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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: New books

‘Lovecraftian People and Places’ now on Amazon UK

19 Tuesday Apr 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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I’m pleased to see that Ken Faig Jr.’s new book Lovecraftian People and Places is now listed on Amazon UK and dated there “12th April 2022”. Over at Hippocampus the page for the book usefully notes that… “All essays have been revised for publication in this collection.”

Incidentally I see that Lovecraft Annual No. 15 (2021) is currently half-price at Amazon UK. It’s still waiting for my review here. I read ‘a few essays in’ last autumn and then put it down. My interest in Lovecraft tends to be somewhat seasonal, strongest in May-September. I’ll have to re-start the 2021 Annual reading sometime before the summer of 2022 comes to an end. I’m pleased to say that editor Joshi has accepted an item by me for a future Annual, and another for his Penumbra journal.

Lovecraft and Ulysses

23 Wednesday Mar 2022

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Neale Monks has a new long review of the book A Monster For Many: Talking With H.P. Lovecraft by Robert H. Waugh, on SFcrowsnest.

Lovecraft, Waugh argues, might be consciously patterning the structure of ‘The Dream-Quest’ on [James Joyce’s modernist] Ulysses, both being subdivided into parts thematically connected to different parts of the human body. Given that the entire story happens within a single night’s dream, the internalised quality of such a structure is plausible, at least.

Lovecraft flatly told White in May 1935… “I have not read “Ulysses””. But I suppose he may have read of it and its structure in press reviews, or heard about it in letters. It was hard to get hold of, but I seem to vaguely recall that Galpin got hold of various ‘naughty’ books when living in Paris? Galpin also had the interest and intellect to plough through some of such a difficult and rather boring text, if encountered. Thus Galpin could have related or known something of it first-hand, more so than other members of ‘the gang’?

Unfortunately for the notion of a modernist influence on Lovecraft though, I believe that old fashioned occultists patterned their spiritual ‘development’ on parts of the body. Called “chakras” or somesuch, which were deemed to be given spiritual ‘power-ups’ and in a certain order? In which case my initial guess would be that Lovecraft’s “Dream-Quest” and Joyce’s Ulysses were drawing on the same occult sources? Occultists will no doubt know more on the topic than I do.

Zothique 9, 10 and Studi Lovecraftiani 20

21 Monday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

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Since I last looked, the Italian Lovecraftian scholars have released several new journals.


Zothique #9 appeared at the end of September 2021.

* “an article on “The Weird and Sword & Sorcery”, which highlights the ‘Celtic substratum’.”

* “a small but succulent special section dedicated to the theme of music in weird literature, introduced by an essay by Davide Arecco, researcher and professor of History of science and technology at the University of Genoa, and with rare or unpublished stories ( by L.A. Lewis, Clark Ashton Smith, Emil Petaja, A.W. Calder, Jessie Adelaide Middleton), poems (by Jo. Dart and Robert Chambers) and also a comic that, signed by the master Gino Carosini (author of the text and drawings) presents a meeting as strange as it is unexpected: the one between the tales of Lovecraft and the music of Chet Baker!”

* “the fourth part of Mariano D’Anza’s long study on Robert E. Howard’s poetry”


Zothique #10 which apparently appeared a few weeks later as an “Autumn 2021” edition. This is the second Robert E. Howard special, of a planned three.

* “another substantial selection of articles and essays dedicated to the Bard of Cross Plains, together with a choice of unpublished works that expand the Italian bibliography of the writer.”

* “Giovanni Valenzano offers a very detailed excursus on werewolves and other shape-shifting beasts in Howard’s fiction”

* “Andrea Gualchierotti with brilliant erudition speaks to us of magic and witchcraft in the cycle of Conan the Barbarian, finding surprising parallels with the real magicians of the classical world.”

* “Mariano D’Anza’s work on the sources of Howardian poetry continues, this being his fifth section.”


Studi Lovecraftiani #20 with the announcement post being dated 12th January 2022.

* “a thorough examination of HPL’s cultural heritage in modern literature and media”

* “an in-depth study of cursed grimoires and impossible books that sprang from its pen and that of other authors”

* “a piece on Lovecraft’s monsters seen as a psychological metaphor, the first part of a learned study on the abstraction of corporeality in HPL’s fiction”

* “an original article that discloses a source never before identified for the short story “The Nameless City”.”

* “three unpublished [in Italian] writings by HPL himself, starting with a memory of his school days, where the writer also tells a funny episode that occurred during the graduation ceremony; then one of his essays where he criticizes the famous poem “The Waste Land” by Thomas Eliot, and, translated here for the first time, there are also his extraordinary notes that he needed to write the famous short story “The Shadow over Innsmouth”.”

The Italian Horror Magazine also notes that #20 has…

* “”Lovecraft’s Call: A Few Considerations on the Cultural Heritage of the Providence Dreamer.” The last part of which talks… “about Lovecraft the philosopher and conservative, a man flanked by authors apparently very distant from him such as Cesare Pavese, William Butler Yeats, Yukio Mishima and Pierre Drieu La Rochelle, Ezra Pound and even the late-stage Pasolini.”

* “Lovecraft and the Bible, examining the influence of the King James Bible on Lovecraft’s tales.”

* “an interview with Richard Stanley, director of The Colour Out Of Space movie.”

Fungi From Yuggoth review

15 Tuesday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Neale Monks reviews the new Fungi From Yuggoth — An Annotated Edition, for SFcrowsnest. The new paperback…

represents astonishing value. There’s tons here to appeal to even the most casual Lovecraft fan, let alone the more serious student of weird fiction or 20th century poetry. ‘Fungi From Yuggoth’ is an astonishingly beautiful sonnet cycle and Schultz has done a stellar job here providing its complete context. … Highly recommended.

I was going to promote it for the latest ‘Plants’ issue of Digital Art Live, but sadly it got crowded out by a game I found at the last minute (Strange Horticulture).

Frazetta Book Cover Art

13 Sunday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Frazetta Book Cover Art: The Definitive Reference will be a completist “168 page, 8 x 11-inch hardcover”, set to be published at the end of June 2022. At $40, affordable too. A slipcover/folio edition is pre-ordering now via the Frazetta Art Museum.

Book bits

10 Thursday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

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Some books bits that don’t seem to justify a post on their own.

The European Conservative journal has a free review-article on the “Afterlife of an American Pulpster”…

Two recent American novels feature not the vivid characters who were products of R.E. Howard’s imaginative pen, but fictionalized versions of the man himself. Teel James Glenn’s A Cowboy in Carpathia was published in 2020 by Pro Se Press. David Pinault’s Providence Blue appeared in 2021 from Ignatius Press.

hplovecraft.com now has the table-of-contents for the third book in The Robert H. Waugh Library of Lovecraftian Criticism. Looks tasty. The entire three-volume set will weigh in at 900 pages.

Taskerland reviews, as a Lovecraft newbie daunted by I Am Providence, the shorter H.P Lovecraft: A Short Biography. This being S.T. Joshi’s 100-page whistle-stop abridgement.

S.T. Joshi’s Miscellaneous Writings and his 1980s Journals have been published.

“Shadow Over Innsmouth” adaptation

06 Sunday Mar 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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From Blue Fox, “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” in a two-part comics adaptation. Set in 1927 but looks to be something of a free adaptation, judging by the cover of the second book (which appears to introduce a young female to the tale?).

Randolph Carter stories in Catalan and Spanish

21 Monday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Leading European newspaper El Pais reviews the new Catalan-language book The Dreamland Stories of Randolph Carter (translated and selected by Ricard Vela)…

The story of Carter’s New England upbringing reveals to us Lovecraft’s own rational and considered autobiography. His pessimistic stance, his accommodation to existential absurdity, his commitment to the validity of dreaming as a life experience and not as an evasion.

Dream-quest is not included, but the reviewer points to the worthy Spanish text titled Viajes al otro mundo: Ciclo de aventuras oniricas de Randolph Carter (Alianza, 1987).

New book: New Maps of Dream

19 Saturday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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I see that PS Publishing shipped New Maps of Dream in July 2021, a new anthology of Dreamlands tales. Though there was evidently some initial difficulty in finding the right type of writers…

Many of our scouts begged off after reporting that the Gates of Horn and Ivory were closed to even the most intrepid dreamers, or wholly unrecognizable to those who could even find them. To our grave dismay, the first monographs to reach us described no perfumed jungles, cat-haunted cities, or wine-dark seas.

But the Introduction states that many more suitable others came later, enough for the volume, and they…

reported that the Dreamlands of old were alive and well.

Although a certain modern jaundice may in some cases have infected the Dreamlands…

As the trailblazing sleepwalkers herein have come together to report, the Dreamlands are indeed alive, but no more well than ourselves: and if we seek to return there, we must be wary of the very soul-sickness motivating our quest infecting and corrupting those exquisitely sensitive realms.

Still, it sounds like an interesting book. And unlike other PS titles it is somewhat affordable. It’s on Amazon (thanks to Martin for hacking his way through the useless Amazon search and finding the link). I also see several other chunky Lovecraftian anthologies have either recently arrived or are forthcoming in early 2022. It seems that the sunken isle of Mythos is rising from the waves once again, and its denizens are once more ravening to devour the world’s paper supplies.

Florida in the springtime

09 Wednesday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The latest edition of The Fossil (January 2022) has no Lovecraft-related articles, this time around. But there is a short activity-report which brings a snippet of good news on the forthcoming Florida book…

Adventurous Liberation: H.P. Lovecraft in Florida has finally gone to the editor for final review. The book should be out in late spring.

Behind the camera, the likely cross-country stop at which Lovecraft would have arrived, in the centre of De Land.

Lovecraftian People and Places listed

07 Monday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The new book Lovecraftian People and Places by Ken Faig, Jr. now has a listing page at Hippocampus Press. $25, and all the essays have been revised and updated for the new volume. Hippocampus’s site has been and still is ‘up and down’ in terms of access from the UK. So here’s a screenshot for those who can’t access it…

Ray Bradbury: Novels & Story Cycles

03 Thursday Feb 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Podcasts etc.

≈ 2 Comments

I’m pleased to see that the Library of America is giving Ray Bradbury the same fine production values they gave Lovecraft a while back. Bradbury gets two volumes, the first being out now as a $40 900-page table-trembler titled Ray Bradbury: Novels & Story Cycles (2021).

It includes “Bradbury’s settled intention” for the final-cut of the famous Martian Chronicles. Google Books can provide no contents list, but according to one interview with the venerable editor this means it includes the show-stopping satirical “Usher II” horror-story, probably best skipped the first time around.

If you want some ‘starter Bradbury’ that’s a little lighter on the wrists, a fine theatrical audiobook version of The Martian Chronicles is the five and a half hour full-cast audio by Colonial Radio Theatre (they use the British spelling for Theatre). Created for direct-to-CD in 2011, rather than lopped-and-chopped to fit a broadcast time-slot. They spent a lot of time making sure the sequence fitted Bradbury’s final intentions. Again, you might do best to skip “Usher II” on the first hearing.

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