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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: New books

H.P. Lovecraft’s Dreamlands, back in print

15 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Chaosium have put their H.P. Lovecraft’s Dreamlands book back into print. It seems to be one of those collectable tabletop RPG guides that also serve as a handy encyclopaedia for writers using the setting…

“Includes […] a huge gazetteer [examining the distinct regions of: The East, The North, Oriab, The Seas, The South, The West, The Moon, The Underworld, and Worlds Beyond.], [descriptions of thirty] People of the Dreamlands, lists a number of important non-player characters within the Dreamlands […] over 60 monsters dwelling within the Dreamlands, descriptions of the Dreamlands gods and their cults […] and a fold-out map of the Dreamlands by Andy Hopp.”

256 pages in paper, and now with a PDF version available.

S.T. Joshi’s blog updates

12 Monday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. It includes, among other items, news of the new illustrated version of the biography which should be published in Autumn 2012…

“…heavily illustrated biography of Lovecraft (the tentative title — which I don’t care for — is H.P. Lovecraft: Nightmare Countries), to be distributed exclusively in Barnes & Noble bookstores. […] I hope to suggest or supply numerous illustrative matter, including photographs of Lovecraft (probably drawing on the extensive collection assembled by Donovan Loucks), copies of letters or manuscripts, and so forth.”

Lovecraft scholarship in 2012

12 Monday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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A couple of non-Joshi scholarly items, noted as due for publication in 2012…

Green, Matthew (2012). “A Darker Magic: Heterocosms and bricolage in Moore’s recent reworkings of Lovecraft”. In: Alan Moore and the Gothic Tradition. Manchester University Press. (Forthcoming, 2012).

Weird Realism: Lovecraft and Philosophy. Zero Books, (Forthcoming, 2012). Seems to have been due since 2010, and “will deal with a small number of H.P. Lovecraft’s greatest stories” when it finally appears.

As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality

10 Saturday Dec 2011

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

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Interesting-sounding new book coming from Oxford University Press… As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality by Michael Saler. Out in January 2012, but there’s a Kindle edition already available in the USA (published 3rd Dec, not available the UK). Looks very interesting, although OUP have saddled it with an unappealing front cover which has dreadfully bad typography.

Edward Castronova says of the book… “This is the best cultural study of fantasy I have ever read. A powerful, liberating argument, woven together from an impressive array of sources, all treated well and fairly. Saler routs the assumption that enchantment and reason oppose one another”. Here’s some of the offical blurb…

“Many people throughout the world inhabit fantastic imaginary worlds [online, in videogames or in fan communities]. These activities are often dismissed as harmless escapism or bemoaned as pernicious wish-fulfillments that distract from the serious business of life. Saler challenges such claims by excavating the history of imaginary worlds in the West since the late nineteenth century, when the communal and long-term immersion in such worlds first began with Sherlock Holmes. The book contends that imaginary worlds emerged at this time as sites of rational and secular enchantments for the modern age. They continue to represent distinct social practices informing political, social, and spiritual life. Individuals often use imaginary worlds as a playful space to debate serious issues in the real world; they also use them to hone their understandings of the interplay of reason and imagination and the provisional nature of all representations. Saler provides an overview of how imaginary worlds went from being feared by the Victorians to being inhabited by the Edwardians, and discusses in detail the creation and reception of the worlds of A.C. Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes, H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, and J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth, among many others. […] Saler’s book contributes the historical back-story of those deeply engaging imaginary universes, highlighting their vital lessons for how we can remain enchanted but not deluded in an age that privileges the imagination as much as reason.”

Of course there were also many other technical precusors of virtual reality in the Victorian and Edwardian eras — such as giant panoramas, fraudulent spiritualist seances, grand Wagnerian ‘immersive’ theater, fairground ‘haunted houses’, etc. A number of history books on these have appeared in recent years. And literature was not without its own technologies that were both individuating and communal at the same time, such as techniques of coded layering such as that found the ‘reserved’ forms used by the likes of Christina Rossetti or the secret codes of queer poetry. One of the interesting changes in genre fiction is that this ‘depth coding’ was no longer available as a literary technology for such writers, since everything had to be “out in the open” in terms of readability. In this respect, what’s interesting about Lovecraft is that his best work finds some potent ways to slip a little ambiguity and ‘difficulty’ back into genre fiction.

The illustrated man

09 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Vague news of a new S.T. Joshi project — H.P. Lovecraft: Nightmare Countries is apparently set to be a heavily illustrated life of Lovecraft, something which previous biographies have not really been able to do. Publisher’s Marketplace reports it has sold to a publishing house.

“is illustrated with photographs, documents, and other images and telling the story of Lovecraft’s life”

Fungi grows…

07 Wednesday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Innsmouth Free Press has the guidelines online for the anthology of short fiction titled Fungi…

“Fungi is an anthology of dark speculative fiction (horror, fantasy, science fiction, and any other variant, such as steampunk) focused solely on the fungal.”

Don’t forget that most of the fungi is down below ground, and what we see as toadstools and mushrooms are just the fruiting bodies. I also discuss bio-luminous slime molds at length in my long essay on the sources and wider historical contexts of Lovecraft’s “The Colour out of Space”, to be found in my Lovecraft in Historical Context: Further Essays and Notes (2011).


Above: Sea Anemone Stinkhorn (Aseroë Rubra), native Australian fungi.

New Critical Essays on H.P. Lovecraft

30 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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New Critical Essays on H.P. Lovecraft is the title of a new book set for publication in 2012 by major publisher Palgrave Macmillan.

Fun with Fungi

29 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Got shrooms? Innsmouth Free Press have pre-announced a new anthology based around fungi…

Full guidelines for the anthology will be posted in December (Don’t send anything, yet!). […] Fungi will be released by Innsmouth Free Press as a special edition hardcover, paperback and e-book. Look for it in October of 2012


Above: from Matango (1963, aka Attack of the Mushroom People)

Ann & Jeff Vandermeer interviewed

26 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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An excellent long interview with Ann & Jeff Vandermeer, editors of the new megathology The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories…

Q: “Is there anything that surprised you when researching and compiling The Weird?”

A: “What surprised us, quite frankly, after reading so much across a century of fiction is that some of what has been dubbed “classic” just re-treads earlier work by other writers that most readers don’t know about…”

“We also discovered that some writers are obscure because the reprint rights are so difficult to acquire. […] Contemporary writers should give great thought to who will represent them after they have passed on. Because we also discovered estates represented by agents who had literally succumbed to dementia and were unable to negotiate.”

Read the whole interview at GavReads.

Future Lovecraft anthology on the Kindle stores now

23 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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The doorstopper Future Lovecraft SF anthology (Innsmouth Free Press, 2011) has just popped up on the UK Kindle Store. Nice price, too — just £3.29. Americans and Canadians can get it on the US Kindle store for $5.18. If you can’t afford even that low price, the Press is currently calling for reviewers.

Contents list.

The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories

19 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Today in the UK both The Financial Times and Guardian Books notice the new wrist-breaker anthology The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories. Amazon UK currently has the book used for as low as £10.

It weighs in at 4lbs, and 750,000 words. So… can I get a Kindle version? No, of course not. What a waste of great publicity. All those potential sales from newspaper reviews just flushed down the drain or diverted to Pirate Bay, because there’s no Kindle version. Seriously, do we need a mass “one-star review” campaign on Amazon, to force publishers to give readers Kindle versions of new books?

Anyway, the chronological anthology looks interesting (even if the only Lovecraft in it is “The Dunwich Horror”, often regarded as a failure), and Weird Fiction Review has a handy table of contents.

Lovecraft Library Volume 1 – shipping early Dec 2011

18 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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A weighty new 232-page collection of comic book adaptations of Lovecraft, The Lovecraft Library Volume 1: Horror Out of Arkham, due 6th Dec 2011 from IDW. Introduction written by Robert Weinberg.

Volume 2 is currently out as a series of traditional comic-book part-work pamphlets, as “H.P. Lovecraft’s The Dunwich Horror” (includes a 100-page adaptation “The Dunwich Horror”, plus other stories), and these will then presumably also be collected into a single volume at some point in 2012. When put together the two volumes should bring us over 400 pages of new comic book adaptations of Lovecraft tales.

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