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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

By Daylight Only

26 Saturday Nov 2022

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A peep at the British anthology By Daylight Only (1929). A new sale listing shows the original dust-jacket, which gives the colour. The paid repro ‘Facsimile Dust-jackets’ version has it as red, but here I’ve digitally recoloured to green…

Presumably a contributor copy would have arrived, circa December 1929, for Lovecraft. A tale by the master had appeared in the third volume, almost certainly issued in time for Halloween, and he received his copy in mid December. So we might imagine the same timing for this fifth book in the series. By Daylight Only featured his “Pickman’s Model”.

Perhaps it was first shipped in bulk to the Weird Tales office for further distribution to the American authors at their latest addresses. Since the British publishers dealt with Weird Tales London agent Charles Lovell, who picked the best published WT stories and passed them in good form to Selwyn & Blount for further selection and arrangement. I imagine he also passed back the contributor copies when ready. Ah, yes… I find that supposition is confirmed. In 1929 Lovecraft also wrote to Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright to thank him… “for the anthology which you forwarded”.

Black Friday

24 Thursday Nov 2022

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A few Black Friday sale items I’ve noticed, of possible interest to Tentaclii readers. All rather modest savings so far. No ‘80% off’ door-busters, as yet.

Blambot has 30% off of their comic-book lettering fonts, by using coupon-code CYBERWEEK at the checkout. Expires 4th December 2022. Some horror fonts and vintage 1950s EC comics type fonts. They also have vintage ad fonts, suitable for recreating old ads and poster for RPGs.

25% off a one-time perpetual licence for the QuarkXpress DTP desktop software. Don’t judge it by the bad reputation it had back in 2002. It’s now worth considering if you need a full DTP desktop software, and (unlike Adobe’s InDesign) it doesn’t require an expensive plugin to export to HTML5.

A modest 25% off Gigapixel AI, the best desktop image up-scaler. Apparently still available as a standalone, for now. They had announced that it would only be available in a bundle with their other AI software.

Modest discounts on DxO ViewPoint 4. If you visit places and make or have a lot of pictures of buildings or rooms, this ‘partly automatic’ desktop software straightens the curved/wonky verticals and horizontals. Used to be very cheap, a couple of years ago. Now more expensive.

No discounts yet on PDF Index Generator, DocFetcher Pro, JitBit Macro Recorder, Scrivener 3, Booksorber. CQuill Writer is 30% off all year round, so doesn’t really count.

As with all software, try before you buy, to check your OS can run it and if you like the user interface. Some software, such as Serif’s Affinity Publisher DTP software, have squinty deal-breaker UIs. Others won’t run on old OSs. AI software may require a certain grade of graphics card.

Twitty fun

23 Wednesday Nov 2022

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Surprisingly true. All-but useless for news / opportunities gathering, but fun to scroll really fast through for 30 minutes a day on a desktop PC, with images blocked. That assumes, of course, you know how to ‘follow’ someone while also blocking their daily tidal-wave of re-tweets. And that your feed has settled down, discarding the stupid mini-feeds ‘suggested topic’ (Soccer, Wrestling, Boxing and other manly grunt-fests). Why are suggestion-bots so dumb? All of them, all the time. Fix that, Elon and you’ll be a rich man. Oh, wait…

Bloch in Manitoba

17 Thursday Nov 2022

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In the news last weekend, Manitoba man inherits author Robert Bloch’s belongings…

It will take some time before Robert Unik finishes sifting through everything he inherited from his late mother last month, but so far the treasure trove the Manitoba man just received includes books, photos and documents that once belonged to the famous fiction writer Robert Bloch.

Affinity Publisher v2, now with footnotes

12 Saturday Nov 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Serif’s Affinity has launched its version 2.0 suite of Adobe-killers. Of interest to scholars and writers is that there are now footnotes, as a new feature in its Publisher DTP software for desktop. Seemingly this feature is also in the iPad app version of Publisher. I assume the footnotes work as they do in Word.

Affinity Publisher v2 on its own can currently be had on an introductory discount for £35.99 UK ($40.99 US), if you don’t need the other Affinity software (equivalents of Photoshop and Illustrator). That’s an excellent one-off price for such a polished DTP software, though note that…

* the InDesign-like UI is going to be a bit scary for the first week for some users

* it’s very eye-straining, since on Windows you can’t scale the UI with its tiny fonts and labels. Mac users can at least scale up the UI font size.

* Windows 7 users should note that Publisher 1.9.2 was apparently the last that could run on Windows 7.

What you don’t get is, compared to the competitors…

* The user-friendliness and Word-like UI of Microsoft Publisher.

* Adobe InDesign’s plugin ecosystem.

* QuarkXpress’s integrated HTML5 output.


Also, I see that at long last Scrivener 3.x is out for Windows, after years and years of waiting.

A history and critical analysis of Blake’s 7

09 Wednesday Nov 2022

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Possibly useful for my future reference, once I get around to finishing my stop-start Doctor Who re-watch, is the 1990 MacFarland book A history and critical analysis of Blake’s 7, the 1978-1981 British television space adventure. Newly found on Archive.org, to borrow. It appears to have just about everything you might want to know about the much-loved Blake’s 7 TV series, including episode synopses.

I also spotted the more fannish guide-book Maximum power! : the complete unauthorised guide to all 64 episodes of Blake’s 7 (2nd edition). Which has details of some of the more obscure spin-off items…

Warning of wobbly cardboard stage-sets and rubber-suit monsters: 1970s British sci-fi TV series are not for everyone, and are something of an acquired taste.

Spellbound and Vuzz reprints

05 Saturday Nov 2022

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British readers of a certain age may be interested in a new digital reprint of Spellbound, which in the mid 1970s was a popular spooky supernatural-mystery weekly comic for girls. Spellbound Volume One is available now. This collects the vintage serial “I Don’t Want to be a Witch”, and pairs it with selected vintage one-off strips. There are also four modern one-off takes on the Spellbound formula, bundled in a 116-page volume. But note that back then a page of a British weekly could contain the equivalent in panels of three pages in a modern padded-out comic.

Also from the 1970s, Philippe Druillet’s Vuzz collected as a new oversized hardback, albeit of 72 pages.

Hop into the Crowsnest

31 Monday Oct 2022

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SF Crowsnest is now recruiting unpaid reviewers. In the past couple of years this fine free-to-read grassroots title has offered quite a number of reviews of books related to Lovecraft’s life, letters and work.

October on Tentaclii

31 Monday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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It was a mild and damp October here in England, which has raised a bumper crop of strange fungi around Tentaclii Towers. The blog was not quite so fruitful, with a bit less activity than normal. Still, here’s my summary for the month.

In postcard pictures related to Lovecraft and his places, this month I looked at St. Paul’s Chapel in New York City (where Lovecraft married Sonia); I found evocative pictures of Newport at Night; and also a few of St. Augustine sea-front including a one-off 1950s low-tide picture. Otherwise there were only small historical nuggets this month. A flick through Robert Bloch’s Once around the Bloch: an unauthorized autobiography revealed the unexpected fact that Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright had a very good sense of humour (at least, when met personally). Who knew? My post on bicycle racing in Providence discovered that the 11-13 year old “veritable bicycle centaur” Lovecraft would surely have known of the opening of a large new cycledrome, backed by the manager of the Providence Opera House. In the third instalment of my notes on Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei I learned (among many other things) that Lovecraft did eventually see the famous surreal-horror movie Dr. Caligari, and one reel of The Golem. But too late to influence his writing. Another website took a look at the composer Scriabin and Lovecraft, and I responded by doing some digging on possible connections. I found a 1922 connection via Galpin, and various broad parallels between Lovecraft and Scriabin, but there seems to have been no influence of Scriabin’s music on Lovecraft or on “Erich Zann”.

In journals and magazines, the German Lovecraftians released a German-language double-issue Lovecrafter #9 and #10. The thriving scholarly Shima journal released a special issue on sea-monsters in English.

In books, I noted the new Theology and H.P. Lovecraft, and later also linked to a podcast with the author of one of the chapters. I also looked through all the forthcoming McFarland books and picked out those likely to appeal to Tentaclii readers. A costly academic collection The Medial Afterlives of H.P. Lovecraft: Comic, Film, Podcast, TV, Games appears to be due by early 2023.

In useful scholarly tools I discovered the Contemporary Biography Builder tool; noted a useful PDF Index Generator video on making back-of-the-book indexes from custom lists; and I spotted that the Stellarium 1.0 final/stable software has finally appeared.

Overseas, the Portuguese have a new non-fiction book on Lovecraft and the Esoteric Traditions: Influences of Cosmic Horror on Occultism. The Spanish have a new police-procedural historical Cthulhu Cult novel, El Asesinato de Robert Barlow.

In events, this month I spotted several Lovecraft + Halloween talks in New England on Lovecraft. And the French have just held their big Campus Miskatonic 2022 event.

Two ‘Lovecraft as character’ graphic novels were noted this month, both with French connections. The Monstrous Dreams of Mr. Providence has now appeared in English and at a nice price on the Kindle, and there’s a new Lovecraft in Quebec gallery exhibition in Canada and an accompanying French-language ‘BD’ graphic novel based on Lovecraft’s visits to Quebec.

In podcasts, the latest Voluminous podcast revealed not only a wholly new Lovecraft letter, but also that the S.T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship was once again accepting applications (the deadline has just gone). It further revealed that scanning of the newly arrived Long letters had not started at the John Hay Library, at least as of NecronomiCon 2022. The new LibriVox Ghost and Horror Collection brought new public-domain readings of “The Outsider” by Lovecraft, and “The Loved Dead” by Eddy and Lovecraft. Dark Adventure Theater announced their big December release, R.E. Howard’s Lovecraftian homage story “The Black Stone”. Nice choice, which will please both REH and HPL readers. I was also pleased to find Tolkien’s The Hobbit, unabridged and full-cast and free. A fine listen.

In movies and TV, the Portland (Oregon) edition of the Lovecraft Film Festival even took place in early October. On TV the Netflix “Pickman’s Model” TV one-off was called by The Hollwood Reporter merely “overlong and over-obvious”. This may not worry those who know the story well already, and are keen to see as much period-costume Lovecraft as possible. Though I don’t know what other problems it may have, from a Lovecraftian perspective.

Sadly several of my carefully-made products have ‘fallen flat’ in terms of much-needed Gumroad sales, and they continue to do so. Meanwhile other key income streams have recently fallen away, due to piracy and also people cutting their online spending. Things are getting a bit difficult for me, frankly. If anyone has any regular reliable monthly work I could do, which ideally pays $600+ per month, I’d greatly appreciate hearing about it please. I’m perhaps best suited to being a specialist editor and researcher/writer, and I have strong skills in Web wrangling and picture processing. Many thanks, and thanks also to my patrons on Patreon.

At the River-Gates

28 Friday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. He now has just 12 volumes in which the table of contents still need to be identified, for his forthcoming Horror Fiction Index. This book will give the TOCs for all known single-author weird / macabre / horror story collections. In fact he may only need 11 more. Since I had already emailed him the TOCs, back in August, for…

PHILIPPA PEARCE. At the River-Gates and Other Stories of the Supernatural. London: Puffin, 1996.

After some research I found it to be a child-sized “60 pence” (about $1) pocket-money ‘taster’ paperback, from the children’s division of Penguin. There were many sold in this format here in the UK in the late 1990s, being the publisher’s experiment in the popularisation of reading. Only 54 pages in paperback with pulpy paper. It had three stories which were taken from the larger collection The Shadow-Cage and Other Supernatural Tales. The title and back-cover blurb as seen on eBay, combined, enabled my identification of the three stories inside.

PHILIPPA PEARCE. At the River-Gates: And Other Supernatural Stories. London: Puffin, 1996.

1. “At the River-Gates”.
2. “The Shadow Cage”.
3. “Her Father’s Attic”.

I’ve re-sent the information to S.T. Presumably it got lost in the shuffle of an August break.

AI illustrations under Creative Commons

18 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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Rather than inflict more AI-generated images on readers of my regular blogs, I’ve started a basic new AI illustrations under Creative Commons gallery-blog to serve as a repository, for the best of my experimental sets and occasional one-off images. All images there are under a permissive Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike. I should add that images are never posted “raw”, and they always get a work-over in Photoshop.

Reading the runes

18 Tuesday Oct 2022

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Looks like Tolkien letters are getting to be as costly as substantial Lovecraft letters…

a remarkable letter in which Tolkien explains the development of runes and languages used in The Hobbit, 1943, [has just] sold for $107,100, a world record for a letter by Tolkien.

They’re of course far scarcer, too.

Until Christmas 2022 you can also get runic with Tolkien at the large exhibition J.R.R. Tolkien: The Art of the Manuscript in the unlikely location of Milwaukee, USA.

Tolkien’s design for a physical replica of The Book of Mazarbul.

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