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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Public domain in 2022

08 Thursday Apr 2021

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Who and what is entering the public domain early in 2022, for nations following the 70 year rule (author died in 1951)?

* Algernon Blackwood, author of the famous story “The Willows” etc. He needs no introduction here.

* Richard Malden, churchman and sometime writer of British ghost-stories. These are collected in the book Nine Ghosts (1942), and were said to have been written for his friend and fellow ghost-story writer M.R. James.

* Gelett Burgess, all-round American humourist and wit, novelist and nonsense poet at the cusp of modernism. Introduced Cubism to the American public with his article “The Wild Men of Paris”. Creator of the 1920s comic-strip infants ‘The Goops’, who had earlier appeared in his humorous books on infant manners. Produced books of parody such as The Rubaiyat of Omar Cayenne, and a mystery-detective book The Master of Mysteries: Being an Account of the Problems Solved By Astro, Seer of Secrets (1912), this being “a cycle of short mystery stories featuring an eccentric amateur sleuth” — said to be an Armenian con-man who reluctantly has to do good.

* Bernhard Kellerman, noted for the best-selling science-fiction novel of a transatlantic tunnel, Der Tunnel (1913). This being said to be set in an alternative future in which the First World War had not happened. Built to “promote world peace” the tunnel apparently precipitates war and a great recession. The book was said to be gripping despite its bitter ironies and was filmed four times (mostly very badly, apparently). Translated into English as The Tunnel (Macaulay and Co., 1915). He is said to have written many short stories, and some dime novels after he was effectively banned from publishing by the Nazis, and so it’s possible that some more of his work might also have been science-fiction?

* Abraham Cahan, founding editor of the Jewish Daily Forward. Novels and stories of Yiddish New York City at the turn of the century, in English, such as Yekl: A Tale of the New York Ghetto (1896, filmed as Hester Street) and the New York career tale The Rise of David Levinsky (1917).

* Lloyd Cassel Douglas, one of the most popular authors of his era, now best known for his ‘Jesus & disciples epics’ such as The Robe and The Big Fisherman. Also a writer of medical ‘doctor’s diary’ casebook novels, of a type once popular.

* Isabel C. Clarke, prolific Catholic novelist. Once very well-known, she now seems to be completely forgotten even by Catholics. Definitely ‘not a Tolkien’, it seems, as she stuck with domestic settings. But did produce several biographies of writers, including Haworth Parsonage: A Picture Of The Bronte Family. It’s not impossible that the latter could be the basis of a new graphic novel or movie.

* Peter Cheyney, once one of the richest British genre authors but now forgotten. Wrote best-selling “American style hard boiled” crime novels in the 1930s and 40s. Some of the plots might be usefully lifted into new science-fiction settings?

* Joseph Conrad’s Congo diaries that were the source for his Heart of Darkness. To be found in print in Last Essays, which it appears has somehow remained in copyright until 2022.

* J.C. Leyendecker, famous American cover-artist and leading designer for magazines. Handsome and gay, his life could make for a new costume-drama bio-pic, feature documentary, graphic novel etc — and presumably much of the art will now be public domain if it wasn’t already?

* Hermann Broch, Austrian novelist described as a “metaphysical realist”, apparently merging mathematics and mysticism. A trilogy of late post-war novels is also said to have explored the rise of German Nazism and depicted different ‘Nazi types’. There are apparently translations, but these are presumably not going into the public domain. Still, there may be short stories needing translation.

* The French writer Andre Gide, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Though, for the Anglosphere, his work and letters will be in translation and these will not be going into the public domain. But he should be up for new unexpurgated translations. Some may also look to France in 1926, hoping it will lead to American public domain materials. But while Breton’s Surrealism and Painting and Aragon’s surrealist/psychogeographic Paris Peasant are both 1926, they were not translated and published in America at that time.

* Andrei Platonovich Platonov, an early writer of strange Russian science-fiction. Wrote a science-fiction trilogy in the 1920s, Descendants of the Sun, The Lunar Bomb, and Ethereal Trail. But he started to doubt the glorious socialist revolution, and a few years later his 15 year-old son was sent to what was effectively a death-camp and Platonov’s name was removed from the books on Communist literature. He continued to write “for the bottom drawer” but was hardly published except for some re-writes of folk-tales. His work does not seem to have been translated into English until fairly recently.


In the USA, works published and films released in 1926 will enter the public domain. Some of the authors below may well already be in the public domain.

* Spengler’s famous 1918 The Decline of the West… “appeared in its English edition in 1926” in both the USA and UK.

* Hugo Gernsback’s futuristic travel-tale novel Ralph 124C 41+: A Romance of the Year 2660 (1926 in book form). “Can be defended as the most important science-fiction novel ever written”, for encapsulating and launching an entire pulp genre (Gary Westfahl, The Mechanics of Wonder: The Creation of the Idea of Science Fiction). Seems most likely to become a full-cast audio adaptation, with sound FX?

* T.E. Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom. The famously lucid autobiography of desert warfare, later beautifully filmed as Lawrence of Arabia. It’s difficult to see how a graphic novel version or movie remake might compete against David Lean’s masterpiece. But Lawrence died 1935, so it must already be public domain.

* Ronald Firbank’s Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli, said to be a posthumously published satiric Wildean comedy, of camp libidinous priests and cardinals with predilections for winsome choristers. Might make for a wild Joe Orton / Ronald Searle / Terry Gilliam -style animation?

* Edna Ferber’s 1926 novel Show Boat… “chronicles the lives of three generations of performers on the Cotton Blossom, a floating theatre on a steamboat that travels between small towns along the banks of the Mississippi River, from the 1880s to the 1920s.” Became a Broadway musical theatre hit. Possibly the property with the most TV mini-series potential, but it would be expensive to do in full costume, with boats and landscapes. Political correctness would probably now make it impossible to get the idea past producers, anyway.

* John Metcalfe’s weird collection The Smoking Leg, and other stories (1925). The 1926 U.S. first edition should put it in the public domain in the USA in 2022. In it Lovecraft especially admired the tale “The Bad Lands”.

* The highly acclaimed biography Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years.

* Honor Willsie Morrow, Splendid Journey. Best-selling stark and epic novel. Published as an adult book, but then taken up in a big way by what publishers would now term ‘young adults’. The story of a thirteen year old lad on the Oregon Trail, drawing on many old letters and reminiscences of a real party of children crossing America in the 1860s. Has obvious potential for adaptations or, for fewer problems with political correctness, translation into genres such as fantasy or science-fiction.

* “The Cowboy and His Interpreters, which appeared in 1926, has been a standard reference for nearly three decades” (from The American cowboy: the myth & the reality, 1955).

* Letters from a Roman Gentleman, being the selected and translated letters of Cicero in one volume, published by the University of California. Latin Notes called it “delightful” in 1927. Seems to have audiobook potential.

* The best-selling non-specialist Story of Philosophy, being… “a brilliant and concise account of the lives and ideas of the great philosophers”. Approachable chapters on Friedrich Nietzsche and George Santayana may make the book of interest to philosophic Lovecraftians. The revised second edition of 1933 will not be public domain.

* “S.L. MacGregor Mathers’ translation of The Kabbalah from the Hebrew originally appeared in 1926″.

* Graham Wallas published The Art of Thought, a well-regarded book on creativity and the creative process.

* Vita Sackville-West’s book The Land, an epic narrative poem of the British landscape, seasons and history. The ‘book-length poem’ format is not at all to modern tastes, but it could well make for an abridged graphic novel or radio adaptation.

* Carl Van Vechten’s breakthrough novel Trigger Heaven, about black life in Harlem in the early-mid 1920s. The Bookman said it did not “preach” but termed it “gaudy”, with its cast of characters being deemed a rather inauthentic mix of “blackface” and “whitewash”.

* The romantic ’90s by Richard Le Gallienne. A brisk and vivid survey of the decadents of the 1890s, and a book published on both sides of the Atlantic. Many of the writers and artists were or had been his friends.

* The Catholic writer Achmed Abdullah’s The Year of the Wood-Dragon (1926). “An American boy’s adventures on a journey into the interior of Tibet.” He was the screenplay writer for The Thief of Bagdad.

* Abraham Merritt’s 1926 book version of his 1924 The Ship of Ishtar, and Ships. Apparently a rip-roaring supernatural fantasy, that sold well and later influenced early D&D.

* Arthur Conan Doyle’s late novel The Land of Mist. Apparently a rather morbid pro-spiritualism novel, which only used his Professor Challenger character in places. His two-volume The History of Spiritualism appeared the same year. By this time Doyle was quite literally ‘away with the fairies’.

* Stanley Unwin’s The Truth about Publishing. “A fascinating insight into the problems, perils and delights of publishing books.” It went through eight editions. Could make for an engaging and bookish non-fiction graphic novel, if the subject matter is still relevant.

* Two biographical Poe books appeared in 1926, one “unscholarly and poorly organised” with little new information, and one an armchair “attempt at Freudian analysis”. Though, at the time of publication, Lovecraft found them useful as on-the-ground guidebooks to finding little-known Poe places.

* An insight into the Lovecraft era of astronomy, with Harlow Shapley’s Starlight, a ‘popular science’ book, and also Florence Armstrong Grondal’s more poetic Music of the Spheres: A Nature Lover’s Astronomy. Both entering the public domain in the USA.

* Joseph Pennell’s Pictures of Philadelphia. See Lovecraft’s Letters to Family, re: his long visit there. 64 lithographs, could be paired with Lovecraft’s text.

* Anne of Green Gables author Lucy Maud Montgomery’s The Blue Castle (1926) one of her two novels meant for adults. About an old maid in Canada who finds escape via literature and… “soon her daydreams about the Blue Castle turn into reality”.

* The Boy Through the Ages, a well-researched book on the daily life of boys from early times to the 19th century, cheerfully written for boys. British but appears to have had a New York edition variously listed as being published by “Doubleday Doran and Co.” or “George H. Doran” in 1926.

* The Velveteen Rabbit, a best-selling young children’s story book of 1926, published on both side of the Atlantic. Now very rare in original editions though, due to being extremely collectable. The same author also wrote the werewolf novel The Thing in the Woods under a pen-name.

* Felix Salten’s Bambi, A Life in the Woods.

* Enid Blyton’s Book of Brownies skips into the public domain in the USA. Brownies here being an old British word for ‘pixies’.

* “Bomba the Jungle Boy, published in 1926″ and popular then. Pulp or thereabouts, said to be “not unlike a youthful Tarzan”.

* Everything in Weird Tales for 1926. Inc. “The City of Spiders” by H. Warner Munn. Said to be “one of the best tales of giant spiders ever written” and thus a possible front story for a new anthology of such. His “The Werewolf of Ponkert” (1925) went into the public domain last year, and its 1927 companion will go in January 2023, “The Werewolf’s Daughter” (1928) following in 2024. His various related “Werewolf Clan” tales will then go over the following few years.

* Kipling’s penultimate collection of stories and poems, Debits and Credits. Kingsley Amis remarked of it… “some self-indulgent fantasy, some exercises in the supernatural … three good stories.”

* “In an interview published in Collier’s magazine in 1926, Nikola Tesla, then in the twilight of his career, made some predictions about the future”. Depending on the verbosity, it might be the basis for an interesting 45-minute radio-play?

* Personae: The Collected Poems of Ezra Pound, published in New York in 1926. This was… “his personal choice of all the poems he wished to keep in print other than some translations and his Cantos.”

* Lovecraft’s fellow writer and poet Hart Crane apparently sees his first collection, White Buildings, enter the public domain in the USA.

* Fowler’s Dictionary of Modern English Usage… “first appeared in 1926”. Though possibly not in the USA?

* The three volume 1926 Supplement to the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

* And of course the original Winnie the Pooh book, the title that will be endlessly parroted by journalists come January 2022. I’d expect that Disney has kept some kind of lock on its own cartoon depiction of the famous bear, and probably also trademarks in relation to how the character names are presented — so it’s not a Pooh free-for-all. But expect things like “Pooh-thlu” or “Poohthulhu” mash-ups mixing Pooh and Cthulhu.


* In music, H.P. Lovecraft’s favourite barbershop song of 1904, “Sweet Adeline” sung by The Haydn Quartet, also comes out of copyright in 2022 due to a 1951 death. I’ll get in first with a “Sweet Azathoth” version…

Sweet Azathoth,
My Azathoth,
At night, drear heart,
For you I pine.
In all my dreams,
Your cosmic beams.
You’re the idiot of my heart,
Sweet Azathoth. (My Azathoth.)

Also certain Caruso opera recordings, in the USA.


In movies, some of the key 1926 movies are:

Douglas Fairbanks’s The Black Pirate.
Buster Keaton’s The General.
Mary Pickford’s Sparrows.
Rudolph Valentino’s The Son of the Sheikh.
The German Faust.

I’m uncertain if Lotte Reiniger’s debut The Adventures of Prince Achmed was released in America in 1926. As a feature-length animation (then an unfamiliar form) it apparently had a troubled distribution history even in Germany.


Canada and South Africa and other nations which follow the 50 year rule (author died in 1971) get…

* C. M. Eddy, Lovecraft’s Providence friend and collaborator.
* August Derleth.
* John Wood Campbell Jr. (science-fiction author, famous editor of Analog).
* S. Foster Damon (William Blake expert).
* Virgil Finlay, the key early Lovecraft illustrator.

So Canadians get to re-write and tighten Derleth’s mythos with all the dross taken out, if they want.

IQcaptcha

07 Wednesday Apr 2021

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Possibly just a left-over April Fools prank, but I like it. IQcaptcha is said to be captcha that… “tests against IQ” in order to protect your social media group from being joined by stupid people.

Top Letters

06 Tuesday Apr 2021

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New on eBay Selected Letters H.P. Lovecraft 1911-1937, with a $100 starting bid. It’ll be interesting to see what they top out at in seven days.

Robert E. Howard Days 2021

02 Friday Apr 2021

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Good news, it seems Robert E. Howard Days 2021 is on, and Roy Thomas is still secure as the guest of honour. We’re assured the announcement is not an April Fools Day prank, but 1st April was probably not the best day to announce it on.

“What’s that you say, kitty..?”

01 Thursday Apr 2021

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Well, another April Fools’ Day gone. My favorite was Vet Times, which reported… “Tech breakthrough translates cat calls, meows and purrs”. The runner up was the report that French scientists have cross-bred and tweaked banana plants… to grow meaty-tasting sausages instead of bananas. And solar panels that work in the dark, though I think that one’s been done before.

The favourite “not an April Fools’ Day joke” is Project Gemini which revives Gopher, and has built a lightweight texty altWeb with ascii-art and Atom RSS on top. There’s a Windows browser for it and a search engine [gemini://geminispace.info/documentation/searching]. Homepages are ‘capsules’, blogs are ‘gemlogs’. No pictures allowed, except ascii-art [gemini://dgold.eu/17.gmi]. You could probably do dancing hamsters, if you scrolled a page of that stuff fast enough.

Sadly WordPress can’t handle gemini: links, and thus they’re here given [in the WordPress 'code' tags]. But once you have the Gemini browser installed and are at a live gemini: protocol link, your regular Web browser should ask if you always want the Gemini browser to open links of that type. The browser can also handle gopher: links. Bring on the dancing gophers…

March on Tentaclii

01 Thursday Apr 2021

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I’m pleased to say that Tentaclii Towers has survived the first plague-winter. Not that there was much to survive, other than the lockdown itself. My fairly large electoral area registers just 17 deaths since last March, little more than the usual flu might bring. But now the winter is over and the surrounding rolling acres of inner-city Stoke-on-Trent are looking rather pleasant again, as the early springtime simmers through a string of warm days. A rhyme of magpies performs delightful acrobatics across the wide gravel driveway of the Towers. At night a peculiar smell bubbles up from ripening ponds.

This month my weekly ‘Picture Postals’ post looked at: Lovecraft and the Providence Opera house; discovered that a giant octopus and squid had once hung from the roof of the Brooklyn Museum; climbed aboard a typical motor-coach interior of the early-mid 1930s; and eyed the Museum of Natural History, Roger Williams Park, with particular reference to the ‘cosmic’ Lowell exhibition held there in 1916. As a post for a Patreon patron I also made a quick preliminary survey of ‘Poe’s home places and H.P Lovecraft’, with pictures. There were also photo-surveys which ventured inside both Weird Tales buildings in Chicago, the Dunham Building and then the Michigan-Chestnut, during the prime ‘Lovecraft years’.

I looked briefly at Samuel Loveman’s “young” friend Gervaise Butler and found two candidates. I suspect he is the younger of the two, a Gervaise Butler born 1904. Lovecraft knew him in 1929, and seems to have thought enough of him to have given him a little one-to-one mentoring in early 1929. In return Gervaise gave Lovecraft a scarce anthology of New England children’s rhymes and games. I also took a look for “Bernstein, late of the Golden Ball Inn”, Lovecraft’s alterations tailor in Providence. I found a fine picture of the young Robert Bloch at his typewriter, and new auction pictures of Lovecraft’s poem “Despair” (c. February 1919). I also rescued an engraving of the Ladd Observatory, 1890. I’ve started reading Lovecraft’s Letters to Family, and it should prove a mine of information. More on that and other volumes of letters over the coming months.

In new books I noted the non-fiction guidebook Le guide Lovecraftien de Providence; the revisionist The Emotional Life of the Great Depression from Oxford University Press; and Joshi’s new essay collection Progression of the Weird Tale as an ebook. Over on S.T. Joshi’s blog he noted that “Lovecraft’s Letters to E. Hoffmann Price and Richard F. Searight … will be out soon from Hippocampus.” I also came across an overlooked non-fiction book from 2018, El sonador de Providence. In imaginative works I see that The Last Oblivion: Best Fantastic Poems of Clark Ashton Smith has appeared in an affordable format, and I also took a look at the Sonia/Lovecraft play “Lovecraft, mon amour” which is now being staged in France.

In new resources, I was pleased to find the Spanish comics journal Cuadernos de Comic (CuCo) has issues online from 2013-2020 in open access. Also a Lovecraft-era run of the journal Old-time New England. Elsewhere The Story Paper Collector (1941-66) is now freely available. Which reminds me that we really could do with the run of Lovecraft Studies online in full, at some point.

I surveyed DeviantArt for a choice gallery of recent new pictures of Lovecraft himself, and brought news that Archive.org has loaded up a million Thingiverse 3D models under Creative Commons, thus providing abundant artist reference and source material. Also in art, Lovecraft paperback-cover artist Ian Miller now has prints of the cover-paintings available. In comics I untangled and surveyed the various Toutain-edited and Toutain-sourced comics magazines of the 1970s and 80s, and suggested where one might find these amazing cultural artefacts today.

Not much in games this month, worth noting. The usual flow of indie-student ‘Lovecraft inspired’ games continues, but nothing big or remarkable. In RPGs the German Lovecraft Society has kindly been able to provide Germans with a full Lovecraftian open-source game framework based on Delta Green, which may bear fruit in due course. In the precarious world of movie-making it seems the suddenly ‘greenlit’ Lovecraft trilogy, being two movies set to follow the big-screen success of The Colour out of Space, has now been just as abruptly cancelled. Oh well, ‘easy come, easy go’.

There was very little new in audio this month, but the curious New England field recordings The Swamp In June and The Frog Pond were discovered on Archive.org. On YouTube there was the usual tidal-wave of Lovecraft readings, but in other types of material only a long survey-lecture of Lovecraft’s influence in Chile. In podcasts I find that the PodCatr service has become a lazy moggie and has failed to purr in my ear about the three new Voluminous episodes so far in 2021. Go get ’em.

As always, please consider becoming my Patron on Patreon. Even getting a boost of $1 a month is an encouragement. This month my Patrons have enabled me to grab a £12 bargain in the form of the new expanded Letters To Reinhardt Kleiner and Others (inc. 100 pages of letters and cards to Arthur Leeds), and also to pop the Lovecraft Annual 2020 into the same order for an extra £9. Expect a review in due course.

Protected: The Sunjammer

21 Sunday Mar 2021

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“… dear to the small boys of other generations”

11 Thursday Mar 2021

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Now online, a complete run of The Story Paper Collector (1941-66). This was a British title for collectors of the pre-comic-strip era of boys’ story magazines. As such it has some crossover into heroic historical-adventure and even some proto science-fiction, though it looks like interest in Billy Bunter type public-school stories predominate. The final issue has a short obituary for Lovecraft correspondent Arthur Harris and reveals he had contributed a number of articles. The website also has runs of several other titles in the same line.

A recent book has been published on the topic, Edwardian Comic Papers (2021) by expert collector Alan Clark, lavishly illustrated with colour plates.

The track to Tentaclii Towers

10 Wednesday Mar 2021

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The track to Tentaclii Towers.

Feel free to use as a CD cover etc, add ravening glowing-eye wolves etc. I have it at 3600px if needed. Creative Commons Attribution.

Lovecraft was right, part 451

10 Wednesday Mar 2021

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“Real-time dialogue between experimenters and dreamers during REM sleep”, in the journal Current Biology…

“… the researchers attempted to communicate with people while they were still dreaming … placed electrodes on the participants’ heads … Four independent lab groups in the U.S., Germany, France and the Netherlands conducted four separate experiments. The researchers used several techniques across the experiments to communicate with dreamers during REM sleep … If dreamers received and understood the question or message during a lucid dream, they then responded with a set of distinctive eye or facial movements that were interpreted by the electrodes.”

Apparently morse-code is used as one communication method. But it’s not just some postgrads trying to grab headlines with some fudgy research, and Cell is not a predatory ‘you pay, we publish’ journal. A journalist at Live Science queried “Robert Stickgold, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School” about the new paper and he is said to have called the study “groundbreaking … Two-way, real-time communication between researchers and lucid dreamers immersed in REM sleep offers a new and exciting window into the study of dreams and dreaming”. Fair enough, it seems legit then. And thus makes for an interesting comparison with what Lovecraft was suggesting just over a century ago…

from Lovecraft’s “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” (1919)… “[long interested in investigating dream-life and] mental communication by means of suitable apparatus, I had in my college days prepared a set of transmitting and receiving instruments somewhat similar to the cumbrous devices employed in wireless telegraphy at that crude, pre-radio period. […] in my intense desire to probe into the dream life of Joe Slater, I sought these instruments again; and spent several days in repairing them for action. When they were complete once more I missed no opportunity for their trial. At each outburst of Slater’s violence, I would fit the transmitter to his forehead and the receiver to my own; constantly making delicate adjustments for various hypothetical wave-lengths of intellectual energy. I had but little notion of how the thought-impressions would, if successfully conveyed, arouse an intelligent response in my brain; but I felt certain that I could detect and interpret them. [The “head-bands” device is fitted to the sleeping Jo Slater]. At this juncture my brain became aware of a steady external influence operating upon it. I closed my eyes to concentrate my thoughts more profoundly, and was rewarded by the positive knowledge that my long-sought mental message had come at last. Each transmitted idea formed rapidly in my mind, and though no actual language was employed, my habitual association of conception and expression was so great that I seemed to be receiving the message in ordinary English.”

“About the middle of August I returned to Arkham and reopened my long-closed house…”

06 Saturday Mar 2021

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The NecronomiCon Providence convention, bundled into “a queer mixture of rods, wheels, and mirrors” and whisked through time to August 2022.

Omni magazine, 1978-1994

05 Friday Mar 2021

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Coming online, albeit in microfilm b&w rather than dazzle-tastic 1970s/80s colour, the complete run of Omni magazine, 1978-1994. “To borrow”, though.

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H.P. Lovecraft's Poster Collection - 17 retro travel posters for $18. Print ready, and available to buy — the proceeds help to support the work of Tentaclii.

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