Librivox has just released a new unabridged recording by John Van Stan of The House on the Borderland. Also on Archive.org as a mirror.
New audiobook of The House on the Borderland
27 Sunday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.
27 Sunday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.
Librivox has just released a new unabridged recording by John Van Stan of The House on the Borderland. Also on Archive.org as a mirror.
21 Monday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, REH, Scholarly works
Robert E. Howard Days: Howard Days 2020 has dates and theme. June 12th and 13th, and the theme is “Celebrating REH in Comics”.
19 Saturday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
The Third International Colin Wilson Conference will be held in Nottingham in the East Midlands of England, on the 3rd to the 5th of July 2020. There’s nothing specifically Lovecraft on the current speaker list, but it’s still an event likely to interest some Lovecraftians in the UK.
16 Wednesday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
As we head toward the Bonfire Night and fireworks season, some intellectual fireworks I found while looking for unknown archival Lovecraft-related material. A 1963 woodcut by Robert Ross in Providence’s Brown Alumni Monthly magazine, in a supplement on the role of the teacher in communicating ideas.
13 Sunday Oct 2019
Posted in Censorship, Odd scratchings
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12 Saturday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.
I’m glad to hear that Isaac Asimov’s original Foundation trilogy is finally being filmed as ten-episode series. Although sadly it’s not being made for the cinema by the Independence Day director, as was mooted about a decade ago. It’s being made for TV in Ireland by Skydance for Apple Studios, by the director of the recent Ghost In The Shell. Filming reportedly starts next month, for a wrap-up in June 2020 and a screening in perhaps Fall 2020 or early in 2021.
I assume it’s the original trilogy (Foundation, Foundation and Empire, Second Foundation). Not the non-Asimov prequels now also available, or Asimov’s own sequel novels.
If you can’t wait, there’s a pre-PC 1973 Foundation Trilogy radio adaptation by BBC Radio on Archive.org, which runs eight hours. Sound design by the famous Radiophonic Workshop. There’s also another copy here.
The freeware AIMP Player and its “Headphones” preset is what you want to listen to this. Presumably it emulates more closely radio speakers, as in the original audio broadcast, dampening the sharp electronic music enough to make it listenable.
10 Thursday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
Call for Applicants: Funded PhD in Music and Multimedia Composition at Brown University. To… “produce, analyze, and perform original works that may include the use of electronic music, acoustic composition and sound in combination with video, performance, installation and text. … full funding for 5 years … There will be two Open House events for prospective students this year, one on 18th October 18th and one on 22nd November”.
05 Saturday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
The Recent Acquisitions page at L.W. Currey features a lot of August Derleth material, and they have a 234-item Derleth catalogue and another for Arkham House.
01 Tuesday Oct 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
Job-ette of the decade, full-time Archivist at 2000AD and Judge Dredd. To be based in Oxford, England.
30 Monday Sep 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
I’m pleased to say that a lovely Indian Summer suffused this corner of the West Midlands of England, if only for the first three weeks of September. Rich mellowness and fruitfulness abounds, even in the unlikely setting of inner-city Stoke-on-Trent and under the now rainy skies. In terms of new primary material on Lovecraft, September was also a rich and fruitful month here at Tentaclii, with much new primary material posted and many new discoveries made. Sadly this work didn’t translate into fruitful abundance on my Patreon, and the monthly total actually fell by $3. I have a feeling I may have to cease daily posting at the end of October, since at the end of its first full year the Patreon has obviously not been the success I had hoped for.
Still, my failed final effort to bring in Patreon patrons was at least a success in terms of new knowledge of Lovecraft, leading to a cavalcade of newly found and mostly visual items related to his final home of 66 College Street and also its views and environs. Along the way I also found good new pictures of Lovecraft’s “Prof. Upton of Brown”; found ‘Cthulhu’ outside the John Carter Brown Library; dug up new pictures of Winfield Townley Scott in his prime; of the “stacks” at Lovecraft’s local Library; and located and shared several useful c. 1928-40 street maps of Providence.
Patreon-only items this month were:
* College Hill from above: bonus pictures.
* Friday ‘Picture Postals’ from Lovecraft: College Street bonus pictures.
* Westward Ho! – Lovecraft’s view. (Many new pictures and my new panoramic Photoshop composite of what his study and rooftop view might have looked like).
* … and a chance to bag a scarce print book on eBay at a tenth of the usual price.
New discoveries are still being made elsewhere, too, and I noted that a new R.E. Howard letter had been found. As for myself, I was pleased to find several more unknown memoirs of Lovecraft dating from the 1940s. My ‘Picture Postals’ post “Misty lanes at the end of summer” also spiralled off into the topic of cosmic-rays and thus ended up making a fascinating discovery — Lovecraft appears to have been the first to link ‘space weather’ with ‘earth weather’ and to write about it.
In my own musings I delved into who was the first to use the term “Lovecraft mythos”. I looked over the horror and historical-epic movies Lovecraft could have seen when he stayed in New York 1932-33. In “A little more on used bookshops in Providence” I updated my long August 2019 post on my newly discovered memoir of Lovecraft.
Scholarly journals blogged about included the latest New Ray Bradbury Review, a horror special; the latest Jack Kirby Collector journal, a “Monsters and Bugs” special; and Monster Maniacs #1, a new fannish magazine on the history of horror comics.
In academia I noted the First Postgraduate Forum on Research in the Fantastic, a useful addition to the scholarly landscape in Germany; a more fannish Spanish event with Lovecraft papers being read in Madrid; and that the USA’s Steampunk Symposium 2020 will have the theme of “The Weird West”. A clutch of new additions were added to my ‘Open Lovecraft’ page for free online scholarship. I noted a call-out for the edited academic collection Not Dead, But Dreaming: Reading Lovecraft in the 21st Century.
I wrote a long review of the Lovecraft Annual journal for 2015, having bagged a copy at a low price. In this I’m glad I didn’t skip Bobby Derie’s short “Six Degrees of Lovecraft: Henry Miller” as it usefully vectored me onto The Black Cat story magazine. Reminding me that Lovecraft had read it in his boyhood, and along the way I also worked out that its demise in 1922 must have opened the way for Weird Tales to appear later the same year.
I’m pleased to say that I’ve also been able to get a bargain $10 inc. shipping copy of A Weird Writer in Our Midst, so expect a review of that at some point. For a bargain £5 each inc. shipping I also picked up the Lovecraft Annual for 2016 and 2017, and these should arrive shortly. My thanks again to my Patreons for helping to fund these, and the ginger beer with which to enjoy them. It’s quite possible these will also get reviews.
A range of relevant art was found and blogged here, and two new artist-published artbooks of Lovecraft were noted. Several major Moebius exhibitions were noted over in Europe. The Lovecraft Film Festival later in 2019 was noted, but I still can’t find any report from NecronomiCon 2019 that’s actually about Lovecraft and which says something worth linking to.
New non-fiction books were light on the ground this month, but I noted T.E.D. Klein’s book of collected essays / interviews / reviews as being due to ship in November; and of course the publication of the second and final volume of the New Annotated H.P. Lovecraft. Surprisingly Klinger hasn’t done “Hypnos”, but I have an “annotated Hypnos” 70% done that I need to get back to and finish sometime and which will fill the gap in due course.
In terms of online freebies, I was pleased to see that (at long last) Machen’s autobiography is online in full, all three volumes of it. I linked it up, and added one more for good measure. The Vita Privata di H.P. Lovecraft turned up on Archive.org — effectively Lovecraft Remembered in Italian translation. Nice for the Italian readers of Tentaclii, as it appears to be firmly out-of-print.
Audio was not such a rich seam this month, and I was only able to note S.T. Joshi’s 8,000 word ‘A Short Biography’ of Lovecraft. This spinning sepulchral sonification has been issued on an LP vinyl disc.
Other creative writers making guest appearances in posts here were Poul Anderson (leading to my discovery of an acclaimed and award-winning 1975 West Midlands fantasy novel); and the Simak-like Ardath Mayhar. Both were conservative science-fiction and fantasy writers I had not encountered back in the 1980s.
That’s it for September. Oh, there was also the Comics themed issue of the free Digital Art Live magazine, which you’ll find is something of a crypto-Lovecraft issue if you squint hard at it in an eldritch light.
30 Monday Sep 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
The Steampunk Symposium 2020 (27th-29th March) is going “Weird West” as its theme in spring 2020. As in ‘the old west’ or ‘the wild west’ of America meets the weird, via steampunk. The event plans “…over 200 hours of programming with a grand schedule of presentations, exhibitors, vendors, entertainers”.
I’m unfamiliar with the sub-genre, but interested to learn that there’s obviously enough of it to hang a symposium on. I assume that the sub-genre must have stepped beyond a simple transplanting of mundane zombies and stock vampires into the Old West, with a few airships thrown in alongside the steam-trains? Do any readers know of really imaginative works in this sub-genre, which also work within an R.E. Howard / Lovecraft framework e.g. “Valley of the Lost”, “The Horror from the Mound”, “Transition of Juan Romero”, “The Mound”, etc.
Meanwhile, over in comics-land, this week Por Por takes a look at the 1977 survey book Comics of the American West. Never reprinted and now collectable, it seems. It’s not yet on Archive.org.
27 Friday Sep 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
The Lovecraft Arts & Sciences Council has a ‘Tour de Tentacle’ for pedal cyclists in Providence. It runs 2 to 5pm on Sunday the 27th October 2019. Although be warned that helmets (unsafe, in my opinion) are mandatory, and there’s a $10 ticket price.