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Tentaclii

~ News and scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft (1890–1937)

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Lovecraftian arts

HPLinks #27 – Lovecraft in Welsh, Providence Film Fest dates, book covers, Night Wire, Lovecraft in a cleft, and more…

26 Wednesday Feb 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraft as character, Lovecraftian arts

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HPLinks #27.

* Hippocampus Press now has a page for A Sense of Proportion: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long and the pre-order discount is active. This page is for the 500 limited-edition hardcover, said to be due in March 2025.

* New and free in open-access, the book Horror in Classical Antiquity and Beyond (2025). This touches on various topics of possible interest to Lovecraftians, such as Roman antiquity and its legacy in horror, hybrids in Ovid (again), and Mythos writers may also be interested in discovering new gobbets of true-grue in the chapter on ‘Recipes for Horror in Graeco-Roman Magic and Medicine’.

* The ultimate horror, having to read Lovecraft in Welsh. Now you can, as there’s a new book of translations titled Galwad Cthulhu a Straeon Arswyd Eraill (Feb 2025). Translated by…

acclaimed Welsh novelist and short-story writer Peredur Glyn, whose story collection Pumed Gainc y Mabinogi was shortlisted for Welsh Book of the Year in 2023.

* “Existentialism as Cosmic Indifference in Works of H.P. Lovecraft” (2020), an undergraduate dissertation. Currently under embargo, but I see it’s set to be available for public download on 17th June 2025.

* The forthcoming 2025 H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival – Providence has dates, 22nd to 24th August 2025.

* The organisers of the 2025 Howard Days have a new blog post, which notes that…

The Windy City Pulp & Paperback Convention is happening 4th-6th April 2025 in Lombard, Illinois, where they are kicking off the ‘100 Years of Bob Howard’ festivities! Windy City is one of the best Pulp Cons in the country, and will celebrate Ol’ Two-Gun with dealers, auctions and a REH panel.

* Edward Gorey at 100, from the Gorey Charitable Trust. A round-up of Gorey events for his centenary year.

* Medievalists.net on “Laughing at Evil: The Hidden Purpose of Gargoyles” in churches.

* Another ‘Lovecraft as character’ tale, discovered. Equoid (2013) by Charles Stross. A novella, at 109 pages and one that is seemingly now collectable in hardcover. But there’s also an affordable Kindle ebook. The cover illustration and blurb are spoilers. But suffice it to vaguely say that a British secret-agent is sent to probe strange doings in the Sussex countryside, and these events are then interwoven (in the first half) with H.P. Lovecraft’s confession of his youthful encounter with an ancient horror.

* A new AI 1970s Sci-Fi Book Covers generator, on Glif.app. Glif.app appears to be yet another of those ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ online AI generator sites at which you buy credits. But it has enough free-trial credits to try it out about ten times.

* New on Archive.org, the 1974 UK edition of New UFO Breakthrough. This is a real 1970s paperback and I had it when I was a lad. I would have read it alongside Lovecraft and R.E. Howard. Wow… looking at the book now I see I was sipping from a “big ol’ keg o’ hot moonshine”. Not just normal cloud-skimming UFOs here, but also orgone accumulators, serpent people from Atlantis, underwater UFOs, alchemists, and polar entrances to an ‘inner earth’. Great stuff for the imagination, though, and possibly also a sort of youthful ‘innoculation’ against pure moonshine.

* Talking of which, Erik Davis (author of the classic Techgnosis) has a new long review, of the 1990s The Invisibles DC comic-book series. One I missed encountering back then, as the comic-book scene largely crashed and burned. But according to Davis…

one of the great representative works of the 90s […] a sometimes brilliantly illustrated tale of a team of colorful mutant punks taking on Lovecraftian archons in a metaphysical postmodern blender […] the last gasp of high and mutant psychedelic subculture that stretches back through Hakim Bey, the Church of the Subgenius, Illuminatus!, the Merry Pranksters, and the Discordian Society

* And talking of boyhood influences equally as whacky, but rather more British, I see the BBC has newly turned their old Radiophonic Workshop core sound-bank into a purchasable archive for download. Doctor Who’s old sci-fi wooshes, splurts, blips and whizzles, yours to re-use… for $200. Or sci-fi/horror audio crafters could just pop over to the huge Freesound.org (which incidentally has recently been ingested into Stable Audio Open, the AI sound-FX generator) and get much the same for free.

* New on YouTube, the classic “The Night Wire” by H.F. Arnold (1926, Weird Tales). With period audio FX and a dramatized reading, in 22 minutes. In 1936 Lovecraft thought it one of the few old Weird Tales stories worth reprinting. He wrote of… “certain obscure but desirable items which have anciently appeared in W.T. [Weird Tales] or elsewhere. It would have been simply barbarous [for lack of reprinting] to prevent the present generation from reading The Canal, The Night Wire, Bells of Oceana, The Floor Above, Beyond the Door, etc.” — Lovecraft to Hoffmann Price, 1936.

* ‘Call of Cthulhu Live’ in summer 2025. An official five-city tour of the UK for Chaosium’s flagship tabletop RPG game.

* The usual tidal-wave of Lovecraftian videogames thunders in each week and Tentaclii never has the time to comb the beach afterwards. But this week I noticed not one but three new one-man indie videogames, and liked the sound and look of all of them. Do No Harm: A Doctor Simulator with a Lovecraftian Twist; The Stamp; and HPL: Nyarlathotep Rising.

* And finally, a thought. President Trump has several times expressed a hankering for a huge new ‘Garden of National Heroes’. It sounds like a new National Park that would contain many thousands of statues and other forms of sculpture, most likely set along verdant long-distance walking trails. Far bigger than a sculpture park, but smaller than the regular-size National Park. It thus occurs to me that, once the bidding-war is over and the winning U.S. state begins to establish the new Garden-Park, it might offer a secure home to the currently-homeless Lovecraft statue? Perhaps the statues of the nation’s horror writers (possibly only the greats who had to struggle heroicly for their art — Poe, Lovecraft, Smith?) might be displayed inside a deep and dark natural rock-cleft? That would afford some protection from spray-can jockeys, while also offering suitable ambience and lighting. A cleft with the stars still visible above at night.


— End-quotes —

[I found myself in …] “a dank, foetid, reed-choak’d marsh under a grey autumn sky, with a rugged cliff of lichen-crusted stone rising to the north. […] I ascended a rift or cleft in this beetling precipice, noting as I did so the black mouths of many fearsome burrows extending from both walls into the depths of the stony plateau. At several points the passage was roof’d over by the choaking of the upper parts of the narrow fissure; these places being exceedingly dark, & forbidding the perception of such burrows as may have existed there. In one such dark space I felt conscious of a singular accession of fright, as if some subtile & bodiless emanation from the abyss were ingulphing my spirit; but the blackness was too great for me to perceive the source of my alarm. At length I emerg’d upon a table-land of moss-grown rock & scanty soil, lit up by a faint moonlight which had replac’d the expiring orb of day. Casting my eyes about, I beheld no living object; but was sensible of a very peculiar stirring far below me, amongst the whispering rushes of the pestilential swamp I had lately quitted. […]” — Lovecraft to Donald Wandrei, November 1927.

The poet enters a dark, sinister and ever-narrowing valley …

The walls contracted as I went
Still farther in my mad descent,
Till soon, of moon and stars bereft,
I crouch’d within a rocky cleft
So deep and ancient that the stone
Breath’d things primordial and unknown.
My hands, exploring, strove to trace
The features of the valley’s face,
When midst the gloom they seem’d to find
An outline frightful to my mind.

— Lovecraft, part of a poem he sent to Kleiner, 1918.


HPLinks #25 – Crypt opens slightly, Lovecraft’s stage-play performed, audiobooks, freeware, CAS, handwriting and more…

11 Tuesday Feb 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts

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HPLinks #25.

* New on Archive.org, Crypt Of Cthulhu #14 (1983) and Crypt Of Cthulhu #57 (1988) as scanned PDFs. These were not previously online. Back issues of Crypt are no longer available to buy as PDFs, so this sort of occasional fan-scan release is all we have.

* Alfredo; A Tragedy, free online…

H.P. Lovecraft wrote one play, that never made it to the stage. Here we present it in [full-cast] audio drama form.

* In French on YouTube, but YouTube can auto-translate, Interview with Francois Baranger (November 2024).

* The Breathing Abyss, a new free Lovecraftian mod for the popular RPG videogame Skyrim (Special Edition)…

The Breathing Abyss is an ocean-based quest mod centred around finding out what a mysterious entity is, where it’s from, and how it can be stopped. The mod features incredibly high-quality voice acting, a unique story, and custom assets.

* The Daily Express (a questionable British tabloid newspaper, inclined to clickbait) has a short player review of the new £10 Steam game Dreams in the Witch House…

the mixture of point-and-click adventure, life sim and role-playing works extremely well. […] With multiple endings and outcomes, this sub-£10 adventure is great value for money

* John Coulthart writes…

I’m currently putting together a revised edition of my Lovecraft book, so that’s one thing which may emerge at some point in the new year [2025].

* New on Librivox, public-domain audiobook readings of Lovecraft’s “The Haunter in the Dark” and “The Thing on the Doorstep”. Both read by Ben Tucker.

* Talking of audiobooks, there’s now a CPU-based local audiobook creator that uses local AI-generated voices. The latest Audiblez is free, open-source, installs on pure Python 3.x (no CUDA or PyTorch dependences, which are roadblocks for Windows 7 users) and generates speech locally on the CPU. The new version, released this week, adds a useful Graphical User Interface. Thus Audiblez may interest those with older PCs, who are otherwise unable to run local text-to-speech AI systems.

* I see that another excellent genuine freeware has also updated. Anytxt Searcher can now also run on Mac and Linux, as well as Windows, and has various other enhancements. Useful for scholars, it quickly searches across the text inside your desktop PC’s documents, including .ePUB files. For proximity-search, turn on Anytxt’s Regex ability by selecting ‘Regular Match’ in the search-type drop-down, and use (for example)…

\b(?:eldritch\W+(?:\w+\W+){1,9}?tentacles|tentacles\W+(?:\w+\W+){1,9}?eldritch)\b

A bit of a mouthful, but it works. This example will find all instances of ‘eldritch’ if the word occurs within nine words of ‘tentacles’. Note there are two instances of 9 in the regex, as well as the search-words. Both numbers need to be changed, if you’re expanding the seek-range.

* The Spiral Tower has a new long and cogent essay on “Sword and Sorcery Fandom: When Enthusiasm Becomes a Commodity”, in the hands not of corporates but rather of individual ’empire builders’ who are following the monetisation playbook…

… growth brought with it a new phenomenon: ‘enthusiasm opportunists’. These individuals, exploiting the community’s passion, began leveraging their fandom for personal gain through Kickstarter campaigns and other monetized ventures […] Over time, this monetized culture eroded the DIY ethos that had made the fandom vibrant. […] I voiced my discomfort with this shift, arguing that the commercialization of fandom was compromising its authenticity. However, my critique was poorly received, particularly by those who tied their monetized ventures to progressive [i.e. leftist] activism. My reluctance to uncritically endorse these ventures was cast, inaccurately, as opposition to their broader causes …

* New in English in the open-access journal Revista Laboratorio, “The Fallen American Adam In Clark Ashton Smith’s “The Maze Of The Enchanter””.

* The Pulp Super-Fan has a very short review of The Freedom of Fantastic Things: Selected Criticism on Clark Ashton Smith (2006) and Clark Ashton Smith: A Comprehensive Bibliography (2020).

* And finally, Lovecraft Copywork is a new free online site. It suggests you train to write in the manner of Lovecraft. Copywork is an old-school method of teaching good writing style. Each and every day one carefully and slowly copies a small portion of a great writer’s text, using one’s best handwriting (though here re-typing is suggested). Over time, one learns to intuitively emulate how the author wrote. The technique might also, I’d suggest, be paired with repeated listening to the same text-portion as read by a good audiobook reader.


— End-quotes —

Lovecraft on handwriting…

“Lonely philosopher fond of cat. Hypnotises it — as it were — by repeatedly talking to it and looking at it. After his death the cat evinces signs of possessing his personality. N.B. He has trained cat, and leaves it to a friend, with instructions as to fitting a pen to its right fore paw by means of a harness. Later it writes with deceased’s own handwriting.” — Lovecraft’s story germ #88, as noted in his Commonplace Book of story ideas.

“… the process of handwriting is no effort at all unless one aims for great legibility & ornamentation. The reason moderns think handwriting is hard, is that they have never practiced it enough to get used to it. […] It is, of course, perfectly adequate for careless & hasty letter writing, where no delicate plot-nuances have to be managed, & where the most slipshod sentence-structure can get by without criticism. Nobody expects anything of a letter, or judges any man’s style by one. Even when I write one by hand I pay no attention to rhetorick, but just sail along at a mile-a-minute pace. That is why I write so long & so many letters — because I take no pains at all with the language.” — Lovecraft to F.B. Long, February 1931.


HPLinks #24 – Wayne June, audiobooks, Angouleme, The Haunted Forest, cats and more…

05 Wednesday Feb 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #24.

* Rest in peace, Wayne June (1954-2025), the man who read Lovecraft’s tales so expertly in the form of the Dark Worlds audiobook series and “The Shadow Out of Time”.

* New to me, an unabridged vintage recording of Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. Freely available on YouTube, as a six-hour reading. Read by David Palmer, though his voice is remarkably similar to the outstanding ‘Books for the Blind’ Lovecraft reader Gordon Gould. If a bit more wistful, perhaps. The Online Catalog of recordings for Books for the Blind etc reveals Ward was issued on tape way back in 1982.

* Just released, the LibriVox Short Horror Collection #77, this time containing a feast of R.E. Howard, Derleth, Lovecraft, Whitehead, and Wandrei. All recordings are issued as public-domain audio readings.

* Conan Chronology has a new and fascinating side-by-side look at exactly how the Comics Code censorship operated on the page in the U.S., followed by a long look at “How Conan Conquered the Comics Code”. Yes, Marvel’s Conan adaptations and adapters led the charge for the de-censorship of U.S. news-stand comic-books.

* “U.S. Govt: AI-assisted Works Can Get Copyright with Enough Human Creativity”. Good to know that such common sense is now official, at least in the eyes of the U.S. copyright office. So just because something used AI in some part, don’t assume it’s therefore freely redistributable.

* The new open-access journal, Imagining the Impossible: International Journal for the Fantastic in Contemporary Media hails from Denmark, and is published in English under Creative Commons Attribution. The journal has so far published three issues.

* In the latest edition of the Spanish journal Theory Now, an open-access review of the book A traves del abismo: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (2024) (‘Into the Abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’).

* New from Iceland in English, the 2024 Masters dissertation “Adapt and Die: Ecocriticism and the Lovecraftian Sublime in Rainworld, Outer Wilds, Frostpunk, and Factorio”. Freely available online.

* A delayed Masters dissertation from Norway in English, on “Lovecraftian Horror and the Role of Truth”. It will be freely accessible from 20th November 2025.

* Just finished a few days ago, the giant Angouleme comics-arts event in France. This saw major exhibitions on…

   — The Lovecraft adaptations of Gou Tanabe, now standing at twelve book-length adaptations. [ Radio France one-hour special ] [ In-gallery video and video short (loop) ] [ Printed catalogue currently available, but very likely to sell out ]

   — The “cult Vikings series” of comics, Vinland Saga. [ In-gallery video, a bit wobbly but not sea-sickness inducing ]

   — ‘The City in Science-Fiction Comics’, with selected works from 150 artists including Moebius, Druillet, Bilal, Frederik Peeters and Francois Schuiten. The focus was on “BD” comics format, common in continental Europe. Rather than on the comics of the USA, Britain or Japan. [ There doesn’t seem to be a catalogue ]

   — A survey of BD comics adapting fairy tales for young children. [ Again, no catalogue ]

Incidentally, the UK’s Lakes International Comic Art Festival now has dates — 26th-28th September 2025. This is now the UK’s only potential challenger to France’s giant Angouleme event in the future, after the regrettable lockdown-demise of Shrewsbury’s ambitious comic arts festival.

* Issued in France in French, at the end of January 2025, Gou Tanabe’s adaptation of “The Cats of Ulthar”, as Les chats d’Ulthar. The book is as yet unknown to Amazon UK.

* In Spain in February 2025, the 2nd ‘Ferroviaria Fantastica’, and this year the event has a Lovecraft theme throughout. The title translates as ‘Fastastic Railways’, but sadly it does not appear to be a festival of Lovecraftian scale-model electric railway layouts (now there’s an idea for a railroad-builder videogame). Seems more of a general regional one-day festival of the fantastic, with talks and creative workshops?

* Also in Spain, a regional gallery show ‘The Cthulhu Mythos’, with a substantial set of online gallery pictures.

* I’m pleased to see that Murray Ewing is slowly reviewing the novels of British novelist John Gordon at his blog. Who knew that there were many more novels, after the children’s classic The Giant Under the Snow? Not me, until now. Ewing’s latest review is of The Edge of the World (1983). The thought strikes me that a full-cast / full-FX unabridged audio reading of The Giant Under the Snow would be quite something.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated, and he brings news that the summer 2025 issue of the weird poetry journal Spectral Realms will contain the poem “The Haunted Forest”, liked by Lovecraft and compared by him to Poe. Thought lost, the poem has now been re-discovered in the January 1915 edition of Outward Bound.

* The German Lovecraftians now have dates for their major annual RPG convention anRUFung 2025, now set for 17th to 20th July 2025. They also report that the dedicated Lovecraftian Miskatonic Theatre, a real theatre in Hamburg’s Harburg district, has successfully crowdfunded $15,000 to replace all its stolen gear. It’s reported that this specialist ‘horror theatre’ has so far put on stage its adaptation of Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”.

* Marzaat unearths a substantial Lovecraft Mythos tale by John Brunner. Who knew? Marzaat’s blog post is however one to read after reading the tale itself, since we get a complete plot synopsis and plot spoilers. The tale itself is found in Weird Tales v55 #31 1992, and in Robert M. Price’s themed anthology The Necronomicon (Chaosium, 1996). A review of the Price collection called the Brunner tale the… “gem of the collection”.

* Due in early 2025 from Chaosium, a new $50 hardback edition of the Keeper’s Guide for the RPG Cthulhu by Gaslight, intended for the game masters who run RPG game sessions. New cover art by Loic Muzy. The book may also be of use to writers using the setting of late Victorian Britain and the nation’s wider British Empire.

* Elsewhere, I’ve reached seven years of producing my regular 20/20 : Tracking Optimism links newsletter, which tracks causes for rational optimism about the future, and notes substantial debunkings of doom-mongers and alarmists. 20/20 is definitely not one for those inclined toward gloom and doom. I’ve also reached issue #275 of my regular Tolkien Gleanings links newsletter, which tracks interesting Tolkien scholarship and other Middle-earth and mediaeval-fantasy related items that catch my eye. Again, not one for those who are allergic to elves and hobbits and the like. But some readers of Tentaclii may be interested.

* And finally, news just in: the cats of Ulthar reported to have withdrawn from their emergency military alliance with the cats of Scotland! (aka: The Scottish government will not, as was widely mooted in the media, ban the keeping of pet cats in Scotland).


— End-quote —

Lovecraft on northern Scotland…

“One of the great puzzles of Northern ethnology is the origin of the peculiar facial & cranial type associated with the Gaelic Celt of western Ireland & northern Scotland — the type with upturned nose, long upper lip, heavy eyebrow-ridges, &c. This type has no known analogue anywhere else in the world, & the ethnologist is at a loss to determine how it arose. The races entering into the composition of the Gaels must have been largely Nordic, with a touch perhaps of Alpine (Slav) & Mediterranean. Whence, then, came this peculiar physiognomy?” — Lovecraft to F. Lee Baldwin, August 1934.

“The cult [of witchcraft] does not seem to have crossed into Britain till late in the 15th or early in the 16th century; and it there found its chief seat in Scotland.” — Lovecraft to R.E. Howard, October 1930.

“… how much I enjoyed The House of the Isles, which swept my imagination along with a kind of feudal pageantry all the more potent because it was real family history, & written by one of the characters of the pageant itself, as it were. […] It is certainly a vivid & dramatic chronicle [of the feudal clans of Scotland], & gripped my imagination strongly enough to send me more than once to histories & reference works for parallel background-material & scenic colour. […] The long pedigree [i.e. ancestral line, detailed in the book] is certainly a matter of the keenest interest — both the actually historic portion, which may be taken as extending back to the generations just preceding Somerled, & the earlier parts in which legendary & oral tradition blend gracefully into an increasing twilight of poetic narrative. […] I am very grateful for the loan of The House of the Isles, & would be glad to see the subsequent volume some time if it be of convenient mailing proportions. [… Of course] In actual detail, the period of romantic mediaevalism contained repellent amounts of crudeness. There is little doubt but that neither Somerled nor Bandoin Ui Niall could write his own name, & both probably ate half-cooked meat with unassisted hands, wiping their greasy fingers on their garments. But taken in its entirety, with all its proud, violent feelings & ruthlessly energetic deeds, it has the inestimable quality of typifying concretely & dramatically those basic thoughts, feelings, attitudes, & motive-patterns from which the whole fabric of Aryan life has flowered, & which have characterised the experience of the race during the longest part of its history. It is a symbol of the utmost potency, & has a natural hold on the deepest hidden psychological processes of the European personality. The ending of a stream of experience based upon the approximately similar conditions which have always surrounded us hitherto, & have thus become the indispensable background & reference-points of our habitual thoughts & feelings, is tremendously to be regretted. It is a tragedy because it deprives us of that reservoir of precedent which has so much to do with our sense of the value & significance of things — throwing us back to the beginning, as it were, & placing before us the task of founding a whole new tradition based on the newer conditions of living.” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, February 1929.


Wayne June (1954-2025)

31 Friday Jan 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

≈ 1 Comment

Red Hook Studios and others have confirmed that Wayne June — for many ‘the voice of Lovecraft’ — has recently passed away. June’s signature weighty voice is heard on many of the finest audiobook readings of Lovecraft’s tales. In these, he has left us a great legacy.

June also billed himself as “audio producer, drummer, singer”. Born in 1954, he began performing with a rock band when aged 15, and he continued to play with a wide variety of 1970s and 80s live and studio bands on a paying basis. He later spent seven years touring every U.S. state, and also internationally, with his guitar hero Johnny Winter. June was the drummer on Winter’s acclaimed album I’m a Bluesman (2004).

Establishing himself as a professional voice artist circa 1998, he was able to draw on his extensive studio experience. But he also trained his voice to audiobook perfection with lessons at Edge Studios in New York, by volunteering for many and varied recordings at Recording for the Blind (RFB&D), and by taking acting classes. His voiceover and audiobook business appears to have been based in Shelton, Connecticut (near New Haven and a little north-east of New York City).

Having grown up reading horror, science-fiction and Lovecraft paperbacks, it was natural that he would want to professionally record such material in readings. His breakthrough narrations were of Lovecraft (the extensive Dark Worlds of H.P. Lovecraft series), three volumes of Poe and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (for his own AudioBookCase venture), and many others (for AudioRealms and others). In recent years he was best known as the narrator (‘The Ancestor’) of the popular Darkest Dungeon videogames (2016-, Red Hook Studios), an extensive performance and a core part of the game’s experience.

A relatively recent horror fandom podcast interview with him is still online, Final Guys #70 – Wayne June Interview (2018).

Doubtless someone with the required skills will be compiling a comprehensive Wayne June discography in due course. Possibly some ‘lost’ recordings will also be uncovered. For instance, he talked of recording Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, but (if recorded) this is apparently unreleased.

Four more LORAs, and a CivitAI block tool for UBlock

30 Thursday Jan 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Lovecraftian arts

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A few more recent LORAs, which are kind of ‘style-steering add-ons’ used with MODELS based on Stable Diffusion 1.5. All free. Local AI image generation will ideally require a PC with at least an NVIDIA 3060 12Gb graphics-card.

Not many, as Lovecraft-ish LORAs have been few and far between over Christmas and New Year, what with all the many distractions of those weeks. These are the only worthy ones I’ve spotted, since my last such posting back in 8th December.

18th century men LORA for Rococo clothing, makeup, wigs, from Lovecraft’s beloved 18th century. For use with a MODEL which ‘knows’ what Lovecraft looks like, such as Photon.

Neo Noir v1.0 LORA. Dark film noir with modern slightly CG vibe in the demos, but obviously also able to do more of a ‘1940s publicity shot’ look. Appears to know clothing.

FantasyMapCreator LORA. Doesn’t appear to have gained many users, but some may want to test it.

And a new updated 1.2 version of Realms of the Dead LORA, and some new pictures (prompts included) show what can be done with it in terms of generating images of Ancient Egyptian passageways…


Incidentally, for those doing their own browsing of CivitAI, the key repository of LORAs, here is how to blank unwanted items in the search results. In UBlock Origin’s Filters list, add your tailored variant of this and save the list…

civitai.com##a[href*=”keyword”]

As the page of search results loads, this blocks the image in each target panel — but not the panel itself. It blocks the image only when it finds keyword in the panel’s href (its Web link), so replace keyword with whatever you need. This block thus squishes unwanted ’empire builders’ who are out to build a series of LORAs — all with the same brand-name. Their endless production of new LORAs can feel a lot like spam. Now you can cosmetically filter them out of results, by name.

HPLinks #22 – the key 1919 Vagrant, the uninhabitable universe, a Lovecraft rock opera, and more…

22 Wednesday Jan 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #22.

* The Drayton Arms theatre in London has officially announced the London Lovecraft Festival, for 16th-17th February 2025. The Drayton also has Web pages for the stage shows, which are booking now.

* Newly for sale, Lovecraft’s seminal “Dagon” as published in The Vagrant, November 1919. Said to be in near-fine condition.

* L’antique Sentier introduces Newburyport, a real-world model for Innsmouth, to French readers.

* From the University of North Carolina, the Masters dissertation “Popular Purity: Change Over Time in the Racial Views of H.P Lovecraft, and the Spectrum of Racial Ideas as Promoted by Popular Culture: 1917-1936” (2023). Freely available for download.

* At Stanford, the B.A. final dissertation “Lovecraft and the Question of an Uninhabitable Universe”. Winner of the university’s DLCL Award (2020). Now freely available for download.

* At McQuarie University, Australia, the PhD thesis Out of time/Out of control: speculative modernism and the limits of thought (2024), on Lovecraft and William S. Burroughs. Freely available for download.

* Forthcoming, an academic book collection on the topic of movie ‘creature features’. With a submission deadline of 10th March 2025, the editor is seeking…

… close readings of films led by creatures and monsters in the 21st century. Classic [older] films will be welcome if analyzed through new, contemporary theories to show how their purpose/meaning has changed over time.

* In Spanish, the YouTube recording of a 2023 Madrid conference on Geologia en la literatura fantastica y de terror (‘Geology in fantasy and horror literature’).

* Also in Spanish, MetalTrip reviews…

A new rock opera, ‘Legado De Una Tragedia: Lovecraft’, which brings together theatre and symphonic metal music. The result is a horror rock-opera full of the best heavy metal. Each song is based on one of Lovecraft’s most iconic stories.

* The Void reviews Kadath, the new Lovecraft-centred metal album by the Lovecraftian band The Great One Ones. Hardforce also has a review in French.

* On the south coast of the UK, Falmouth University will stage a three-day conference on Haunted Modernities, 16th-18th July 2025. Deadline for submissions: 17th March 2025. The conference seems to be casting the net wide, but will focus around…

… haunted modernities and spectral futures of all sorts. Looking back to the past as a haunted space and forward to the ‘spectres’ of the future, we want the ‘Haunted Modernities’ conference to be indicative of wide open spaces and fruitful intersections in scholarship and practice. Whether work is hyper-local, global, or interstellar we welcome imaginative, creative, ethical, and diverse discussions from all disciplines and subject areas. As well as traditional papers, creative practice work is also invited in whatever form — written, film, audio, performance, exhibitions etc.

* New on Librivox, a public-domain reading of the English translation of Hesse’s Steppenwolf. 1929, in first English translation, which I assume is the translation used here due to the 1929 U.S. copyright expiration date. So far as I know, Lovecraft never encountered the translation.

* A forthcoming book, Space Ships! Ray Guns! Martian Octopods!, will be a transcribed collection of interviews with science-fiction and fantasy authors, drawn from Richard Wolinsky’s Probabilities radio show. His half-hour interviewees included Robert Bloch, Fritz Leiber, Ray Bradbury and many more. The book is due from Tachyon in August 2025. No Amazon listing as yet.

* New on Archive.org, a scan of the 1990s Sheffield horror-punkzine Gibbering Madness #6. This has a fannish look at punk rockers in horror movies, with the article naming about 18 such movies. Also of note is the punkzine Scrawl #3 from Belfast, though only for a 7″-single review which mentions in passing that…

Rudimentary Peni are quite rightly recognised as pioneering and influential in the realm of anarcho punk and are possibly one of the most deranged bands ever. […] The late eighties saw [their album] Cacophony, which was a musically inventive yet immensely bizarre tribute to the works of H.P. Lovecraft.

* Blinks notes a new broadcast TV travel documentary which (though otherwise tiresome) gives… “a number of interesting scenes showing both the inside and outside of Dunsany Castle”, plus some snatches of discussion with the current Lord Dunsany.

* And finally, new on eBay at a sensible price, ‘Stereo View of the Head of the Providence River’, which appears to show the ‘Old Brick Row’ which Lovecraft tried to save.


— End-quote —

“Good old Providence — there is no other town quite like it! [Until 1929 and the loss of the Old Brick Row, it still had the coherent] ancient waterfront with slant-roofed brick warehouses and lanes of gambrel-roofed shops and pillared taverns […] Then, too, from most points’ along the [College] hill crest there is a breath-taking view of the outspread roofs and spires and domes of the westward-stretching lower town — a view reaching even to the dim violet hills of the country beyond the country whence many of my ancestors came. At sunset this vista is past description — the marble dome of the State House, the Gothic tower of St. Patrick’s, and the distant spires of Federal Hill against the flaming, mysterious west — and then the cryptic twilight, with the violet of the far hills creeping eastward to engulf the whole drowsy valley, and little specks of light leaping out one by one till the expanded sea of roofs is one titanic constellation […] And even more magical now that we have tall buildings to light up and suggest enchanted cliff cities of Dunsanian mystery.” — Lovecraft to E. Hoffman Price, February 1933.


HPLinks #21 – Spectral Realms, Spanish Lovecraftians, Madness on the London stage, Azoth 1918-1921, and more…

15 Wednesday Jan 2025

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HPLinks #21.

* New on the Hippocampus Press website, the annual weird poetry journal Spectral Realms No. 22. There are a few ‘classic reprint’ poems as well, including… “a rare poem from Weird Tales by pulpmeister E. Hoffmann Price”.

* In Spanish, a new open-access journal article in the latest Signa: Revista de la Asociacion Espanola de Semiotica. This focuses on discussion of two… “spearheads of genre fiction in our country: Emilio Bueso and Guillem Lopez, [who adapt] the Lovecraftian model to their own distinctive styles and obsessions”. Freely available online.

* In English in the latest edition of the Hungarian journal Patchwork, Escape from Innsmouth and The Shadow over Innsmouth: The Role of The Reader and Player in Postmodern Multimedial Narratives. Freely available online.

* The latest Good Friends of Jackson Elias podcast hosts, as a guest, the author of the new book Ripples From Carcosa: H.P. Lovecraft, Haunted Landscapes and True Detective (2024).

* French blog L’Antique Sentier translates part of the letter from H.P. Lovecraft to Helen V. Sully, 5th March 1935.

* Another 2025 London Lovecraft Festival theatre listing, for At The Mountains Of Madness at the Drayton Arms Theatre, 16th February 2025. Booking now. As yet, no sign of a 2025 programme at the official Festival website.

* Spraguedecampfan has a detailed review of Planets and Dimensions by Clark Ashton Smith. As I blogged last week, a scan of this 1970s book collection of CAS’s essays is now free on Archive.org.

* New from Scriblus, an 8,000-word article on “The Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series (1969-74): An Introduction”.

* Frontier Partisans trails the forthcoming “comprehensive and meticulously curated” 646-page new edition of the Western Tales Of Robert E. Howard. Due from the Robert E. Howard Foundation Press in February 2025.

* Modern Age magazine suggests “It’s Time for a Walter Scott Revival”… “He’s known for his swashbuckling tales but offers much more.”

* Free on Archive.org, Azoth: The Occult Magazine of America (1918-1921). Of possible interest to Mythos writers seeking deep background on the immediate post-war period, which were also the years in which Lovecraft started to write stories again.

* Inverse reconsiders Underwater, a submarine horror box-office flop of a movie. Has major spoilers.

“Five years ago, Underwater did what many Lovecraft adaptations couldn’t. […] The film isn’t adapting any particular [Lovecraft] story, but a dedicated watch reveals details that are intentionally [Lovecraft] lore-consistent”.

* And finally, Beth Murray was a photographer who made a fine set of 1940s views of Providence, which I collected in a blog post a while ago now. Later I found one more from the set, which was later issued as postcards. I’ve now found another card not seen before, showing the Seekonk River near Red Bridge. Small size, but clear enough to suggest that it was still very much a working river when Lovecraft was alive. The river was strongly tidal and salty.

Red Bridge on the Seekonk, Providence, in the 1940s.


— End-quote —

Lovecraft at the Red Bridge: “I was standing on the East Providence shore of the Seekonk River, about three quarters of a mile south of the foot of Angell Street, at some unearthly nocturnal hour. The tide was flowing out horribly — exposing parts of the river-bed never before exposed to human sight. Many persons lined the banks, looking at the receding waters & occasionally glancing at the sky. Suddenly a blinding flare — reddish in hue — appeared high in the southwestern sky; & something descended to earth in a cloud of smoke, striking the Providence shore near the Red Bridge — about an eighth of a mile south on Angell Street. The watchers on the banks screamed in horror — “It has come — It has come at last!” — & fled away into the deserted streets. But I ran toward the bridge instead of away; for I was more curious than afraid. When I reached it I saw hordes of terror-stricken people in hastily donned clothing fleeing across from the Providence side as from a city accursed by the gods. There were pedestrians, many of them falling by the way, & vehicles of all sorts. Electric cars [tram-cars] — the old small cars unused in Providence for six years — were running in close procession — eastward away from the city on both of the double tracks. Their motormen were frantic, & small collisions were numerous. By this time the river-bed was fully exposed — only the deep channel filled with water like a serpentine stream of death flowing through a pestilential plain in Tartarus. Suddenly a glare appeared in the West, & I saw the dominant landmark of the Providence horizon — the dome of the Central Congregational Church, silhouetted weirdly against a background of red. And then, silently, that dome abruptly caved in & fell out of sight in a thousand fragments. And from the fleeing populace arose such a cry as only the damn’d utter — & I waked up …” — Lovecraft to Rheinhart Kleiner, May 1920.


HPLinks #19 – hard and Long, Joshi’s Recognition reviewed, a Fanhistory Project webinar series, dreaming cats, and more…

02 Thursday Jan 2025

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HPLinks #19.

* Newly listed for discounted pre-order, a 500-copy hardcover edition of A Sense of Proportion: The Letters of H.P. Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long. Due to ship in early spring 2025 (“March”), and it can’t ship outside the USA.

* In English in the latest edition of the Hungarian open-access journal Patchwork, “Subjectivity and Cosmic Ambiguity in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Nameless City””.

* The latest edition of the new open-access journal The Incredible Nineteenth Century: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Fairy Tale has a review of Joshi’s The Recognition of H.P. Lovecraft: His Rise from Obscurity to World Renown (2021).

* In the Italian open-access journal Classica Vox, “Il richiamo degli abissi: una ripresa del Glauco ovidiano in H.P. Lovecraft” (‘The Call of the Deep: a revival of Ovidian Glaucus in H.P. Lovecraft’). Presents, in Italian, the idea that Ovid’s… “Metamorphoses, [specifically the] episode of Glaucus, was an important source of inspiration for the short story The Shadow over Innsmouth”.

* A special new Lovecraft issue of the French journal EaN… “Cthulhu waits no longer. Lovecraft is more relevant than ever: this is perhaps what explains the contemporary interest in his surprisingly modern work.” EaN appears to be open-access.

* In the latest issue of the French journal Otrante ($ paywall) “Relecture juridique de la nouvelle Le molosse d’H.P. Lovecraft” (‘A legal rereading of the short story The Hound by H.P. Lovecraft’).

* The current Weird Tales IP owners recently had a 100-page ‘Cosmic Horror’ special issue (#367), which I think I missed hearing about. But usefully, last week the Tellers of Weird Tales blog perused this issue, finding that… “the contributors to this issue are mostly movie, television, and comic book people” rather than writers. He also suspects that most of the unsigned pictures, of which there are apparently many, were generated by AI models. Which I’ve no objection to myself… provided AI images are done well, generated by someone who knows what they’re doing, and tickled a bit with Photoshop before release. Tellers of Weird Tales also has another post taking a deeper look at the Cosmic Horror issue.

* FanHistory Project Zoom Sessions. This is an online webinar series with the holders and curators of science-fiction fandom university collections. Set to run from January through April 2025.

* A few years back the Chinese communist authorities took a sudden and unexpected interest in science-fiction fans and communities. What seemed somewhat benign at the time now looks different, as a new paper reveals the “unexpected intensification” of censorship which followed, and how “government censorship caused once-thriving fanfiction communities to break apart”.

* Propnomicon posts the scenario setup for The Miskatonic University Sahara Expedition 2025. A real-world LARP in the deserts of North Africa.

* An early indication of the return of the London Lovecraft Festival in February 2025. A listing for “A Night Beneath The Elder Sign” at The Drayton Arms Theatre, London, on 16th February 2025. Lovecraft’s “Celephais, a tale from the Dreamlands, told in shadow puppet style” with “electronic soundtrack performed live”. Plus a “dramatic retelling of From Beyond”.

* Metal Temple interviews the band The Great Old Ones… “Lovecraft may be the sixth member of the band. It’s always music first, but Lovecraft is part of the band, you know?”

* And finally, the English edition of the leftist El Pais asks “How do cats dream?”.


— End-quote —

“My dream of the black cat city was very fragmentary. The place was built of stone & clung to the side of a cliff like some of the towns drawn by Sime for Dunsany’s stories. There are towns more or less like it in Spain. The place seemed to have been built by & for human beings aeons ago, but its present feline inhabitants had evidently lived there for ages. [I beheld] the cats moving about in a rational & orderly manner, evidently in the performance of definite duties.” — Lovecraft to Lumley, June 1936.


HPLinks #18 – Lovecraft and relativity, Lovecraft’s political evolution in Spanish, a Canton discovery, and more…

19 Thursday Dec 2024

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HPLinks #18.

* A new Wormwoodania post, “Remembering Scott Connors”, the Clark Ashton Smith and weird fiction scholar who has recently passed away. Related is last week’s news that S.T. Joshi intends to spend 2025 writing the long-awaited Clark Ashton Smith biography, a book Connors had apparently started but was unable to bring to publication.

* The Papers of Sonia H. Davis blog surveys 2024’s accomplishments in producing valuable new data and scholarship about Lovecraft’s wife.

* New on Archive.org, a scan of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Fantasy Magazine for Winter 1992, with the lead article being the memoir “H.P. Lovecraft Meets Fafhrd and The Gray Mouser” by Fritz Leiber.

* The Fossils website has a new “scan of the article “The Phenomenon of H.P.L., a ten-page biography of H.P. Lovecraft by Helen V. Wesson originally published in The Fossil for July 1957.”

* Now free on YouTube, S.T. Joshi’s presentation “Lovecraft and the Physicists: Coming to Terms with Relativity and Indeterminacy”, given at the recent ‘Lovecraft et les sciences’ conference in France. Two hours, but the length is partly due to the lack of an AI insta-translator. Thus there are many pauses needed for manual translation.

* A third Lovecraft book of translated letters for Spanish readers, El Terror de la Razon. Cartas III (2024), new from publisher Aristas Martinez. The blurb reveals that the first section flows around the idea of… “‘The Terror of Reason’, his ideas about humanity and the cosmos that he disseminated in his most famous stories [and fashioned into] visionary thought that would later inspire a new generation of posthumanist philosophers”. Then the second part of the book focuses on the evolution of the man’s political ideas and ideals, in his own words. I’d hope there are copious footnotes enabling younger readers with no personal experience of the 20th century to (for instance) distinguish national socialism from soviet socialism, and to know what a ‘blackshirt’ was, etc. e.g. when he signs off “Yrs for the blackshirt march on Washington” — Lovecraft to Galpin, July 1934.

* New from Brazil in open-access, a Spanish-language journal article with the translated title ‘Gods, Monsters, Aliens: Lovecraft and the Post-Human’.

* The free bundle of Lovecraft tales, specially set up for deep textual analysis with a computer, is now available as lovecraftr version 1.2 (December 2024).

* Further to my July 2024 post on “that Canton madhouse”, Tentaclii reader Luke has written to say that he’s spotted a possible state institution at Canton (this being the Canton to be seen from a tall railway viaduct, when on the rail route from Providence to Boston). This was the ‘Industrial School for Crippled and Deformed Children’, later the ‘Massachusetts Hospital School’. Opened in 1907 and continuing to the present day, located on an 160-acre slope going down to meet the large local lake then called ‘Reservoir Pond’. Lovecraft had written “I shall plan my cousin’s escape from that Canton madhouse”. Yet this real place was not a “madhouse”, but rather an institutional residential hospital with vocational training (farm work, craft workshops etc) for ages 2 to 20. This possibility is certainly worth considering. But, so far as I can see, the location and relatively low-rise appearance (compared to the vast castle-like state madhouses of the time) suggests it may not have made much of an impression on passing rail travellers, even if it could have been seen from a train window…

Note that Luke plausibly observes that the use of “poor little cousin” indicates that the Innsmouth-tainted cousin may have been sent away when a child. He was “little” but then “I had not seen him in four years”, and then a few more years pass before the rescue plan. All of which suggests a boy of perhaps 12 or 13 at the time of the rescue. A boy who would not yet have been transferred to an adult institution. Thus, to find the key state institution for “deformed” children at the real Canton is certainly intriguing.

* A new Skull Session podcast interview with Will Murray… “Will Murray and I discuss his long and varied career writing for Marvel Comics and magazines” and the influence of Lovecraft.

* It’s official, there will be a “4k restoration” version of the Re-Animator movie, complete with bubbling vats of newly-brewed extras. Likely to appear in early April 2025, and to ship with a 150-page book. The much-loved 1985 comedy movie adapted Lovecraft’s Home Brew magazine shocker-serial “Herbert West: Reanimator”.

* In Denmark in August 2025, a three-day conference on ‘Otherworldly Entertainment’…

Today, videogames continue to be one of the biggest platforms for horror, magic, gothic, and occult entertainment, even outperforming cinema and television. Despite [this deep reach into] broad audiences, [the topic] remains severely understudied.

* A paying Lovecraft-related job for a “Dark and mysterious painterly illustrator” wanted for the early stages of a commercial project. Predictably it’s a ‘rush job’ and over Christmas and New Year too. But the offer looks quite serious and there should be just enough time. Sadly the application is by a “super detailed and borderline complicated form” (‘exit stage-left: half the creatives in the room, screaming…’, etc).

* Tartarus Press on the T. Lobsang Rampa books. I recall these being prominent on home bookshelves, as a young child. Not my own shelves, as I never read the Rampa books. But it’s fascinating to learn now that the supposed mystical Tibetan lama who peeped out at me from the book-cases as a child, was… “in fact the son of a plumber from Plympton in Devon [southern England] called Cyril Hoskin”. He became a sometime fitter of corsets, sometime photographer, in the dreary greyness of post-war London. After his first 1956/57 best-seller…

with each subsequent book, Rampa casually shared his knowledge of astral travel, civilisations on Venus, UFOs, etc. One of his books was even meant to have been dictated to him by his cat.

The newspaper expose didn’t matter. He just went into full character for the rest of his life, claimed ‘reincarnation’ and much else… and credulous readers still lapped it up. Tartarus is now seeking anyone who can help with the research for a new full biography of this strange and strangely popular Englishman.

* Islands magazine recommends a visit to an “Underrated Literary Gem Filled With Rare Finds In Rhode Island”. This being the John Hay Library in Providence. Along with the huge Lovecraft collection, evidently the visitor can find there what sounds like one of the world’s finest collections of miniature toy soldiers, and for the especially ghoulish… four books bound in human skin.

* And finally, at the Grolier in New York City, “Imaginary Books: Lost, Unfinished, and Fictive Works”. Their exhibition runs until 15th February 2024. The Necronomicon is, regrettably, represented by a rather naff plastic ‘joke’ case (supposedly holding ye dreadfull tome).


— End-quotes —

“Hope ya kin get your Black Cat file [i.e. a complete ‘reference file’ run of a past magazine]. I used to buy that reg’lar-like, and recall the swell weird stuff it had.” — Lovecraft to Morton, 23rd February 1936.

“I have been re-reading [your new story] “Marsh-Mad” — & the more I analyse it the better I like it! I shall make every effort to get this in the official organ [but, if not then it] is far too good to waste on any but a first-rate paper! Try it on the Black Cat.” — Lovecraft to Galpin, 29th August 1918.

“Once again I’ve followed a Mortonian [Morton] tip, as I did when sending “Dagon” to the Black Cat and “The Tomb” to the Black Mask and have slipped Weird Tales five of my hell-beaters” — Lovecraft to Morton, May 1923.

We know Lovecraft began to “notice” the magazine Black Cat in 1904, but I know of no scholars able to pinpoint the exact date at which he ceased to buy or read the title.


HPLinks #17 – Masonic Lovecraft, Lovecraft as trainspotter, Lovecraft and Science conference, search the Providence Journal archives, and more…

11 Wednesday Dec 2024

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HPLinks #17.

* The journal Fraternal Review, from the Southern California Research Lodge, has a new ‘H.P. Lovecraft and Freemasonry’ special edition. Contents include…

* Harry Houdini and Masonry.
* Lovecraft’s Masonic grandfather.
* Masonic influences on Lovecraft, as well as Lovecraft’s subsequent influences on the occult world.
* Real-life location of the Masonic Lodge that inspired the one taken over in Lovecraft’s “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”.

A $5 digital edition is available. It’s interesting to think what might have happened had Lovecraft taken a different path… able to break into local journalism, then a local magazine editor (he would have been a cert for something like the Hospital Trust magazine The Netopian, with all its local history) and… thus been enticed to join a local Masonic Lodge. Possibly there’s a “what if” Mythos story in that?

* Deep Cuts looks into Her Letters To August Derleth: Muriel E. Eddy, and there are also a few firmer biographical memories found in the article “Mrs. Hinckley’s Providence”. The latter having an item of data on Lovecraft’s youth that I don’t think I’d seen before…

Dorothy Walter, a member of our Short Story Club, said Mr. Lovecraft used to call on her when she was young. About 20 years ago [circa 1946-47] a stranger came from Baltimore and asked Miss Walter and me [Mrs Hinckley] many questions. I only remember that my father knew Mr. Lovecraft and always spoke to him. When we came from Wickford to go to school, Mr. Lovecraft was usually sitting in the Providence railway station, probably because it was nice and warm there.

Presumably the father was taking the girls to the train for school each day, or meeting them off the train, and thus he said ‘hello’ to the boy Lovecraft. This seems quite plausible, though due to Lovecraft’s avid early interest in trains and railroad-men rather than for the warmth (his adult aversion to cold was later known, which probably coloured memories). Deep Cuts puts this at a time when Lovecraft was perhaps 10-12 year old. So maybe 1901-02? I also note that the article also recalls that at that time, at the back of the railway station there was a “beautiful backwater cove”. Tidal and sweet-smelling as she recalled it, but which was later filled in. This huge water feature can be seen on panorama views of the early city. It’s interesting to hear that it may have been known to Lovecraft as a boy. I seem to recall he was to be found, late in life, doing a bit of ‘urban exploring’ in the same location.

* Deep Cuts also has Three Letters to the Editor, 1909, found via the digital archive of the Providence Journal. The topic of Lovecraft’s letters was Robert E. Lee and the South in the Civil War. Also letters from the young Lovecraft on the stage play The Clansman, something which was also debated among amateur journalists some years later — and as such his opinions on it are already well known.

* I see the (new?) Providence Journal Archives search is free, but then any items found are paywalled via individual pricing or a monthly subscription. I’m uncertain if they can take payments from outside the U.S., since payment is via credit card only. $29.95 gets you a one-month ‘unlimited downloads’ pass. Sadly passes cannot be gifted to researchers, since only the cardholder is allowed to use them.

The search-box supports phrases in quote marks e.g. “Ladd Observatory”. As with many old newspapers, however, the OCR of tiny print leaves much to be desired and there are many false-positives and oversights. For instance a search for “Winslow Upton” of the Ladd, will not find some articles that have his name and can be found with “Ladd Observatory”. Still, there are fascinating free snippets available, and even these may give mythos writers a historical hook on which to hang a story…

Found in a few minutes: Winslow Upton of the Ladd Observatory discussed “life on other worlds” in public in 1907. Whipple graves were opened ‘en masse’, 1910. Lovecraft’s beloved River Seekonk was being totally poisoned by sewage outflows, 1923.

* Newly announced, the dates for the Robert E. Howard Days in June 2025.

* The German Lovecraftians have released dates for their annual get-together, 17th to 20th July 2025. In scholarly activity, note that a Literature Team Leader is now required to take forward their ongoing work… “on a volume of essays from German-speaking countries and a translation project for Lovecraft’s letters and essays”.

* In France, a two-day conference at the University of Poitiers on ‘Lovecraft and the Sciences’. 5th-6th December 2024, so sadly it’s been and gone. But here’s the programme in PDF, and I guess there may be recordings on YouTube and/or a book in due course.

* Skulls in the Stars reviews The Opener of the Way by Robert Bloch. Being a “quality edition” of 22 early Bloch stories, published by Valincourt. Has plot spoilers.

* New and free at FantasyBabble (spin-off from HorrorBabble), “A Stroll through the Dreamlands: 13 stories by H.P. Lovecraft”. The reading runs 2 hours 47 minutes, and it has all the Dreamlands stories in audio (except the Randolph Carter tales).

* In early 2025 France’s prestigious comics mega-fest Angouleme will feature a Masterclass with Gou Tanabe, the acclaimed manga adapter of Lovecraft. The event is one of several that will run alongside his large one-man exhibition ‘Gou Tanabe x H.P. Lovecraft’…

The great architect of a mythology which has infused all the world’s popular culture, H.P. Lovecraft has now built a bridge between 20th century New England and 21st century Japan, transcending borders and time, enabling pulp and manga to meet and join hands. This show is an opportunity to verify, once again, how great stories are universal.

* News of another Lovecraft all-night lakeside camp-out near Mexico City. Noctambulante 2025 is a Lovecraft-themed ‘camping and cinema’ event, and this time the organisers also promise that… “Cthulhu will emerge from the depths of Lake Xochimiclo”. Campers are expected to dress in a Lovecraftian manner. Starting on the evening of 29th March 2025, and booking now.

* The well-loved vintage videogame The Thing: Remastered, apparently forthcoming in a new release with… “updated character models, textures, and animations, with the implementation of advanced 3D rendering for updated lighting and atmospheric effects.”

* Also being mooted for a polish, a 40th anniversary Re-Animator edition of the celebrated 1985 comedy-adaptation movie of Lovecraft’s Home Brew shocker “Herbert West: Reanimator”.

* Visualizing Camelot was a 350-item university gallery exhibition surveying the uses of King Arthur in popular culture. The show was developed by subject-expert curators who were able to draw on specialist American and British collections of such material. It’s been and gone but a substantial website remains online.

* And finally, the new online H.P. Lovecraft Translator…


— End-quote —

“I was arrested mainly by the great temple of the Scottish Rite Masons, whose striking architecture lifts it out of the commonplace and mundane into the realm of the cosmick and mystical. Gazing upon it, I could well believe all the vague legends connected with the Masonick order; for here surely dwelt arcana whose sources are not of this earth. I saw it first at night, when only the twin cryptick braziers beside the great bronze door lit up the grim guardian sphinxes and the huge windowless facade. Mystery dwelt there — and I departed full of vague thoughts hinging upon the obscurest of dream-memories.” — Lovecraft on his visit to Washington in 1928.

“The hall retains its pristine impressiveness; its lofty rooms forming the present home of Ionick Lodge, the Masonick branch founded by my grandfather, and of which he was the first Grand Master. It did me good to see his picture there, enshrin’d in proper state.” — Lovecraft visits his grandfather’s Masonic Lodge in 1926.


HPLinks #16 – Lovecraft Imagined, imagining Northumberland, manifest destiny, AI shoggoths, and more.

05 Thursday Dec 2024

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, HPLinks, Lovecraft as character, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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Welcome to HPLinks #16.

* S.T. Joshi’s latest blog post brings news of a new Ken Faig Jr. book, The Skull of Roger Williams: Lovecraft Imagined. In Joshi’s words, this offers…

powerful and poignant stories (and even a play or two) featuring Lovecraft as a character, along with some of his close family members; Clark Ashton Smith and R. H. Barlow appear in one of the pieces. If you’re looking for over-the-top horror tales with liberal doses of gruesomeness, you should go elsewhere; but if you’re interested in deeply moving portrayals of Lovecraft and his family as they actually lived their lives from the 1890s to the 1930s, written by one of the most learned and sensitive of Lovecraft’s biographers, this is a volume you will not want to miss.

Sounds good. Available now, as a 440-page paperback or as a budget ebook.

* In Italian in this week’s edition of the newspaper Domani, a long feature-article on “L’inferno artificiale di Lovecraft: come costrui il suo Northumberland senza esserci stato” (‘Lovecraft’s artificial hell: how he built his Northumberland without having been there’). Related, and linked to by the article, is an essay on “Lovecraft Archaeology”.

* Deep Cuts blog remembers Philomena Hart and her tangential connection with Lovecraft. She was the wife of Bertrand Hart, long a favourite newspaper columnist in Providence and one who tangled with Lovecraft in print.

* The work of Alfred North Whitehead, a British philosopher whose 1920s works influenced Lovecraft, is now in the public domain. Thus, new this week, we now have Whitehead’s acclaimed and seminal Science and the Modern World (1925) as a LibriVox audiobook.

* The latest Typebar Magazine has “An Unintended Critique of Manifest Destiny in H.P. Lovecraft’s At The Mountains of Madness”. The author states he worked on it long, and it is now… “available on Patreon for magazine subscribers now, it’ll be available in a month or so for non-subscribers to read online.”

* In a South American open-access journal “La metafora del shoggoth en la inteligencia artificial” (‘The shoggoth metaphor in artificial intelligence’). The PDF has an English abstract.

* Up for auction, in France, original Druillet Lovecraft artwork from the 1970s.

* This week, John Coulthart outlines the edition history of his Yuggoth collage.

* I see that the £122 Routledge academic book Critical Approaches to Horror Comic Books (2022) had a chapter on “Tanabe Gou’s Manga Adaptations of H.P. Lovecraft”.

* Wormwoodiana blog has a new post on Arthur Machen and the Sherlock Holmes stories.

* Who knew that Bram Stoker wrote a book of fairy tales, as well as the famous Dracula? Yup.

* A special ‘Haunted Midlands’ issue of the regional history journal Midland History. This being the English Midlands of the UK. Appears to be free to access, at present. Serious articles, not contemporary ‘ghost-hunter’ piffle and confabulation.

* The World Fantasy Convention 2025, set for the south coast of the UK, now has its two themes: ‘Lyrical Fantasy’ and ’50 Years of British Fantasy and Horror’.

* A call-for-papers for Youth and Horror: An International Conference.

* The new £130 Routledge academic book Entering the Multiverse (2024) has a chapter on “The Arkham Horror Multiverse”. With a focus on fan-interaction in the form of fan-guides for the game, which aim to boost the pleasures to be had from the… “endless world-building that comes from ludifying [i.e. ‘making game-like’] Lovecraft”.

* New on Archive.org, a run of Unbound fanzine, which offered a range of fan-written Call of Cthulhu (Chaosium) adventures in the 2010s. Including a set for solo players.

* A new Creative Commons open ebook on Hybrid Monsters in the Aegean Bronze Age. A bit niche, but it may appeal to writers or RPG makers seeking monster ideas from the deep past.

* Mythos writers may also be interested to know that the CQuill offline fiction-writing software is now available for Mac, albeit in an experimental but working version. A few days ago I was able to get a discounted copy of the Pro version for Windows, in the Black Friday sales. Having Pro means I’ll be able to make a Lovecraft ‘Style Assistant’ for it, when I find time sometime in 2025. I guess I may then share the Assistant via my Patreon. The standard version of CQuill is free, and only lightly crippled — it will load (but not create) an Assistant from an author’s works.

* And finally, a reminder that The S.T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship in H.P. Lovecraft application deadline is 17th January 2025. The awardee gets to swish around the Brown campus with up to $5k in their back pocket, while researching Lovecraft.


— End-quote —

“… you have no doubt read reports of the discovery of the new trans-Neptunian planet […] a thing which excites me more than any other happening of recent times. […] Asteroidal discovery does not mean much — but a major planet — a vast unknown world — is quite another matter. I have always wished I could live to see such a thing come to light — & here it is! The first real planet to be discovered since 1846, & only the third in the history of the human race! One wonders what it is like, & what dim-litten fungi may sprout coldly on its frozen surface! I think I shall suggest its being named Yuggoth!” — Lovecraft on his reaction to the discovery of the planet Pluto, in a letter to Miss Toldridge of April 1930.

A new mega-observatory in Chile is now coming online, with the largest camera ever built, and it should be able to easily find the ‘Planet X’. Recent research shows this very likely rolls in an unknown orbit far beyond Pluto, and some 80% of the likely locations have now been discounted. The current best estimate is that, when found in 2025 or 2026, the planet will be around 6.66 times the mass of the Earth. An ominous number.


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

≈ Leave a comment

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.


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