in my old copy of Lovecraft’s Library (update: it’s in the 2024 edition), and one has to wonder if the apparent HPL name inscribed in the book may actually be another example of Loveman’s late penmanship. The book detailed the hunting and shooting life of the English countryside, through the eyes and work of a gamekeeper, in the 1870s. Unmentioned in the blog post, though some readers will recall it, is that Lovecraft had once been a crack shot with a rifle and once had a large collection of guns. Thus the book would have been doubly appealing to the Anglophile Lovecraft.

* Coming soon, a single-volume collection of Two-Gun Bob’s Adventures in Science Fantasy, checked against the original manuscripts and published by the REH Foundation.

* The new Daniel Crouch Rare Books Catalogue XXXIX: “I wisely started with a map…” – a celebration of fictional cartography (2024). £50 in paper, or you can download the sumptiously illustrated PDF for free.

* At Tentaclii this week, I note “Some changes at Amazon”. Where did all those Warehouse Deals on books go? Turns out they’re still there, but hidden and only accessible via a special kind of search. You’re welcome.

* And finally, talking of affordable books for scholars, The Internet Archive is back online. No personal logins at present, so you can’t yet change your password to a new secure one. Or upload new items. Or ‘search inside’ the text of books and magazines. In the meanwhile I’m sure they’d welcome a ‘happy to see you back’ donation.


— End-quote —

“… Cyclopean phantom pinnacles flowering in violet mist, surging vortices of alien life coursing from wonder-hidden springs in Samarcand and Carthage and Babylon and AEgyptus, breathless sunset vistas of weird architecture and unknown landscape glimpsed from bizarrely balustraded plazas and tiers of titan terraces, glittering twilights that thickened into cryptic ceilings of darkness pressing low over lanes and vaults of unearthly phosphorescence…” — H.P. Lovecraft, recalling his early experience of the sunset cityscapes and towers of New York City, in a letter of 18th January 1930.

HPLinks #10 – Teutonic subs, weird decadents, ancient astronauts, cosmic radios, painted zoogs, a new Bram Stoker tale and more

20 Sunday Oct 2024

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HPLinks #10.


     “… it would be damned improbable if there were any real phenomena existing unknown in space and happening to correspond to these error-born myths” [which assume] “such things as gods, immortality, etc.” — Lovecraft on ‘space gods’, to Robert E. Howard on 16th August 1932.


* The Lovecraft Historical Society have another Dark Adventure Radio Theatre recording due, currently available for pre-order. It’s an adaptation of Lovecraft’s wartime submarine-supernatural “The Temple” (1920). Due to surface from the depths on 24th November 2024.

* A new long post from JonBlackWrites on “Yellow Signs: The Decadent Movement and its Influence on Weird Fiction”…

“If one considers the poetry of two of the most celebrated practitioners from each movement, Charles Baudelaire and H.P. Lovecraft, there are lines of their poetry which, ripped out of context, would be almost impossible to identify as the work of one creator or the other.”

* Jordan M. Poss has “Further notes on aliens and the gothic and makes a short but convincing case that UFO lore and the literary gothic have a lot of strands in common. One can see at a glance how much of Lovecraft’s mythos corresponds in much the same way. I don’t recall of any book or article showing a heavy overlap between the post-1950s UFOs-are-aliens crowd and Lovecraft, but perhaps it’s an area worthy of a little historical study. I guess the ‘ancient astronauts’ angle would come closest to overlap (ably dealt with in the book: The Cult of Alien Gods: H.P. Lovecraft And Extraterrestrial Pop Culture, 2005). And, ah yes… there was also that definite early influence of Lovecraft on Terence McKenna, who later became a big name among the mystical-trippy UFO crowd.

* Talking of “ancient astronauts”, Deep Cuts this week takes a deep-dive…

“into the history of one of the most contentious affairs in pulp science fiction in the 1940s, the Shaver Mystery, and its interactions with H. P. Lovecraft’s Mythos”.

* The Papers of Sonia H. Davis has been blogging extensively over the summer, and now on into the autumn with a long new post on Lovecraft’s daughter by marriage. Especially note the long research-heavy posts “Dear Mrs. Greene” Part I and Part II, on Galpin’s letters to Sonia.

* A 2023 Philology degree dissertation “Images of the Living Dead in Lovecraft’s Oeuvre in the Light of the Aesthetic of Ugliness”. Just a firm abstract, in English. One wonders if the author was able to also draw on Lovecraft’s various remarks about his own ugliness and sense of facial disfigurement. But there’s no PDF available.

* Corbeyran’s Classic Fantastic book of comics adaptations of fantasy classics, now 89% funded on French crowdfunding platform Ulule.

* The TransAtlantic Fan Fund (TAFF) now has the Work For Hire book for free download, being a book of essays by Dave Langford… “written for sf, fantasy and horror reference works published long ago from 1996 to 2007. These do not include the Encyclopedia of Fantasy and Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, both freely available online.” Authors discussed include Rudyard Kipling, Brian Stableford and Colin Wilson, among many others. The Fan Fund helps send British science fiction fans to conventions in the USA, and will welcome a donation if you enjoy the book.

* Last week John Coulthart surveyed the covers for “Lovecraft at Ballantine” in the mid 1970s. The covers are shown and there’s an eyebrow-raising amount of dragons and similar.

It then occurred to me that in 1976 dragons were ‘hot’ (remember Anne McCaffrey and all that best-selling dragon-riders stuff?). Perhaps that’s why a cynical publisher wanted to suggest that Lovecraft wrote about dragons and dragon-like sea-serpents? But if so, Ballantine also made some unfortunate choices in the cheap-looking artwork and questionable graphic-design for the framing. Compare these editions with the vastly better work on the Panther paperback covers, appearing around the same time here in the UK.

* Via Chaosium, watch the panels from this year’s Miskatonic Repository Con, online. Including one on writing Mythos scenarios, and another on how to intertwingle real-world history into your Mythos setting.

* Reviews from R’lyeh has a long new review of the 1920s Gumshoe-based game The Terror Beneath: An Investigative Roleplaying Game of Weird Folk Horror…

There are elements of folk horror here, but also eldritch horror, such that Machen’s work is seen as a precursor to and influence upon the works of H.P. Lovecraft. The latter is important in The Terror Beneath in several ways. [The setting is not rural Wales, but rather among the] communities of London’s docks and veterans of the Great War [i.e. the First World War]”.

Nice to see a British working-class 1920s setting. The game is currently pre-ordering and is due for publication on 24th October 2024.

* In the Portland Press Herald local newspaper (accessible from the UK, no ‘EU cookies’ nonsense), a new exhibition review titled “Discover a quirky Vermont college that you’ll wish had really existed”. The show offered relics from “St. Amelia’s College of Speculative Timbre”, where among other things…

“Professor Samuel Drexler built odd musical contraptions taken from literary works, such as ‘the Detestable Electrical Machine’ H.P. Lovecraft wrote about”

The “electrical machine” (un-capitalised) is found in Lovecraft’s tale “From Beyond” (1920).

* At DeviantArt, a set of eight finely painted section-illustrations for The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath. Also, by the same artist, Zoogs.

* Also at DeviantArt, a new Halloween photo-set, as-if from 1970s experiments in Providence which sought to enter the Dreamlands of HPL via ‘cosmic radios’.

* And finally, the National Library of Ireland reports “Hidden Bram Stoker Story Unearthed in Irish Archives”. An amateur researcher has found the lost “Gibbet Hill”…

“in an 1890 Christmas supplement of the Daily Express Dublin Edition. The story was unknown even to Stoker biographers and literary scholars for over 130 years.”

The tale’s setting, Gibbet Hill. A gibbet being where criminals were hanged and then left for display.

Which just shows that there may even still be an unknown Lovecraft item lurking somewhere, perhaps in some amateur journal or old newspaper.


— End-quote —

“Around the All-Hallows period I unearthed a highly picturesque district on the city’s very rim — Fruit Hill, from one point of which I caught a view of almost incredible loveliness which included a twilight-clad descent of walled meadows (with a wood and glimpses of a sunset-litten river at the bottom), dim violet hills against an orange-gold west, a steepled village in a northward valley, and over the rocky eastward ridge a great round Hunter’s Moon preparing to flood the scene with spectral light.” — H.P. Lovecraft, to Richard Ely Morse, 14th November 1933.

HPLinks #9 – swamps, theory, a century of Rats, a new bio graphic-novel, and more

14 Monday Oct 2024

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HPLinks #9.

“[in the] foreign colonies one sees a gradual Americanisation” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, February 1932.


* Sky News Italy reports on a new graphic novel about the master H.P. Lovecraft…

Recounting the life of the famous writer in a dreamlike and imaginary way, a soon-to-be-published graphic novel combines biographical and fantastic features to explore the genesis of H.P.’s literary works.

The chunky new graphic novel is HPL – Una vita di Lovecraft. By writer and cartoonist Marco Taddei, illustrated by Maurizio Lacavalla. Lacavalla has a rough and inky style that reminds me a little of Nicole Claveloux…

To be published in Italian by Edizioni BD. The 234-page table-trembler was launched in September at the Treviso Comic Book Festival, Italy, and is set for general release on 15th October 2024. Amazon UK shows an affordable £9 Kindle version (presumably with a free-sample on release), while Amazon Italy has both the digital and dead-tree versions.

* L’Antique Sentier has a well-illustrated new blog post on “La decadence de Red Hook”, in French, with extended translation of Lovecraft’s letters. Worth seeing for the pictures alone, though of course you can auto-translate.

* Swamp Atlas has a new and long survey of marshes, bogs and swamps in H.P. Lovecraft’s works, including those found in the poetry. In Italian.

* From 2012 but new to me, “H.P. Lovecraft: creencia estetica y asentimiento intelectual”. Freely available as part of the Catalonian open-access journal Taula. Examines the formation of…

Lovecraft’s theory of cosmic horror” arising from “the deep connection between his narratives and scientific images of the world, his distinctions between intellectual assent and aesthetic belief and between the mundanely gruesome and true cosmic fear.” Also notes how this feeds into… “the metaphysical assumptions that underpin his late literature.

* Free in open-access from Brazil, the 294-page ebook As Nuances Do Gotico: do setecentos a atualidade (‘The Nuances of Gothic: from the 17th century to the present’) (2023). The lead essay is on the modern nature of the monstrosity revealed in Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”.

* The German Lovecraftians reported in September that the latest annual… “double-issue of our magazine Lovecrafter is nearing completion”. This year the magazine takes the topics of ‘Edgar Allan Poe’ / ‘Lovecraft and the cinema’.

* In France, the article “The Rats in the Walls: un centenaire, mon chat, et la restauration monumentale” celebrates the centenary of “The Rats in the Walls”. Freely available online, in French.

* A review of the new Dagon videogame adaptation, as played on the PlayStation console, from PlayStation Universe…

Dagon Complete Edition is a captivating, engaging, and informative piece of content that truly loves and respects H.P. Lovecraft. […] the visual quality is so enjoyable and vivid that the [one hour of] bare-bones gameplay never wears out its welcome.

The reviewer usefully notes that one of the DLC easter-eggs is a cel-shaded toon adaptation of Lovecraft’s very juvenile tale “The Little Glass Bottle”, written when the budding master was about seven years old.

* Horacio Lalia: Una Vida Dibujada, a 2023 book on the life and work of an acclaimed comics artist. He has produced several books of Lovecraft adaptations, among his other horror comics.

* New to me, a collection of comic-book adaptations HPL Vol. 1: Comic Adaptations of the Works of H.P. Lovecraft, all by Canadian Nick O’Gorman. “Beyond the Wall of Sleep”, “The Statement of Randolph Carter”, “The Music of Erich Zann”, “The Doom that Came for Sarnath”, and “The Cats of Ulthar”. Apparently the Herbert West: Reanimator serial is also made to fit into the book’s 156 pages, and thus I guess we should expect a little truncation. Published by Target Destroyed in summer 2023, and available as a budget Kindle ebook as well as in paper. The maker (I think I had previously noted his recent Imprisoned with the Pharaohs comic-book adaptation) expects to eventually illustrate all Lovecraft’s works in this way, culminating with “At The Mountains of Madness”. The Vol. 1 book is “quite violent and gory” says one reviewer, so it’s not a kiddie-comics edition of Lovecraft.

* In Spain, the citizens of the city of Pamplona celebrates their link with Lovecraft, in the form of a new book…

In 1927, the American writer H.P. Lovecraft had a strange dream that took him to ancient Pompaelo [Pamplona]. An illustrated book will recreate the story that was left unfinished. Lovecraft dreamed that he was an Ancient Roman and was undergoing the ancestral rites of the so-called ‘mountain people’. Almost a hundred years later, author and editor Oihane Amantegi and illustrator Unai Gonzalez have come together to create the first adaptation of Lovecraft’s dream-story. In order to carry it out, they have launched a crowdfunding campaign on the Verkami platform. […] the story shows the extensive knowledge that Lovecraft had of ancient history, of Hispania [Spain] and of the Basques in particular.

It’s already been handsomely crowd-funded, with 23 days still to go.

* In table-top games, a big crowdfunder for Trail of Cthulhu 2E (2nd edition) is being launched about now. Trail is a core Lovecraftian investigation RPG that uses the Gumshoe play system.

* A new links page for Bob Byrne’s collected Robert E. Howard essays posted at Black Gate.

* Archive.org is still offline, after a serious hack. The Wayback Machine is back online today, though in read-only mode. The Archive is reportedly due back in “days, not weeks”, apparently. When it’s back, you may want to save out your own torrent magnets and host them on a blog post etc as a backup. So long as you’re still seeding what you posted, your files should (theoretically) then still be available to the public even if the Archive goes down again.

* And finally, the largest exploration spacecraft ever built has today successfully launched on a SpaceX rocket. The craft will search for evidence of alien life in the dark waters below a frozen ocean, on a large and mysterious moon near the edge of the Solar System. Very Lovecraftian!


— End-quote —

“There recently appeared before the public a rather unsophisticated volume entitled Pollyanna, which preached a sweetly artificial doctrine of converting ills into blessings by the contemplation of possible calamities still more direful. [Though the book proved a success with girl readers,] poor Pollyanna became the target of every penny-a-line hack reviewer and little-wit in Grub-Street [i.e. mass-market journalism]. They loftily demonstrated that the easing of melancholy by force of imagination is a vastly unscientific thing. Impossible, they vowed! Or, even if possible, it ought not to be […] The New York Tribune, in fact, deemed the inoffensive Pollyanna sufficiently culpable to merit a sneering editorial. So runs the worldly-wise current of twentieth-century life! Your modern philosopher had rather be mature and miserable, than childlike and contented; and he deems you a monstrous imbecile if you can be happy at a time when he thinks you have not sufficient cause to be happy. Heaviness of spirit, he doth asseverate, is a sacred obligation of every thoughtful and responsible citizen. [… I confess to] no little amusement at the wailing of these worshippers of morbid maturity. […] It is dangerous to dabble in realities, and if more of us were able to retain the happy illusions of our infancy, those illusions would be so much nearer truth [in reality, and yet meanwhile] on the pleasures of the fancy rests all the mighty framework of art, poesy, and song”. — H.P. Lovecraft, “In the Editor’s Study”, October 1916.

HPLinks #8 – Yog-sothothery, Ward Illustrated, movies, weird non-fiction, catlands and more

06 Sunday Oct 2024

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HPLinks #8.

Fully fun-checked.

* A new Italian book of essays was published on 2nd October 2024, Yog-sothothery – Oltre la soglia dell’immaginari (‘Yog-Sothothery – Beyond the threshold of the imagination’), edited by Salvatore Santangelo and published by Castelvecchi Editore. The book…

explores the life and works of H.P. Lovecraft, highlighting his unique cosmogony [and] includes essays by experts on Lovecraft’s work, including: Angelo Clementi, graduate in philosophy, screenwriter and journalist; Virginia Como, graduate in literature, specialized in philology, linguistics and cultural anthropology; Pietro Gurriello, founder of the Dagon Press magazine and editor of the Lovecraftian Studies magazine; Paolo Mariani, writer of short stories in the horror and fantasy genre; Adriano Monti Buzzetti Colella, essayist, journalist and head of the Culture Editorial team of TG2; Miska Ruggeri, journalist with experience in politics, travel and culture; Salvatore Santangelo, journalist and university professor, expert in international politics.

The publisher’s website finds nothing for a search for either ‘Lovecraft’ or ‘Sothothery’. Nothing about the book on the front page, either. But at least Amazon Italy has a page which reveals the book is out, is 160 pages and is in print only. No table-of-contents, that I can find.

* Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, illustrated by Jason Eckhardt (2024). The book is available now from Necronomicon Press. It also has maps, handily placed on the back cover.

* Mark Finn’s biography Blood & Thunder: The Life of Robert E. Howard is now available as a Kindle ebook, and note that…

This is the updated and expanded second edition of the Monkeybrain Books 2006 edition. This is the author’s ‘director’s cut’ of his popular biography […] a total of 35,000 more words

* I fondly if vaguely recall the 1970s British Orbit paperbacks of R.E. Howard tales. I’m fairly sure I had Worms of the Earth and Swords of Shahrazar, if not others, in the 1980s. There’s now a new YouTube video celebrating and showing them, “Robert E. Howard in Orbit | 70s Brit paperbacks”.

* The local Portland Tribune reports “It’s a cornucopia of cosmic horror in the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival and gives handy summaries of many films. I’ve linked to an Archive.is copy, since the Tribune region-blocks all visitors from the UK and EU.

* Over in Holland, I also noticed a Zienema: Lovecraftian Halloween Special cinema evening in Groningen. Set for 29th October 2024.

* Now crowdfunding, All Tomorrows by C.M. Kosemen, a solo-artist artbook and apparent timeline of future ‘speculative evolution’…

I knew that the many weird species I created would be impossible to unite with a single coherent story, so I went with historic narration — similar to Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, or Olaf Stapledon’s incredible books, Star Maker and Last and First Men.

* The Silver Key has a new review of the academic book
Weird Tales of Modernity: The Ephemerality of the Ordinary in the Stories of Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith and H.P. Lovecraft (2019).

* The scholarly journal The New Ray Bradbury Review now has the latest issue #8 online, which has the theme of Bradbury and the early U.S. space programme. Free and open-access.

* A brave attempt at starting a new paid-for non-fiction web-a-zine with a leftist slant, Speculative Insight: space, magic, footnotes. Partly paywalled, subscription, and no RSS feed.

* The latest SFFaudio Podcast #806 summons Robert Silverberg’s “Demons of Cthulhu” (1959). Freely available online.

* I now have the volume of Lovecraft’s letters to Toldridge in my hands. I see it doesn’t include the letters she sent to him and which have survived. Some of which are at the John Hay repository and can be freely seen online…

   bdr:422815
   bdr:422816
   bdr:422817
   bdr:422818
   bdr:422819

* Spotted on eBay, a ‘perhaps’ business-card for HPL’s optician? We know that the younger HPL wore glasses, loved the upmarket covered Arcade of shops as his natural home for purchases and haircuts, and that when young he felt that money was no object (i.e. he wouldn’t ‘shop around’ to get a cheaper pair).

Slightly weighing against this possibility is the mid 1890s ad in his boyhood astronomy journal, for the Providence optician R.H. Allen. The boy Lovecraft has spotted in the newspaper that Allen was selling a second-hand astronomical instrument of some worth.

* Also found on eBay, another ‘perhaps’ picture. A curious and rather precarious-looking building that may have been a familiar sight to Lovecraft, on the seaward approaches to and from his favourite town of Newport…

* And I also spotted a nice set of pictures from someone selling a set of the Gollancz hardbacks, UK ‘yellow jacket’ editions once easily found in our public libraries.

* And finally, I came across the “weird science-fiction adjacent” ‘zine Perhaps You Might Try The Soup, hailing from the inner-city ‘catlands’ of Dublin, Ireland. I hadn’t before heard the word ‘catlands’, but it’s a fine psychogeographic shorthand. Where people keep cats in inner-city England (and presumably also Dublin), the streets are nearly always more pleasant than streets where mostly dogs are kept or no pets at all. It’s a simple and effective metric, and an apt word. One can even imagine an eccentric map which marks out the ‘catlands’ of a large town or city. I find that the word first occurs in Scribner’s Magazine in 1893, where in W.E. Henley’s long poem “Arabian Nights” (man recalls the tales and magical lands he knew in boyhood) the figure of Puss-in-Boots is described as… “King over all the Catlands, present and past and future”. Thus the word has ‘prior art’, and could presumably be used as the title of a new book or comic — without fear of trademark trolls.


— End-quote —

“One may easily sympathise for a time with the rebellious artists who point out the insignificance of human inhibitions, but they begin to fatigue one when they persist in denying equal insignificance to the freakishly extravagant instincts which they so consistently exalt. Where so little sense of proportion exists, it is impossible to feel any sense of serious power — and as art material, this conventional perversity is becoming woefully hackneyed …” — Lovecraft writing to Belknap Long, the quote being a possible source for the title of the forthcoming book A Sense of Proportion: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long.

HPLinks #7 – Esquire, Bok, the voice of CAS, dogs and cats, Shadow Out of Time movie, and more

30 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts

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HPLinks #7.

* With thanks to ‘Eastman’, fresh scans of “Lovecraft cultist” by J.C. Henneberger as published in Esquire magazine, March 1946. Also “The Ten-cent Ivory Tower” by John Wilstach in Esquire magazine, in the Christmas issue dated January 1946 (with a continuation on page 160). And an author’s rebuttal in Esquire, June 1946. I commented at length on these back in 2020, though the post’s images were later lost in the site-move.

* New from the HPLHS store, the book Night-Black Deeds, being an “enriched” edition of Lovecraft’s “The Shunned House”.

* A new Hannes Bok LORA, being an illustration-style add-on for Flux. Flux is the latest ‘hot thing’ in AI image-generators, and more stable than the wayward Stable Diffusion.

* Deep Cuts takes a lengthy look into Lovecraft collaborator Hazel Heald’s Letters To August Derleth.

* Insolita: Revista Brasileira de Estudos Interdisciplinares do Insolito, da Fantasia e do Imaginario (‘Insolita: Brazilian Journal of Studies of the Unusual, Fantastic and Imaginary’). In open-access, with seven issues all in Portuguese. Very much focused on horror and the weird, and with a strong tilt toward screen culture. Articles have included ‘Cyclopean Games: the Lovecraftian heritage in games’, and the latest issue has an article on the film adaptation of “The Colour Out of Space”.

* New on YouTube, Clark Ashton Smith Reads a Letter to H.P. Lovecraft (1930). Genuine letter? Who knows, but the voice is well done. I assume AI-generated + some kind of ‘olde time radio’ audio filters, but perhaps not.

* New from Psilowave Records, a 70-piece, 8-figure, “Colour out of Space” custom 8-inch figure set. Ordering now.

* 2024 illustrations and storyboarding roughs for the Lovecraft story “Cats of Ulthar”. By a student at the Academy of Applied Arts, University of Rijeka, Hungary. Also a short account of his making of an illustrated book. Freely available online, though not free to re-use.

* Another interactive game which adapts Lovecraft’s “Dagon” is due for release on 10th October 2024. Announcement Trailer on YouTube.

* A new free audiobook on LibriVox, an A-Z Bibliography of the Science-Fantasy Novel (1953). The focus of the tome was on American books, and each entry included a plot digest. On pursuing it on Archive.org one finds a whole lot of best-forgotten 1920s and 30s novels of lost races and ‘princesses in need of rescue’, but also some works that may interest. This is the format used for entries…

As you can see… plot spoilers.

* Horror comics have risen from the dead. The latest Comics Experience podcast peers nervously through the cemetery gates.

* Slightly misleading… the official George Kuchar (1942-2011) bibliography lists “Graphic Classics: H.P. Lovecraft, Vol. 4, Eureka Productions, 2002. (2nd edition includes Kuchar’s bio of H.P. Lovecraft, originally published in Arcade in 1975, [and this 2nd edition was dated] 2007)”. But I see that the 2002 edition also had a reprint of the tendentious 1970s ‘underground comix’ bio-strip.

* A U.S. legal case has reportedly led to the… “U.S. Patent and Trademark Office cancelling Marvel and DC Comics’ joint trademark for the word ‘Super Hero'”. Superhero, super-hero, and variants were also covered, until now. Creators and publishers are now free to trade using the word(s) in the U.S. Springing to mind… “HPL: Supine-hero!”.

* The International Documentary Association has a review of the acclaimed art-house ‘Lovecraft meets Pessoa’ movie Telepathic Letters, reviewed by a fellow film-maker… “In the film, Lovecraft says, ‘The universe may be a dream, but it cannot be considered a human dream'”.

* The IMDb is listing The Shadow Out of Time (2025), a $500k low-budget movie from Weird Howard Films. Due for release October 2025.

* At the Philippe Labaune Gallery in New York City, “Hell, Ink & Water: The Art Of Mike Mignola”. From 19th September – 26th October 2024. The gallery has an online one-page version of the ‘for sale’ items in the show, though it takes a while to load.

* At the Heath Robinson Museum on the western outskirts of London (UK), the large exhibition “The Art of Sidney H. Sime, Master of Fantasy”. From 28th September – 5th January 2025.

* And finally, I’ve ordered the volume of Lovecraft’s letters to Toldridge, which should arrive before mid October. I’ll hope to post some notes on these letters by late October and then into November. These letters are more cheery, by all accounts, than the Sully letters — and thus not such a show-stopper as those were.

HPLinks #6 – LitFest, Dongbei, MythCon, and a mysteriously foxy map in HPL’s own hand

23 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

Welcome to HPLinks #6.

* A short Q&A interview with the Innsmouth Literary Festival organisers. The event happens here in the UK on 28th September 2024, and will bring together Mythos writers, publishers, editors and collectors of weird fiction.

* Leftist Spanish newspaper El Pais this week has a new feature article on “Dias felices e impios en el club de lectura Lovecraft” (‘Happy, Ungodly Days at the Lovecraft Book Club’) ($ paywall, in Spanish). The Club being a group of fans who apparently strike the journalist as unusually cheerful for Lovecraftians.

* According to Amazon UK, Francois Baranger’s oversized L’Ombre sur Innsmouth illustre releases in French in mid October 2024, not 2025 as was mooted earlier in the year.

The French Druillet – Lovecraft artbook and the English edition of Tanabe’s Cthulhu manga are expected about the same time.

* A recent long podcast on “Modern Religion and H.P. Lovecraft”, with Christopher Ruocchio and Austin Freeman. Freeman is the editor of the excellent recent book on Lovecraft and aspects of theology and the Bible.

* From Brazil in open-access, the new article “Lovecraft e a logica dos transitos culturais” (‘Lovecraft and the logic of cultural transits’). Examines his transits into and consequent… “massive penetration [into the culture, and how this disturbs] “classic dichotomies and dominant philosophical and aesthetic perspectives”.

* A new bibliography of Lovecraft in Hebrew translation, via S.T. Joshi. Who, in the same post, reveals he has finished his massive survey history of atheism.

* From Indonesia in English, an open-access journal article on Lovecraftian Elements in the Writing of Three Icons of the Dongbei Renaissance…

Literary works based on Dongbei (China’s Northeast) or composed by Dongbei-born writers have been playing a preponderant role in modern Chinese literature” […] “the three leading neo-Dongbei writers portray preternatural creatures, and their narratives convey fear of the unknown and nameless approximations of form” and thus their work “bears resemblance to the Cthulhu Mythos”.

* Partial online proceedings of the recent Mythcon 53 (August 2024), with videos and transcripts, plus some PDF papers. About 75% Tolkien, but with other papers. Such as: “Clifford Simak’s Big Front Yard”; “Fantasist of Middle America: L. Frank Baum and his Works”; “Middle West and the Pastoral Ideal in the American Artistic Landscape”; “The Tragic Life and Misconstrued Work of Jules Verne”; and “Wisdom and Life Lessons in the Works of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ray Bradbury, and David R. Slayton”. Freely available online, though they still await some PDFs.

* Talking of Simak, it’s good to learn that the long-awaited final two volumes of The Complete Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak were released in 2023. Though (of the set) these two still appear to lack Kindle editions on Amazon UK. 14 volumes in total. #13 was Buckets of Diamonds (tales of strange events in otherwise ordinary American towns) and the final #14 was Epilog (Simak’s robot stories).

* A pleasing new quick-sketch of Klarkash Ton by MrZarono, at DeviantArt.

* A John Carter of Mars audio series, now fully funded on Kickstarter. The $84k+ raised will enable… “the first dramatic audio adaptation”, multi-cast and with lush soundscapes. Though note it’s an ‘adaptation’, rather than an ‘unabridged reading’ + cast and FX.

* A slick new directory of 920 illustrators understood by Midjourney, the popular paid-for online AI image-generator. Illustrated, and with a search-box, so you can quickly look for the names of long-ago pulp artists.

* Compare the above with Arcanorium at DeviantArt, a huge and magnificent selection of old-school painted fantasy art. No AI involved.

“Wizard’s Revenge” by Don Maitz.

* And finally, rather less prettily, my cleaning of Lovecraft’s map of “Foxfield”. This being his unused setting for a weird tale. Found on the back of one of the letters whose paper was used to write “The Dreams in the Witch House” in early 1932. The letter he used for this map is dated 25th October 1930, therefore this map must have been drawn between then and early 1932. Here I’ve carefully removed the typed letter in Photoshop, to leave you with only the pencil map…

His “1932 | 1692” note suggests the likely years that could have been involved with a Foxfield tale: an investigation in 1932 of events in that place in 1692 — the year in which the Salem Witch Trials began. Thus one might think of it as a fold-out visual addition to his Commonplace Book of story-ideas. (With thanks to ‘Eastman’ for the Web link to the Brown repository page containing the scan). (Update: Cthulhu & Co. has a transcription online).

HPLinks #5 – Endowed Fellowship, shadow-puppets, strange climates, weird law, and more

17 Tuesday Sep 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

HPLinks #5.

* Applications for The S.T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship in H.P. Lovecraft, at Brown University in Providence, are due by 17th January 2025.

* I note that Brown University has a list of theses and dissertations that were done at Brown and relate to Brown and the parts of Providence adjacent to the university campus. Of possible interest to Lovecraft researchers are: Fox Point: the disintegration of a neighborhood and the related Community building: The Azorean, Cape Verdean, and Continental Portuguese in Fox Point, 1900-1940; Arsenic contamination in Providence’s East Side (relevant to “Colour”?); The problem of academic reputation at Brown University in the 1930’s which might perhaps marginally illuminate Lovecraft’s presence on the edge of the campus at that time; and Choosing Genes: the eugenics of Herbert Eugene Walter [1867-1945]. The latter was a full Biology professor at Brown from 1923, a leading heredity expert, and he later also taught at the Marine Biological Institute of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. As such he sounds like a rather interesting figure to include as a character, or to at least reference, in a 1930s New England Mythos adventure.

* H.P. Lovecraft Film Fest Kickstarter, live and… already funded in a flash! The event is now set for 3rd-6th October, and note that the online “Streaming Program is 18th-22nd October” 2024.

* Nighttide Mag has a report on Dreams of Light and Shadow: TL Wiswell’s Shadow Puppet performances… “At this year’s NecronomiCon, Tonnvane ‘TL’ Wiswell performed shadow play adaptations of two of H.P. Lovecraft’s weirder short stories.”

* The Rise of Cthulhu blog has the post “NecronomiCon Providence 2024 part 1” which has notes on the panels he attended. Part two remembers the spectacular Lovecraftian WaterFire parade of 2013 in Providence.

* In France, Actualitte takes a closer peep at the handsome new Druillet et Lovecraft artbook.

* An Italian Lovecraftian points out that Lovecraft and Barlow did alarmist ‘global warming’ fiction first, with “Till A’ the Seas” (January 1935, for publication in the Californian for summer 1935).

* A call to contribute to The Pulpster #34, which for 2025 will have the theme of ‘Masters of Blood and Thunder’. The theme centering being the writers Edgar Rice Burroughs (John Carter of Mars, Tarzan etc), Rafael Sabatini (Captain Blood), and Edgar Wallace (Sanders of the River, crime novels, original King Kong movie script). The editors also seek articles on your favourite villain from the pulps.

* The new paper “The Law is Weirder than AI” (2024)… “Primarily through the lens of author H.P. Lovecraft’s weird tales, I argue that the law is very weird [and this then leads me] to an assessment of the weird claims surrounding ‘artificial intelligence’.” Freely available online.

* From the Ukraine, a new short discussion paper on “The horrors of Lovecraft: disgust and repulsion”. In English and freely available online.

* Egregoric Times has a blog post that briefly considers “H.P. Lovecraft, Horror Writing and ‘Transliminality’. The author wonders if there may be neurological basis for openness to what appears on the surface to be “paranormal or extrasensory experiences”, especially in certain conducive places and atmospheres. I recall I read a weak one-page guest-article on a very similar topic, in New Scientist magazine, a few weeks ago.

* DMR reviews The Best of Jules De Grandin by Seabury Quinn, one of the most popular Weird Tales writers… “I kept thinking, ‘How on earth was this guy more popular than Robert E. Howard or H.P. Lovecraft?'”.

* Coming in October from Hippocampus, the book Where the Silent Ones Watch, a chunky anthology in which… “twenty-seven authors and poets visit William Hope Hodgson’s worlds and concepts, to dig deep into his mythologies and delve into fresh mysteries in unexpected times, locations, and interpretations.”

* The following paperback covers are completely new to me. I had thought (though not as a collector) that I was broadly familiar by now with the 1970s paperbacks of the British publisher Panther. But who knew they put out two volumes of Machen? Not me. Vol. 2 being dated 1975. Neither appeared later in the used bookshops I frequented, in all the time I was assiduously browsing and purchasing. Ah, for the long-lost days of the 50-pence second-hand paperback, or ‘three for £1’…

* Also new to me, I see The Meeplesmith has a nice line in Lovecraftian miniatures for tabletop gaming. Lots of them, relatively affordable and nothing ‘sold out’ as yet. There’s a tiny figure of Lovecraft himself. But there’s no stylised Lovecraft Circle (imagine: a bespectacled young Barlow, the old anarchist Morton, the New York dandy Belknap Long, straight-man Leeds leading his freak-show friends, etc) as yet, and no Erich Zann-like figure that I could see. Which seems a missed opportunity.

* A real-life “Sahara Expedition – In Search of the Unknown 2024”, happening 23rd – 27th Oct 2024 in Tunisia. A 1930s Lovecraftian LARP adventure in a real desert.

* And finally, the sometime-Lovecraftian creative Alan Moore on language…

Q: Could you disclose to our readers some of your favourite and most interesting occult artifacts?

A: My most powerful, without a doubt, is the Random House Dictionary of the English Language, unabridged. That is the best book anyone will ever read. To understand language is to understand what is hidden, which is to say, the occult.

Moore also has his own book coming soon, The Moon and Serpent Bumper Book of Magic.

HPLinks #4 – table-trembling translations, Polish letters, Martians in 1924, ‘Little Bobby’, Tom Sutton, Lovecraftian tabletop gaming, and more

09 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Films & trailers, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

HPLinks #4.

* French publisher Gallimard is to publish a huge table-trembling single-volume slab of Lovecraft’s tales in French. Recits (‘Tales’) is due shortly before Halloween 2024, and has 29 new translations in 1,408-pages. I’m told the La Pleiade imprint being used is highly prestigious in France.

* A new Polish edition of Lovecraft’s selected letters, Lovecraft Listy Wybrane 1906-1927 (‘Lovecraft: Selected Letters 1906-1927’). Due for publication in a 544-page hardback by Vesper, on 13th September 2024. The book’s cover doesn’t inspire, but I dug up the publisher’s page and this reassured me. At the end of the blurb found there, one reads that…

The letters were selected and translated by Mateusz Kopacz. He is a Lovecraft expert and translator of, among others, the major Lovecraft biography by S.T. Joshi.

* Edgar Pera’s new feature-length film Telepathic Letters (2024, 69 mins), now on the film festival circuit. It’s getting a lot of flak from the AI-haters, it seems, as he used Stable Diffusion to make the movie.

   i) The Trailer.

   ii) An ICS review… “avatars of Pessoa and Lovecraft speak to one another … Pera introduces two thematic threads that both Pessoa and Lovecraft believed to be the foundation of humanity – fear and madness – and explores how they both influence artistic expression”.

   iii) A Cineuropa review of Telepathic Letters… “The film seamlessly shifts between documentary and portmanteau horror, and its multifaceted formalism could also be seen as a video-art piece – a collage of bizarre, unsettling and otherworldly imagery”.

   iv) The Hollywood Reporter had an interview with Edgar Pera about the new film, in English. ($ possible paywall, but I had the whole interview).

… while preparing The Nothingness Club, about Pessoa’s heteronyms, I found many more invisible links between them. Now I have tons of their books, [where I have] written in the margins “Link Lovecraft” or “Link Pessoa.” And since we were already preparing then The Spiral of Fear, a Lovecraft feature, I thought that making a film about them might be a good way to make Pessoa and Lovecraft readers meet.” (Pera)

   v) A long interview on Telepathic Letters in the open-access journal Rotura, with choice screenshots. In Portuguese.

   vi) The Portuguese newspaper Espresso has what might be a new profile-interview with Pera, but it’s behind a $ paywall.

* Postscripts to Darkness has a new long article on “”The dread contemplation of infinity”: Some Thoughts on George M. Gould and Cosmic Horror Before Lovecraft”. Continued in the follow-on long post “Lovecraft, Lucretius, and Leonard’s Locomotive-God: Further Thoughts on Cosmic Horror”. The latter essay…

further explores Lovecraft’s developing conception of cosmic horror by focusing on another of Lovecraft’s under-recognized contemporary influences; namely, the American professor, poet, memoirist, and translator, William Ellery Leonard.

* Centauri Dreams tunes in to “The ‘Freakish Radio Writings’ of 1924”. In August 1924 the earth seemed to be receiving radio messages from a fast-approaching Mars, at least according to credulous press reports. It was actually bona-fide research that…

was serious SETI for its day. A dirigible was launched from the U.S. Naval Observatory carrying radio equipment for these observations, with the capability of relaying its signals back to a laboratory on the ground. A military cryptographer was brought in to monitor […] any signals from [the closely approaching] Mars as detected by the airship

Very likely to have been a point of discussion with Lovecraft at the Kalem Club, I would imagine. And even today it may be a real-life hook on which some Mythos writers could hang a 1920s story.

* Congratulations to all involved with The Fossil, journal of the historians of amateur journalism. It has now reached issue 400 (July 2024). The issue is freely available online in PDF, and includes… “Past Editors Ken Faig, Jr. (2024-2012) and Don Peyer (1996-1997) recalling their years editing The Fossil, and Monica Wasserman describing the involvement of Sonia Greene Lovecraft in amateur journalism.” Plus a note about the mysterious listing of a “H.P. Lovecraft in the 1917 Los Angeles City Directory”. Another real-life hook which may interest some Mythos writers, I’d suggest.

* Wormwoodiana reviews the new book L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy…

Anyone interested in how a modern literary estate was usurped can learn from the vitriol and scheming profusely detailed in this book. […] Derleth comes across as scheming, duplicitous, and extremely petty. The evidence is all here.

* Deep Cuts has a new long article on the scholarly Mexican work of Lovecraft’s young friend Barlow, “Deeper Cut: R.H. Barlow & the Codex Huitzilopochtli”.

* An article in the Italian open-access journal Classica Vox, “Exotika e Outer Ones”, sees a connection between a 1927 lecture heard by Lovecraft, given by Sir James Rennell Rodd on classical antiquity, and the story “The Whisperer in Darkeness”. In Italian, with English abstract.

* New on Archive.org, a scan of the French journal Revue Roumaine for April 1966. In a review of a volume of the poetry of Emil Botta, one finds…

For in Emil Botta’s poetry there is nothing more striking than this feeling of perpetual flight towards a ‘beyond’ that the poet tries to evoke. Botta’s poetry is an attempt to fly over a territory, completely unknown, in a strange and sad universe above a “no man’s land” located between life and death. Let us note a striking resemblance, although devoid of any material possibility of filiation, between Botta’s lyrical adventures and the dreams of another great dreamer of our time, Lovecraft. There are almost disturbing correspondences here that seem to suggest a coherence of their dream universe. But while Lovecraft is a narrator whose descents into the depths of dreams are pregnant with dark events, Botta’s poetry pilots brief, violent, exhausting plunges into this obscure empire of shadows.

* The Spanish open-access journal Helice: Critical Thinking on Speculative Fiction publishes in Spanish and some English. Of special note is the 2023 English article “A Century of High Fantasy in Latin Europe (1838-1938), and Beyond: A Historical Overview”. Freely available online.

* DMR has new review of Tom Sutton’s “The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath” Portfolio (1978). An item new to me, and with impressive penmanship judging by the scans shown…

See also the 2023 Dark Worlds Quarterly article “The Lovecraftian Tom Sutton at Charlton Comics”. I think I actually had a couple of his Charlton issues in my collection, back in the day. Long lost, now. But I see that a 148-page collection of the best of Tom Sutton’s Creepy Things (Charlton) was issued in 2015, and still appears to be available in a $90 hardback in the USA.

* Said to be newly available on a streaming movie service in the USA, the HPLHS movie adaptations The Call of Cthulhu and The Whisperer in Darkness. Though they seem to be region-locked, and thus are not yet available for me in the UK…

* The religious multi-author online magazine Protestia reports “Oldest Baptist Church in America Hosts Cthulhu For Horror-Themed NecronomiCon”, with some interior pictures of the event. Reports ‘with a frown’ and a wry tone, I note. But that modest reaction in itself shows how far we’ve come, from the foaming-at-the-mouth of the 1980s evangelical ‘satanic panic’.

* Mysteries of Montreal has a short overview of the NecronomiCon 2024 RPG gaming-related panel discussions which he attended, and some criticisms.

* RPG maker Chaosium’s Fall and Winter Releases list for 2024. Includes a new Investigator’s Guide for Cthulhu by Gaslight (the Lovecraftian RPG set in late Victorian / early Edwardian Britain, as I recall). I imagine this may interest both Mythos and Sherlock Holmes writers, as well as the intended audience of RPG players. Also due from Chaosium before Christmas is At The Mountains of Madness for Beginning Readers, which looks amusing.

* And finally, an online museum dedicated to the various felines Famous On th InterWebz. Lovecraft’s cat not yet among them.

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