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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: New books

Pulp!

04 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Added to the magazines section of the “Lovecraft on the Web” directory:

Twit Publishing’s Pulp! magazine. The editor harks back to the days when kids chugged hardboiled detective mysteries, westerns, horror, action/adventure, proto-superheroes, science fiction, and weird fantasy — completing the homage with terrible cover artwork.

Sadly, it’s a USA-only project and so they reject submissions by British writers. Twits.

News of the paperback for ‘I Am Providence’

04 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Wilum Pugmire reports that the paperback edition of S.T. Joshi’s magnificent I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H.P. Lovecraft should be available soon.

Sword and Mythos

28 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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A new IndieGoGo campaign to raise funds for a Sword and Mythos print anthology from Innsmouth Free Press, combining Conan-style romps with
Lovecraft’s mythos. Due Oct 2013.


Above: Conan encounters a shoggoth, Conan the Savage comic, No.4.

The Lovecraft Circle and Others

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Completely unlisted on Amazon USA or UK, and almost unknown to Google Search, so possibly a new book: The Lovecraft Circle and Others — as I Remember Them by Jack Koblas. $30.

Update: well-reviewed by Joshi in the Lovecraft Annual.

The Age of Lovecraft: Cosmic Horror, Posthumanism, and Popular Culture

24 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Call for Proposals for academic book chapters: “The Age of Lovecraft: Cosmic Horror, Posthumanism, and Popular Culture”.

Editors: Carl Sederholm at csederholm@byu.edu / Jeffrey Weinstock at Jeffrey.Weinstock@cmich.edu

250-word proposals are sought for chapters for an edited scholarly collection on H.P. Lovecraft and his place in 21st century literature, film, media, and popular culture. This collection will consider the late 20th and early 21st century as “The Age of Lovecraft”, as he achieves unprecedented levels of cultural saturation. In short, we will be asking ‘why Lovecraft, why now’?

Deadline for proposals: 31st October 31st 2012. Chapters of approximately 6,000 words due one year later.

Conversations with the Weird Tales Circle

24 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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A glimpse of Wilum Pugmire’s bookshelves led me to a new doorstopper book, one I don’t remember hearing of before: Conversations with the Weird Tales Circle (2011). This is a limited edition book (200 copies) of over 750 pages…

“contain letters and essays by the writers, with many interviews and memoirs about the writers, often by other writers from the Circle. With dozens of color and black & white photographs, and many of the articles never before reprinted (several coming from 1930s and 1940s fanzines that are now very difficult to find), this is an important and illuminating look at a group of people that defined an era.”

Seemingly still available at Centipede for $225 plus shipping.

Lovecraft Annual 2012

17 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The new 2012 edition of the Lovecraft Annual scholarly journal is now available, from Hippocampus Press. $15 with free shipping. Including:

   Anna Klein, “Misperceptions of Malignity: Narrative Form and the Threat to America’s Modernity in “The Shadow over Innsmouth””.

   Gavin Callaghan, “Elementary, My Dear Lovecraft: H.P. Lovecraft and Sherlock Holmes.”

Rabid

09 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books

≈ 2 Comments

A possibly interesting new history book on an insanity-causing disease: Rabid: A Cultural History of the World’s Most Diabolical Virus. Just published in hardcover, and as an audio-book.

Was this a disease still a threat in Lovecraft’s time? It seems so. It was a real horror, one literally stalking New England, in the early years of the 20th century. Although possibly it was a minor worry at the time, when weighed alongside things like tuberculosis and syphilis. But raving insanity was the result of the disease, which might make it interesting to Lovecraftian researchers.

   “By 1768 rabies had been distributed throughout New England.” — New Jersey municipalities: Volumes 25-26 (1948).

   “the increase of rabies of late in New England renders it obligatory on those physicians, who may meet with it, to give an account of their cases as soon as convenient” — Boston medical and surgical journal: Volume 40 (1849).

Rhode Island only had four human death from rabies between 1911 and 1917, one in Providence in 1913 (Mortality Statistics, United States Bureau of the Census 1919, p.44). However by the late 1920s the incidence of death had about doubled (possibly this was because of the swelling of the U.S. population), and there were about 100 human deaths per year from the disease in the USA.

   “In the earlier part of this [20th] century, New Jersey had a large problem with canine rabies. In 1939, the worst year for recorded cases of dog rabies, 675 dogs and four humans died of rabies.” — The History of Rabies, New Jersey Department of Health.

However there only appears to be one instance I can remember in which Lovecraft has a dog directly associated with terror, in “The Hound” (1922)…

   “The baying was loud that evening, and in the morning I read of a nameless deed in the vilest quarter of the city. The rabble were in terror, for upon an evil tenement had fallen a red death beyond the foulest previous crime of the neighborhood. In a squalid thieves’ den an entire family had been torn to shreds by an unknown thing which left no trace, and those around had heard all night a faint, deep, insistent note as of a gigantic hound.” — “The Hound”.

Rabies was eradicated in Britain in 1902, and then again most famously in 1922 after a four-year outbreak caused by dogs smuggled past the quarantine in 1918. One wonders if the news in 1922 from his beloved British Isles might have set Lovecraft to thinking on threatening dogs? Although personal experience, Poe, and the 1921 movie of The Hound of the Baskervilles might seem more obvious inspirations for “The Hound”.

Neal Stephenson’s Some Remarks

07 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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Released today in print and audio book, Neal Stephenson’s collection of essays and provocations, Some Remarks: Essays and Other Writing. Nothing very Lovecraftian in it as far as I can see. But interesting defences of bookishness, musings on the social role and cultural depictions of scientists, and musings on SF/fantasy/horror genres and blurring boundaries.

Slime Dynamics

03 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Oozing into a bookstore near you at the end of September, Slime Dynamics by Ben Woodard…

“…slime is more often than not relegated to a mere residue the trail of a verminous life form, the trace of decomposition, or an entertaining synthetic material […] this text explores naturephilosophie, speculative realism, and contemporary science; hyperbolic representations of slime found in the weird texts of H.P. Lovecraft and Thomas Ligotti; as well as survival horror films, video games, and graphic novels, in order to present the dynamics of slime not only as the trace of life but as the darkly vitalistic substance of life.”


84 pages.

Introduction – Slime Ascent.
1 – The Nightmarish Microbial.
2 – Fungoid Horror and The Creep of Life.
3 – Extra-Galactic Terror.
Conclusion – Slime Metaphysics?

Cthulhu Libria

01 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

≈ 1 Comment

The German book-oriented fanzine Cthulhu Libria is keeping up a regular publication schedule, and free PDF editions are available. With fine covers for each issue by Johann Peterka…

Above: Robert Bloch – “Notebook found in a Deserted House”, by Johann Peterka.

Johan Peterka also starts a comic-strip adaptation of “The Haunter of the Dark” in Cthulhu Libria issue 44 (April 2012)…

Lovecraft in Historical Context 3 – now an ebook for your Kindle

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

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

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I’m pleased to say that my new book, Lovecraft in Historical Context: a third collection of essays and notes, is now available for the Kindle ebook reader, in the USA and the UK.

This was a 12-hour hand-coding job, with four passes of proof-reading on an actual Kindle, and is not an automatic conversion. There is a linked table-of-contents, and the footnotes are fully interactive “round trip” links.

The ebook is also available for the Kindle in Germany and Italy.

A 120-page print edition is also available, for those who prefer print. This print edition link will also get you to the table-of-contents and a PDF sample.

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