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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

All aboard the Trans-Europe Express…

06 Thursday Jan 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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Eldritch-con 2022: A Horror and Fantasy Game Writers’ Convention. In November 2022, including the possibility of…

a unique, luxury pre-convention travel package – a rail journey from Paris, France to Bucharest, Romania upon the Venice Simplon Orient Express [including] a live-action role-playing experience created by Sean Branney / the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society

December on Tentaclii

02 Sunday Jan 2022

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings

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Here’s a quick round-up for December on Tentaclii, for what it’s worth now. In December my ‘Picture Postals’ posts took a look at Robie Alzada Place (1827–1896) and her home place to the west of Providence, this also having been the home place of Lovecraft’s mother; I followed Lovecraft’s travel trail far up into the White Mountains; and I mused on the Ladd Observatory and its relation to time and time-keeping in Providence.

I wrote a long summary here of the year’s more general Lovecraft-related activity by others, in “Lovecraft in 2021: a summary survey”.

Not much in new books in December, but I was pleased to spot S.T. Joshi’s Phantasmagoria: The Weird Fiction, Poetry, and Criticism of Sir Walter Scott and its fine cover. Also the Lovecraft astronomy book El Astronomicon Y Otros Textes En Defense De La Ciencia down in Spain. The French had shipping dates for the various volumes in the sumptuous Editions Mnemos set of Lovecraft’s work in a new translation.

Not much research by me in December, other than for the ‘Picture Postals’, though I am slowly reading through a new book of letters. I did look at who Chapman Miske was, what he published on Lovecraft, and where to find it. I took another look at Lovecraft’s knowledge of Harlem, after finding some new data.

I spotted that H.P. Lovecraft’s first publication (Scientific American, 25th August 1906) was for sale on eBay. Also on eBay I found a good watercolour of the “Longitude” lane in Charleston, which Lovecraft described and admired on his travels. Over on Abe, a set of “At the Mountains of Madness” in Astounding Stories appeared for sale. More significantly, at the end of the month Abe also landed a big bundle of Lovecraft’s earliest appearances in print.

Popping up on Archive.org for free in December was a comprehensive plot-annotated checklist of ‘Bibliomysteries’ (mystery novels across various genres which centre on rare books, book collectors, old bookshops and suchlike); and I was also pleased to see Clifford D. Simak: a primary and secondary bibliography.

Among the audio, the timely story “The Return of the Undead” by Arthur Leeds saw a welcome free release on YouTube. It’s also just gone into the public domain. A new Voluminous podcast looked at ‘H.P. Lovecraft, Detective’, doggedly solving a dastardly crime at the Haverhill Post Office. A books podcast interviewed the author of the intriguing new novel Providence Blue: A Fantasy Quest.

I was pleased to see that the Robert E. Howard Days in Texas announced their 2022 dates. I was also pleased to find a new lost story by Lovecraft’s friend Everett McNeil, “A Descendant of the Vikings” (1906/07).

In software I noted the new writing software CQuill Writer 1.x, an interesting style-prompting assistant which could be filled (in its full paid version) with the works of Lovecraft. I also see that Scrivener 3.x for Windows was released, at long last, something I had missed earlier in 2021. The latter seems hideously complex, but is said to be the best software for writers on Windows. In 3D software I noted free 3D writing accessories for the free DAZ Studio 3D figure rendering software, which could be used with the 3D Lovecraft figure.

Elsewhere I produced a bumper 108-page ‘Moebius tribute’ issue of Digital Art Live, and also interviewed Simon Ravenhill (Striker, in The Sun newspaper) for VisNews. I comprehensively updated my free “The Folk-lore of North Staffordshire” annotated bibliography, now available online in version 1.7. I released my short book Tolkien and the Lizard: J.R.R. Tolkien in Cornwall, 1914, this being a PDF extract from a much larger book on a far larger and more intellectual topic relating to the young Tolkien. Cornwall has sold only two copies, as a fundraiser for the larger book, but did at least help pay for the meagre Christmas food shopping.

All this while having Omicron. From which I’m now recovered — and I presumably now have the latest and greatest antibodies.

Coming soon on Tentaclii… Lovecraft’s almanacks, Tom Baker’s best, and taking the Trans-Europe Express to vampire-country. Not necessarily in that order.

Entering the Public Domain in 2022

30 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Here’s a link to my earlier comprehensive post on What’s Entering the Public Domain in 2022. With a focus on genre fiction and interesting non-fiction, and special attention to Lovecraft-related items.

Lovecraft in 2021: a summary survey

29 Wednesday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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My round-up of ‘the year in Lovecraft’:

The highlight of the year must be the publication of Lovecraft’s Letters to E. Hoffmann Price and Richard F. Searight, complete with the New Orleans curry recipe! Yet more is to come, as a successful crowdfunder purchased the Lovecraft-Long letters and ferried them to safety at the John Hay Library. It was recently announced that David E. Schultz has already done the bulk of the work on preparing these letters for publication, and that S.T. Joshi is now at work on the same. Joshi notes that their “intellectual content … is unsurpassed”. A broad multi-year schedule was also announced by Joshi for the completion of the publication of the many volumes of Lovecraft letters. Also of note in originals, this year Lovecraft’s handwritten “Pickman’s Model” came up for public auction.

Among his vast output S.T. Joshi published his book The Recognition of H.P. Lovecraft on the reception of Lovecraft over the decades, a new essay collection The Progression of the Weird Tale (mostly on Lovecraft/Barlow and Lovecraft/Long), and two volumes of his new annual scholarly mega-journal Penumbra. The Lovecraft Annual 2021 also shipped under his editorship, and I reviewed the 2020 edition here at length. His S.T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship at Brown remained suspended by Brown during the pandemic.

The 2020 book Ideology and Scientific Thought in H.P. Lovecraft was revealed to have been definitely written in English throughout, as in 2021 S.T. Joshi bagged a physical copy and blogged about it. Lovecraft: The Great Tales appeared, a weighty new non-fiction survey of the tales by Derleth expert John D. Haefele. There was advance news of a new uniform set of books called the Robert H. Waugh Library of Lovecraftian Criticism, including a wholly new third book of essays by Waugh. Ken Faig will also have a new collection of older work as a book, planned for 2021 and now due in early 2022. Among various scholarly reprints, Donald R. Burleson’s Lovecraft: Disturbing the Universe became available as a new ebook edition. Also in ebook, the Lovecraft ‘autobiography’ Lord of a Visible World can now be had from Amazon for just £5 (about $8).

In smaller one-off publications, the apparently-new scholarly booklet Copyright Questions and the Stories of H.P. Lovecraft appeared. For Lovecraft’s birthday I gave the second edition of Lovecraft’s collected poetry the back-of-the-book index it was lacking. This free PDF should be especially useful for many, as the book lacks an ebook edition which could be searched by keyword.

For researchers Archive.org uploaded numerous long runs of microfilmed vintage journal titles, about 15 of which are useful for researching Lovecraft and his times. In more contemporary scholarly work, the Tentaclii ‘Open Lovecraft’ page has so far added 20 new links to open scholarly work published in open-access in 2021. Including one substantial open Phd thesis. More will be added to 2021 as I discover them. More items have also been added there as fill-ins for the various other years.

In Italy the Italian translators of Joshi’s Lovecraft biography I Am Providence have reportedly published all three volumes as Io Sono Providence: la biografia di H.P. Lovecraft. Journals such as Circulo de Lovecraft, Ulthar, Zothique, Studi Lovecraftiani continued to publish, and Cthulhu Libria set itself up as a proper journal and published its second issue. There was a festschrift book of essays in Italian for the major Italian scholar and Lovecraftian anthologist Gianfranco de Turris.

Lovecraft’s poetry is now available in a Swedish translation. Leslie Klinger’s Annotated Lovecraft is now complete in two volumes in German translation. H.P. Lovecraft was also suddenly popular in Hungary, with the nation enjoying a string of new pocket-book editions with what are said to be fine translations.

Spanish speakers had a book on Lovecraft and astronomy, El Astronomicon Y Otros Textes En Defense De La Ciencia (‘The Astronomicon and Other Texts in Defence of Science’), and there are possibly other books in Spanish that I haven’t noticed yet. The Mexican Lovecraftians appear to have had a face-to-face ‘Lovecraft birthday’ symposium in Mexico City in 2021.

French tourists to Providence now have a new guidebook in French, Le guide Lovecraftien de Providence (2021). Having crowd-funded nearly 400,000 Euros ($450,000) for a new French translation in a seven volume boxed-set, the public-sale shipping dates for the sumptuous volumes were announced and volume one will ship January 2022. Also in French, S.T. Joshi’s blog noted the short books Lovecraft, l’Arabe, l’horreur and Lovecraft: sous le signe du chat.

Historians of the Amateur Journalism movement continued their dedicated work in The Fossil journal, and in one issue David Goudsward presented a rich seam of new data about the early life of Lovecraft’s friend and colleague Mrs Miniter. Later amateur science-fiction ‘zines have also seen worthy work, and The Hevelin Fanzines collection scans are now 100% transcribed for researchers. The Hevelin Fanzines include a number of key early Lovecraft ‘zines, and the collection is free online. Behind the scenes, Ken Faig continued to produce his mostly genealogy-based Moshassuck Monograph editions on aspects of Lovecraft’s life, for private Amateur Press Association mailings. On his blog, Bobby Derie continued to research figures active in amateur journalism, especially where they were brought into contact with or collaborated with Lovecraft.

In travel books the short Long/Lovecraft-related book Old World Footprints reappeared as a reprint, newly annotated and richly illustrated. The long-awaited book Tour de Lovecraft: The Destinations is said to have finally shipped. My blog Tentaclii took many ‘virtual trips’ to investigate various places relevant to or known by Lovecraft, from the Weird Tales offices to the remote Newport coves he visited on some of his last trips.

On the history of Weird Tales magazine, 2021 saw a new edition of Robert Weinberg’s book The Weird Tales Story: Expanded and Enhanced, under a new editor and expanded with new essays. Various journals including The Pulpster continued to ably cover the wider history of pulp magazines and their heroes, and blogs also provided many useful introductory surveys on niche topics and characters in the pulps. Writers of the ‘new pulp’ continue to power thriving new original-story magazines, and I get the feeling that this may have taken some of the wind out of the sails (and sales) of Mythos fiction. But perhaps that is simply due to the pandemic’s effect on the demand for horror. Although, that said, non-Lovecraft horror comics have had a fairly good ‘if still somewhat niche’ year.

In terms of the ‘Lovecraft Circle’, the book The Last Oblivion: Best Fantastic Poems of Clark Ashton Smith appeared in an affordable format. The expanded book Out of the Immortal Night: Selected Works of Samuel Loveman was published, with a wealth of new material. Donald Wandrei’s The Complete Ivy Frost story collection shipped. Here at Tentaclii I continued to find various new bits of data about Arthur Leeds and Everett McNeil of the Lovecraft Circle, both of whom are rather more interesting than the Lovecraftians of the 1980s and 90s assumed. November saw Sonia’s sumptuous amateur journal The Rainbow, Vol. 2 No. II (1922) arrive on Archive.org as an excellent scan, this being an important and rare Lovecraft document with photographs.

There was of course a lot of R.E. Howard activity in 2021. The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1 shipped. Todd B. Vick’s new accessible biography Renegades and Rogues: The Life and Legacy of Robert E. Howard had a number of reviews. The Dark Man (the R.E. Howard journal) shipped, and in 2021 had several items of Lovecraft interest. Fred Blosser offered his ebook Exploring the Worlds of REH #3, “Home, Hearth, Heroes, and Hauntings: Howard’s Texas Weird Tales”. The Robert E. Howard Days 2021 were successful held in Texas, with Roy Thomas as the prestigious guest of honour, and dates were announced for 2022. Also of note is the collection Robert E. Howard Changed My Life (reminiscences about individual discovery and appreciation of Howard’s work and life), and what appears to be a ‘journal-artbook’ The Robert E. Howard Collector Volume One: Illustrating Robert E. Howard.

I hardly cover Mythos fiction or contemporary novels here, but Providence Blue seems worthy of note. A major new mystery-adventure novel featuring Lovecraft, R.E. Howard (and possibly Wilum Pugmire) as characters, and written from a Catholic perspective. Sadly this currently lacks an ebook and audiobook.

On the screen The Lone Animator continued making his excellent stop-motion animated shorts, also providing long ‘making of’ blog posts. In film, the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival returned to Providence and there showcased the wide range of recent indie productions. But I shall have to leave it to someone else to survey the year’s ‘Lovecraft on the Screen’ for 2021.

In spoken audio the Voluminous podcast (reading and discussion of key Lovecraft’s letters) continued. Dark Adventure Radio Theatre shipped their CD for “The Horror in the Museum”. “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” Vinyl LP Box Set, from quality vinyl purveyors Psilowave Records, apparently shipped at Halloween. Also in spoken audio there were of course numerous podcasts and numerous story readings during the year, including S.T. Joshi interviews, and with Horrorbabble offering especially notable and regular story-reading work on YouTube. Some of the more obscure Lovecraft items and poems, and even some letters, are now getting good readings. There also seems to have been an upsurge of Lovecraft YouTube readings in languages other than English, and Clark Ashton Smith is also a beneficiary of this trend.

In classical music there was the new “A Symphony of Galpin”, Reber Clark’s orchestration of Galpin’s “Lament for HPL”. In popular music there were of course numerous rock / heavy metal / prog albums and EPs which claimed to have strong Lovecraftian influences and lyrics. I also recall a couple of ambient / soundscape albums in that line.

In digital arts there were superb ‘3D human’ H.P. Lovecraft demo renders by Khoi Nguyen, which sadly surfaced too late to feature in the Lovecraft-friendly Halloween ‘Gothic’ edition of Digital Art Live magazine. Lovecraft and the Lovecraftian remains a popular niche on digital art showcase sites such as ArtStation and DeviantArt.

Traditional arts & crafts seemed somewhat lessened this year, despite the worthy tracking work of Propnomicon. Possibly this was due to the lack of conventions and the closure of white-walled galleries during the pandemic, and the general impoverishment of many artists (crafts are expensive). But perhaps there is crafts work going on in out-sheds and attics that will appear in 2022.

In comics the manga master Junji Ito offered in English his new and ambitious Lovecraftian 240-page graphic novel called Sensor. It’s quite possible that many other Lovecraftian manga works appeared in 2021, but Sensor was the one that grabbed the western reviewers. There was a new graphic novel adapting Dream-quest in Spanish, H.P. Lovecraft: Kadath by screenwriter Florentino Florez. A new 64-page anthology comic, Nightmares of Providence #1, was a hit stretch-goal anthology as part of a big Alan Moore crowd-funder.

In illustrated books / art-novels, Gary Gianni’s heavily illustrated The Call of Cthulhu book shipped. Francois Baranger shipped the second volume of his acclaimed oversized cinematic art-novel for Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness.

In games a new essay-book from Carlos Gomez Gurpegui of Spain examined H.P. Lovecraft et le jeu video (‘H.P. Lovecraft and the videogame’). The arty Myst-like Lovecraftian one-man indie videogame The Shore was released, becoming a modest critical success in a very crowded and hyper-critical market. Numerous other ‘Lovecraft-influenced’ games and mods appeared as usual, on almost a weekly basis, and some were quite major titles.

In RPGs the German Lovecraft Society provided Germans with their full completed FHTAGN book, this being a wholly open and royalty-free Lovecraft RPG said to be based on Delta Green. Doubtless there was also much other Chaosium and non-Chaosium Lovecraft-related activity in the world of table-top RPGs and wargaming, but I don’t keep track of such things here. Someone else will have to summarise the year in RPGs and videogames.

That’s it for 2021. Onward to 2022!

On the solstice

21 Tuesday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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H.P. Lovecraft plucks a crumb of comfort from the arrival of the solstice, and turning of the winter toward spring…

Though we must for months to come endure the rigours of inclement weather, we may find a consoling proof of the sun’s return in the increasing length of the days. Between the first of the month [of December] and the winter solstice the days lose 16 minutes, but from the 22nd to the 31st, a gain of five minutes is to be noted.

Howard Days 2022

18 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH, Scholarly works

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The Robert E. Howard Days in Texas have their 2022 dates, June 10th & 11th. Also a theme…

The theme for HD 2022 is ‘Howard’s Influence on Gaming’ (think role-playing games, board and table-top games, card games and videogames).

Early photo of the Howard House under Project Pride management, Texas Historical Commission. Newly rectified, lightened (as much as possible) and colorised.

CQuill Writer 1.x

15 Wednesday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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New from the makers of Dynamic Auto-Painter (DAP), CQuill Writer. It’s just had the first update for 1.0. The free version is…

Offline and “fully working and non-expiring version with limitations. It still offers a whole range of writing and plotting tools to is perfectly usable for smaller to medium sized projects … [CQuill Writer is] unlike anything else because that was the whole idea behind making it

The Style Assistant is based from a specific work of an existing author … Style Assistant comes from written books (e.g. Pride and Prejudice) and it instantly shows examples of entire phrases. … If the Assistant stumbles upon a word that the author didn’t use or like, it will try to suggest another word, more common for the author’s style. … If you can get a book in plain TXT format (for now), you can load it and create your own Assistant.

So… all that could come from Lovecraft. Although making your own Style Assistant is a feature of the paid version, currently at the introductory price of $47.

Videos: Create your own Smart Writing Assistant and How to Generate Author’s Thesaurus from multiple books.

A hands-on test shows it lubricates the writing quite well, and I had the opening paragraph of an Anne of Green Gables tale before I knew where I was. Here are the modules that ship with the latest free version.

IMAGE MISSING

You also get a free ‘Monkey Typist’ that can complete your current sentence, possibly with amusing consequences.

Witch of the Demon Seas

06 Monday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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Just the thing for a dull Monday, a new two and a half hour LibriVox recording by Phil Chenevert for Witch of the Demon Seas by Poul Anderson. It was the only Planet Stories tale he didn’t use his own name for, possibly because he also had another tale in the same January 1951 issue.

There’s also an existing paid audiobook, which has this enticing blurb…

an entertaining romp with pirates, witches, wizards and bizarre sea aliens [and] an intriguing brand of “magic” [which] eschews the typical supernatural underpinnings in favor of the more scientific.

The journal Amra (February 1977) observed…

Witch of the Demon Seas (January ’51); a damn good heroic fantasy, beautifully and accurately illustrated by Vestal.

A recent account of a reading of “Witch” by Mporcius has way too much plot-spoiling summary to risk linking, but he usefully observes…

Anderson’s story totally lives up to the sex and violence reputation of Planet Stories … Even though its full of dragons, sea serpents, witches and swordsmen, this is a science fiction story, not a fantasy. What the characters seek is not a pile of treasure, but knowledge.

It all sounds quite positive to a Conan fan. The main character is even called Corun. But there’s more. Anderson had similar Planet Stories tales in 1951, “The Virgin of Valkarion” and “Swordsman of Lost Terra”. “Swordsman” is also available in a 2021 Librivox audiobook — though with a different reader than “Witch”, and you may want to tweak the AIMP player’s pitch settings to get a deeper voice.

These three pulp tales obviously gave the author a taste for the approach, and they were followed in 1954 by what is said to be the very superior dark fantasy novel The Broken Sword. This apparently drew heavily on much the same sources as Tolkien, resulting in a ‘Norse Vikings vs. Elves’ situation that was actually slightly pre-Tolkien and all the more interesting for it. Dark World notes that in the 1970s Anderson returned to do more writing for the Broken Sword world, following a successful 1971 re-issue of his by-then-forgotten novel. Of this original novel Dark Worlds observed…

perhaps the finest American heroic fantasy, with good characterizations, excellent surface detail, good plotting, and an admirable recreation of the mood of the Old Norse literature.

Bibliomysteries

04 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, a comprehensive plot-annotated checklist of ‘Bibliomysteries’, from the mid 1980s and published in the fine Armchair Detective journal. These being mystery novels across various genres which centre on rare books, book collectors, old bookshops and suchlike.

* Introduction and Part One.

* Part Two.

Even if you don’t care to track down and read any of these, just reading over the abundant setting/plot details could be useful for spurring fresh ideas about plot elements for Mythos fiction or for RPGs.

Note that Part One is immediately followed by a short survey of “The Science-Fiction Detective Story”, up until that time.

Clifford D. Simak: a primary and secondary bibliography

04 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Now at Archive.org to borrow, Clifford D. Simak: a primary and secondary bibliography. As I wrote here in my 2018 “Rediscovering Clifford D. Simak” post…

It has an interview with Simak, a short life chronology, and listed his adaptations for radio.

On the little-considered ‘airplane novel’ genre

02 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Kipling, Odd scratchings

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Having recently become enamoured of Kipling’s classic “With the Night Mail” and his Aerial Board of Control universe, I was interested to see that Quillette has a long new survey of the genre of the airplane novel. Exploring especially how it was blown off-course in response to terrorist events…

Gone are the days when aviator/authors such as Nevil Shute and Ernest K. Gann and Paul Beaty wrote about airplane travel as if it were an almost spiritual experience. That type of novel lost its hold on the public’s imagination when men […] began boarding airplanes with a nefarious purpose in mind. The golden age of hijacking only lasted from 1965–1972, but its impact on popular culture endures.

I’d add that Lovecraft’s “At the Mountains of Madness” might be considered to be, in part, among the ‘airplane tales’ of the 1930s. But there the ‘spiritual experience’ of height and far-sight is flipped into horror.

I guess, in a way, that the 1970s ‘turn’ in the genre then subtly opened a way for the nascent steampunk to offer a home for the old and vanished ‘romance of air-travel’. If only with dirigibles, zeppelins, balloons and personal ‘fliers’ of various kinds.

Also new on Archive.org. in a Loompanics book from the 1980s, the opposite. A chapter surveying the key examples of The Inner World in Fiction. ‘Inner World’ here meaning various non-horror ideas of subterranean realms under the earth.

“… giving a most pleasing and ragged aspect”

01 Wednesday Dec 2021

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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For sale on Abe, all three parts of “At the Mountains of Madness” in Astounding Stories, February-April 1936. Certainly not mint condition, but they may interest some as a conservation project.

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