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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: New books

Gou Tanabe’s “Innsmouth” begins publishing in May 2020

13 Monday Apr 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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That cult manga graphic novelist Gou Tanabe was adapting “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” has been known for some time now. He’s already done The Hound and Other Stories, and At The Mountains of Madness, and others, to much acclaim from manga readers. Now it’s been announced via some English manga blogs that his “Innsmouth” adaptation will debut in Japanese in the Japanese-language Comic Beam (link may not be ‘Safe for Work’ in western countries) in May, and conclude in November 2020. I can find no formal announcement / previews on the magazine’s site, but among the magazine’s ‘kawaii’ and ‘suggestive schoolgirl’ covers, there are occasional Lovecraft covers such as this “Shadow Out of Time” cover from May 2018…

His “Time” completed in Japanese serial form in November 2018, and was then published in two volumes in 2019. It is available in French as Dans L’abime du Temps, but I don’t yet see it in an official English version.

The Drafts from Beyond

12 Sunday Apr 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ 1 Comment

A forthcoming book from the REH Foundation…

Collected here for the first time are three surviving drafts of Howard’s section of the story [the round-robin “The Challenge from Beyond”, with Lovecraft as one participant], all from Howard’s typescripts, and the final version, as published in Fantasy Magazine for September 1935. Taken together, these drafts reveal a writer who isn’t just pounding out a few pages for a fan publication, but one who is painstaking in his decisions and interested in presenting his own worldview, even in just a little more than three pages. Coming soon — with cover art by Tim Truman!

Solomon Kane: The Original Marvel Years Omnibus

06 Monday Apr 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Censorship, New books, REH

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Due in July 2020, the 624-page collection Solomon Kane: The Original Marvel Years Omnibus, collecting all the Marvel comics featuring R.E. Howard’s Puritan adventurer.

I’m not keen on the cover. I guess it helps sales, though, since it makes him look vaguely like Conan or a generic pirate. But personally I’d walk straight past it and not recognise Solomon Kane the Puritan.

Also it seems you can no longer trust Marvel’s new reprints, as they’ve started censoring and pasting out things like Wolverine’s cigar. And probably other things now deemed ‘politically incorrect’. It’s a slippery slope. How long before tight shiny spandex, on slightly-too-curvy “boobs ‘n bums”, gets covered up under stick-on shrouds?

Anyway, I just took another look for the 2010 movie of Kane, hoping that by now there might be a longer Director’s Cut. A flop at the time, I seem to remember it was hardly released. I found it good entertainment but very choppy in the first half, as though large chunks had been hastily cut out. But no… it seems the 2010 theatrical release of the movie is all we have in 2020.

Christoper Anvil and the Interstellar Patrol series

05 Sunday Apr 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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I’m always pleased to discover a prolific science fiction author I missed in the 1980s, or was put off reading by dour critics. Especially so if the author is a rare example of straight humour consistently integrated into ideas-based science-fiction. I’d never heard of Christoper Anvil, and his ”Interstellar Patrol” series at first sounded initially to me like the 1930s ”Lensman” space opera, fine at the time but perhaps a bit creaky and staid today. But Anvil’s series began in October 1966 and has been compared to the initial Star Trek series (by Transformations : The Story of the Science Fiction Magazines from 1950 to 1970) and been called “insistently readable” (by SFE: Encyclopedia of Science Fiction). His ”Interstellar Patrol” is not to be confused with that of Edmond Hamilton, who published his as a series in Weird Tales in the 1920s.

Anvil was a former U.S. military pilot who turned to writing ideas-driven science fiction for Astounding and then Analog. He also wrote mystery stories for Ellery Queen’s and Alfred Hitchcock’s. His main science-fiction series appear to be immense, while others are short and peripheral. But his ”Interstellar Patrol” series seems like a manageable sampler-series to start with, at about 38 short stories and novellas. Apparently it was a roaring success with the readers at the time of publication, and is still very fondly remembered by an ageing few.

It’s almost impossible to find critical writing about him, even reviews on Archive.org, but a brief review in Asimov’s magazine in 2009 had perceptive things to say. Paul de Fillippo observed, reviewing the War Games reprint collection of Anvil’s military stories, that Anvil is not a munitions-and-mud type of military writer. More like an intelligence guy who’s aware of the wide play of “covert and overt” forces, and misguided actions and unintended consequences, that could lead to combat.

The last thing one might notice about these stories — last, because they dazzle us by zipping along like maglev trains through a Disneyland of the jester’s imagination — is how well they’re constructed, and what literary tricks Anvil features in his bag. His prose is hardly ornate or “sophisticated,” but it delivers the action in a punchy, succinct and captivating fashion. … Anvil’s chosen tone is humorous and sardonic, a mix of cautious cynicism and hopeful optimism. This voice alone lifts him out of the common herd of genre writers.

As for the ”Interstellar Patrol” series, it in now to be found neatly presented in two ebook collections, with the stories deftly arranged by an editor to follow the internal timeline of the series. They’re cheap at $7 each and complete, and are not bot-assembled shovelware. The first is titled Interstellar Patrol (2003), and the second is Interstellar Patrol II: The Federation of Humanity (2005). These have rather offputting front covers, a jarring mix of ‘posh’ lettering and pulp art, but the second cover is less cheesy…

No audiobook as yet, but I’m pleased to see that Tantor have a 17-hour audiobook of Interstellar Patrol due in May 2020.

Judging by the first two stories it’s enjoyable slightly zany pulp with military-intelligence nous, good action and clean humour, and a small-c conservative worldview. Anvil seems like a sort of mutant cross between Robert E. Howard and Asimov, with a dash of the Firefly TV series via Star Trek. He certainly is as compellingly readable as the SFE: Encyclopedia of Science Fiction suggests.

He’s obviously very far from Lovecraft’s cosmic horror, admittedly. But in these fraught and impoverished times such relatively light and humorous escapist stories may be just what the doctor ordered.

Gothic influences in Holmes

05 Sunday Apr 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

≈ 3 Comments

The second half of a forthcoming book, No Ghosts Need Apply: Gothic influences in criminal science, the detective and Doyle’s Holmesian Canon (October 2020), attempts to make the case that there are gothic traces in what are often assumed to be the ‘rationalist’ Sherlock Holmes stories. Sifting the extensive blurb for the book, one can eventually determine that the author suggests the following specific points…

* intrigue and secret societies;

* uncanny consequences of new technologies and scientific discoveries;

* instances of degeneration, regression and atavism;

* Sherlockian discussion of ‘criminal types’;

* the melancholy moods of the great detective.


One might also suggest…

* the isolated house and its ‘hidden’ structure, re: secret passages, mysteriously locked and shuttered rooms, and suchlike;

* disguises and assumed identity;

* Holmes alternates between mental states, from drugged or lethargic to hyper-perceptive of things others cannot see;

* sudden personality change;

* landscape expresses a mood – moonlit city streets and moorland fogs;

* fatal love, vengeance;

* strange methods of dispatch — poisons, maddening gases, deadly imported creatures and the like;

* stories within stories, some unreliable or apparently conflicting.

Curiously, thinking about Holmes makes me wonder about the broad similarities between the pairings of Sam/Frodo and Watson/Holmes.

The Other Lovecraft

29 Sunday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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“The Other Lovecraft” is a Spanish magazine review of the new book translation of some of Lovecraft’s weird poetry…

The Introduction [by Juan Andres Garcia Roman] casts a clear light on these poems, and is a pleasant and well-written little essay. It is not easy to find introductions to these [more obscure] aspects of Lovecraft [in Spanish].

Going Dutch

27 Friday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Now in the final stages of preparation is Clark Ashton Smith: Poems in Prose, as a Dutch translation with Glossary. The translator is now looking for native Dutch speakers to assist with the final polishing…

I’ve been silently but steadily working on a Dutch translation of the Poems in Prose. I’m in the last round of editing and I expect to publish them later this year. Are there, by any chance, other Dutch speakers on these forums?

New book: A Century of Weird Fiction, 1832-1937

27 Friday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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A Century of Weird Fiction, 1832-1937 is listed as available March 2020. It’s a £45 academic book from the University of Wales Press here in the UK, and apparently tries to marry two currently active academic lines of interest. Firstly the focus on the aesthetics of “emotional effects” (mainly around feelings such as disgust) in the weird, and secondly the recent elaboration of the possible philosophical implications of the weird. The book has chapters on Poe, Machen, Blackwood, William Hope Hodgson, and Lovecraft.

New book: Visual History of Science Fiction Fandom

27 Friday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Scholarly works

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The Visual History of Science Fiction Fandom: Volume One: A Tour of the 1930s is a lavishly illustrated 516-page new book. The $150 first edition is said to have sold out already, but there’s an ebook at a still-hefty $40.

Some have called it a “sumptuous scrapbook”. John Locke (The Thing’s Incredible! The Secret Origins of Weird Tales) has called the book…

“A much more detailed portrait of First Fandom than previously available”

There’s also the interesting addition of… “Original narrative comics, that bring to life key events”.

I can’t immediately find scholarly or otherwise weighty reviews. I’m thus uncertain if it offers a few nods toward less public and less photogenic networks, such as Lovecraft and his circles. Ideally one would want a whole chapter on the influence of that on early science fiction, but it might be tough to find quality archival pictures.

New Barlow book will be twice the size of the 2002 edition

25 Wednesday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. He reports that His Own Most Fantastic Creation (stories featuring Lovecraft) is shipping, and usefully offers the contents-list.

His new blog post also reports that the forthcoming Barlow book will be a “vastly augmented edition” of Eyes of the God (2002)…

has been expanded to more than twice its size, coming to close to 550 pages and including a number of unpublished works of fiction and much other matter, including several essays on Barlow written in the 1950s and 1960s. Expect this volume later this year (I hope)!

The new podcast Wyrd Transmissions has bagged a long talk with S.T. Joshi, for episode #2.

New book: H. P. Lovecraft: El caminante de Providence

25 Wednesday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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A new Spanish biography of Lovecraft, by Roberto Garcia-Alvarez, H. P. Lovecraft: El caminante de Providence. The 490-page book has an introduction by S.T. Joshi, and appears to be a substantial update of the 2016 first edition. It was due for release 19th March 2020, but publication has been postponed. The local press in Malaga, Spain, has additional details…

In 2016, the GasMask publishing house in Malaga published what is considered to be the most comprehensive and ambitious biography of this American author, The Walker of Providence, the work of Asturian writer Roberto Garcia-Alvarez. [Now comes] a new, expanded and revised edition of The Walker of Providence, with a foreword by the American writer and critic S.T. Joshi. [However, the book is now] delayed until the arrival [of printed copies] in bookshops is possible.

I’m currently working on the assumption that the end of May should see things starting to return to normal, so hopefully the Spanish won’t have too many weeks to wait.

Journal of Juvenilia Studies

25 Wednesday Mar 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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An article by Ken Faig Jr. in the latest issue of The Fossil (January 2020) reveals a new journal from the International Society of Literary Juvenilia, the Journal of Juvenilia Studies. I’m pleased to see that the new journal is open-access, and has so far produced three issues and includes book reviews. It’s been added to my JURN search-engine, which enables the discovery of articles in open-access arts & humanities journals.

The journal is devoted to discussion of the works of young writers, and of the juvenilia of famous writers when they were young, rather than literature for ‘juveniles’ (as Lovecraft’s era termed them, though marketeers and librarians would today refer to them as ‘young adults’). This makes the journal relevant to The Fossil and the history of amateur journalism, and also to Lovecraft because so many of the producers of amateur publications were youngsters. The Journal of Juvenilia Studies could thus be the place to land an article on this aspect of Lovecraft’s complex network of postal ‘zines / correspondence / book-borrowing / letters-pages / boy-printers and so on.

As for The Fossil, this also offers a publication opportunity — the editor remarks in the latest issue that he’s keen to see more “articles related to amateur journalism” from new hands.

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