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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: New books

Lovecraft Unbound reviewed

08 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ 1 Comment

Lovecraft is Missing has a new review of Lovecraft Unbound (2009), an anthology of 20 Lovecraft-inspired stories. Judging from this, and a detailed Amazon breakdown of the contents, Marc Laidlaw’s “Leng” and Michael Chabon’s “In the Black Mill” sound like the stories I’d buy it for. The book can currently be picked up in used condition for $4 on Amazon U.S., including shipping. It’s not available for the Kindle.

Robert Aickman

03 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

Bookslut has a new appreciation of Sheridan Le Fanu and Robert Aickman. Robert Aickman is a new name to me, but he sounds fascinating. Sadly, he’s yet another author who can’t be purchased for the Kindle, despite being published in print by Faber and Faber (three print volumes: Cold Hand in Mine, The Wine-Dark Sea, The Unsettled Dust). You might think publishers wanted people to go get the pirated versions.

I was delighted to learn that the first story in Cold Hand in Mine is set in Wolverhampton. I’m always keen to find horror and fantasy stories that arise from my own West Midlands of England…

“The Swords” is one, a seedy [horror] tale of adolescence and first love, set against a grimy industrial background of Midlands Britain, replete with carnivals, snakemen and two-bit whorehouses.

Aickman also co-founded The Inland Waterways Association, along with L.T.C. Rolt, a grassroots organisation which so wonderfully restored the old canals of the Midlands.

Lord it’s An Expensive World

03 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

≈ Leave a comment

Here come the silly prices for mint first-edition hardback copies of Lord Of Visible World: Autobiography In Letters, now that the book is out-of-print…

I Am cheap

28 Wednesday Sep 2011

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

≈ 1 Comment

The two-volume I Am Providence, currently direct from Amazon with free shipping, for just $63. I doubt it’ll ever get much lower than this?

Lovecraft in Iran

26 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ 1 Comment

As if Iran wasn’t horrific enough, Lovecraft has been translated and is set to be published there…

“The book A Dark Lore including six phantasmagorical short stories by American writer Howard Phillips Lovecraft is converted into Persian by Arash Tahmasbi […] and will be released by Farhang Javid Publications.”

Across the genres

26 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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Kim Wright muses on why so many contemporary literary fiction authors are prepared to dip their toe in writing genre fiction…

“Once upon a time, genre was treated as almost a different industry from literary fiction, ignored by critics, sneered at by literary writers, relegated by publishers to imprint ghettos. But the dirty little and not-particularly-well-kept secret was that […] these genre books were the ones who kept the entire operation in business. All those snobbish literary writers had better have hoped like hell that their publishers had enough genre moneymakers in house to finance the advance for their latest beautifully rendered and experimentally structured observation of upper class angst.”

“it’s not just a matter of writers flipping back and forth, it’s a matter of genre and literary cross-pollinating to produce a new species”

The first half of the reader comments are quite interesting, too — but then the “what counts as SF” genre-police bores arrive.

Stealing Cthulhu – review

25 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

≈ 2 Comments

I just finished reading an e-copy of the new book, Stealing Cthulhu ($35). The 30,000-word book was written for those who run tabletop role-play games (RPGs), and who need to devise new scenes, unique plots, and familiar-but-fresh monsters. But the book will also interest writers, especially since the remix culture is now breaking down old writerly taboos around unique ‘authenticity’. Writers won’t be swamped in tedious RPG rules arcana, since that particular monster is safely locked away in a single short appendix (where the author sets out his own simple RPG system called Cthulhu Dark). In the body of the text the reader is offered clear and intelligent breakdowns of what Lovecraft does and how and why he does it, drawing on a clutch of his key stories. The author has obviously wandered freely in the vast catacomb of Lovecraft’s writing (and also a few of the wider Mythos stories), but what he loots from it is then rigourously and sensibly organised. The writing is clear and concise throughout. There may be “how to” books on writing horror (I haven’t bothered to look), but this book is the only writing guide for Lovecraftian horror/SF that I’ve ever heard of. Maybe it’s better than standard “writers guide” tomes, since it doesn’t suggest how to write — simply how to come up with ideas about what to write about and how to structure those ideas. Another advantage is that the author’s approach arises from oral RPG storytelling sessions, not from academic lit-crit theories or writers’ workshop ‘rules’. He simply gets down to giving easy-to-follow guidance on how to recombine and re-work ideas / characters / monsters / settings / atmospheres, etc, to tell new stories that can satisfy tabletop gamers. The structural story breakdowns are followed by light suggestions for adapting these elements so they work with RPG player groups, but the author never gets bogged down in this. Of course, one then needs a slathering of freshly weird imagination laid on top of these basic re-mixes. And a writer may need to insert plot switchbacks, like Lovecraft did. But the book presents a good system for getting a starting base story, and will no doubt help jump-start many blocked writers. For an ebook (I had it as a PDF) it’s rather expensive at $35 (about £23), but not so when you factor in that your $35 will also eventually get you a collectable print copy. A unique and recommended book.

Lovecraft in Historical Context books – now available for the Kindle

20 Tuesday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

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I’m pleased to say that both my Lovecraft in Historical Context books of essays and historical notes are now available on the Kindle: One (2010) and Two (2011).

Kickstarter project for Dream Quest

19 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books

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Jason B. Thompson has a Kickstarter project to crowd-fund a new edition of The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath and Other Stories in comic book form…

“Here’s my plan: I want to go back to my Dream-Quest comics, retouch the art, and reprint all four stories — Dream-Quest, “Celephais,” “The White Ship” and “The Strange High House” — together in one definitive collection of HPL’s greatest dream stories. The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath will have a new cover, a map of the dreamworld, concept art of the various creatures and places, and a comic adaptation of Lovecraft’s four greatest dream stories. Altogether, it’ll be a 176-page, oversize (approximately A4 [about the same as the U.S. Letter] size) book.”

50 days left to go, and he’s currently had $5,888 pledged of the $10,000 goal.

Lovecraft in Historical Context: further essays and notes – now for the Kindle

18 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ 2 Comments

I’m pleased to say that my summer 2011 book Lovecraft in Historical Context: further essays and notes (31,000 words, 14 essays and two new original stories) is due next week in Kindle format. It’s finished (all hand-coded) and uploaded, and should be approved for the Amazon Kindle Store in a few days.

It can also be purchased as a print paperback.

H.P. Lovecraft as psychogeographer – now available for the Kindle

18 Sunday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books

≈ Leave a comment

I’m pleased to say that my latest book is now available an an ebook for the Amazon Kindle ereader: on the USA Kindle Store and the U.K. Kindle Store. The hand-coded Kindle edition has a linked table-of-contents, and a fully-linked “round trip” endnotes system.

Walking With Cthulhu: H.P. Lovecraft as psychogeographer, New York City 1924-26

Kindle edition of ‘Walking With Cthulhu’, coming next week

16 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books

≈ Leave a comment

I’ve hand-coded a Kindle edition of my new book, Walking With Cthulhu: H.P. Lovecraft as psychogeographer, New York City 1924-26. The Kindle edition has a linked table-of-contents, and a fully linked “round trip” endnotes system (i.e.: from each endnote, click back to the correct point in the main text). The Kindle edition has just been accepted by Amazon, and they usually take about three or four days to make it “live” on the Amazon Kindle Store. Hopefully from early next week you should be able to look at the “free 10% sample” and/or buy it. I’ve set a U.S. price of $9.99, with the UK and German prices set to reflect the dollar.

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