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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Tolkien and Howard

01 Sunday Sep 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings, REH

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The new Tolkien’s Library is a doorstopper, and thus the free 10% sample for the Kindle has all the introductions and the first 90 items (though curiously, the table-of-contents is missing, so one has no clue what’s in the appendices). One reads in Tom Shippey’s introduction that…

Tolkien mentions not only some of the early British classics of “scientific romance” … H.G. Wells; not only familiar British writers of fantasy, such as Dunsany and Eddison; but also several [1960s-70s] writers of commercial twentieth-century science fiction or fantasy, such as John Christopher, Frank Herbert, Sterling Lanier, Lyon Sprague de Camp. He did not like all of them, but one he mentions with mild approval is Robert E. Howard, creator of the “Conan” cycle. This is something of a surprise, given that Conan is the pre-eminent example of hairy-chested macho barbarian heroism, so very un-hobbitical. Perhaps Tolkien appreciated Howard’s efforts to create a sense of age, of lost civilisations?

From my other encounters with Shippey I get the sense he is definitely not a Howard fan for some reason. And is thus probably unaware that Howard was also Tolkien’s equal — and arguably his actual superior — in setting up, setting out and then describing complex battles in epic fantasy worlds. Nor is he probably aware of the close comparisons that can be made in terms of a few central plot devices found in the longer Conan works. However, having not seen the rest of Tolkien’s Library, I’m unsure about what item Shippey is resting this remark on. Is there a new finding, or is this the same old de Camp memory? As I wrote here in March 2019, that Tolkien read Howard…

all boils down to what L. Sprague de Camp remembered in 1983 a snatch of conversation had with Tolkien in a garage in 1967, so it’s pretty slim as evidence goes.

August at Tentaclii

31 Saturday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Well, that’s August gone. Tentaclii Towers sailed serenely on through the shimmering August blue and the increasingly chill nights of late summer, avoiding power-cuts or flash-flooding. My daily blogging continued, although my Patreon remains stubbornly stuck at $59 a month.

This month the password-protected posts for my Patreon patrons were:

* “A Century Less a Dream, new for $4”. (Effectively the ‘best of Lovecraft Studies’ as a nice hardback. I got one, but one was also left available at $4 for someone else to bag).

* “Friday ‘picture postals’ from Lovecraft: Finding Bolton”. (My new discovery on the mysterious Bolton, a place featured in several Lovecraft stories).

* “Moving Lovecraft’s House” (an eyewitness account of the event and a photo).

* “Knowing Derleth” (Derleth on the gay scene within early science-fiction fandom, and more).

Just $1 a month or more (ideally more) gives you access to protected posts at Tentaclii.

In the arts, another ‘Lovecraft as a character’ appearance was discovered in the graphic novel Atomic Robo and The Shadow from Beyond Time, and this discovery led to issue #42 of Digital Art Live magazine having a superb and long lead interview with the Atomic Robo guys. Tentaclii also featured: a brief first look at the new Colour Out of Space movie, with my musings on why it might have been time-shifted; an unearthing of a lost French Lovecraftian sculptor Henri Etienne-Martin with good pictures; an update on the Blaschka’s ocean invertebrate glass-models, including news of restorations and a new book; the Lovecraft Birthday ‘InnFest’ festival in the Second Life virtual world (now with 90 minute ‘best of’ video; and a couple of other Lovecraftian arts items.

New books were noted, such as: Lovecraft’s Letters to Wilfred B. Talman and Helen V. and Genevieve Sully; Lovecraft’s ‘autobiography in letters’ Lord of a Visible World (as a second revised edition). In fiction, new affordable and properly edited ebooks of The Averoigne Archives (Clark Ashton Smith) and the best of Wilum Pugmire; plus Arthur Machen: Collected Fiction. I noted that the French can expect a “Fully Upholstered Luxury Lovecraft” set in early 2020. I was also pleased to find the Lovecraft Lexicon encyclopedia in affordable ebook, and I read through it cover-to-cover during August.

August was a light month for new journals, but the new Lovecraft Annual #13 and Pulpster #28 were both major releases and also packed with independent scholars who Know Their Stuff. I also noted two calls for non-fiction material from future editions of the Arkham Gazette fanzine.

Useful freebies were linked to here, as usual. These included: concise synopses of Lovecraft’s revision works, totalling 13,000 words; Krazy Kat 1916-22 free online (incidentally, I also found that Lovecraft made a probable passing reference to Krazy’s mouse “Ignatz”, so maybe he did come to know this famously surreal kittee strip after all); The Fantasy Fan’s 1933-34 issues were found and linked on Gutenberg; I found 15 pages of Breccia adapting “The Whisperer in Darkness”; and a French website called Cthulhu & Co. was found, this being a fine online catalogue of Lovecraftian zines and journals. Of course August and Lovecraft’s birthday brought my own freebies: Lovecraft’s “The Cats of Ulthar” with 8,000 words of scholarly annotations; and my new revised high-res map of “Lovecraft’s Providence”.

In my biographical posts, ‘Lovecraft on a bicycle’ offered my detailed timeline of Lovecraft’s bicycling, done in order to rebut a recent tendentious (and now, proven false) claim about Lovecraft. Several of my regular “Picture Postals” posts at Tentaclii were biographical, with one of these including the full run of Frank Belknap Long’s ‘comic strip by postcards’ featuring Lovecraft as a character; “HPL in an aquarium”; and an unusual night-view photograph of College St. very near to Lovecraft’s final home.

I feel I had a breakthrough in the post “On that elbow”, by tallying story-interpretation against historical context. I similarly looked into the real Sydney Bulletin, of “Call of Cthulhu” fame — I’ve long suspected that Lovecraft had several unknown Australian correspondents, and though this post wasn’t on his correspondents it served to further confirm my hunch.

My big discovery this month came in the post “Eddy bookstore on Weybosset St”. I found a seemingly previously-unknown 1948 memoir of Lovecraft, by one who knew him well. This led me to the equally un-noticed uncle Eddy, Providence’s used bookseller. Just a few streets over from the Public Library, Lovecraft had access to a large (20,000 volumes?) used bookstore, whose friendly proprietor would open up especially for him and who was also the uncle of his best friend in the city. Who knew?

Due to the tribble-like expansion of volumes of Lovecraft’s letters, I wrote a quick post suggesting the need for a public ‘mega-index’ of these and I suggested how this might be speedily created. I also noted that Rhode Island newspapers before 1923 should be online soon, after news of a $250,000 funding grant for scanning and digitisation. One wonders if the Library might offer some sort of ‘hunt the Lovecraft’ prize, once that database is online and public. Talking of Providence, I thought I might get a blog post by rounding up all the reports from NeconomiCon Providence 2019. But after extensive searching I can only find one… and curiously that doesn’t even mention Lovecraft.

Scholarly links this month included a free detailed paper on the history of the lost Arabian desert city of Irem/Iram, plus a number of new additions (inc. one thesis) to my Open Lovecraft page. I also noted that the call for “Tolkien’s Legendarium and the Arts” included explicit openness to Lovecraft; and that there’s a call for general horror scholarship from the UK’s Ann Radcliffe Academic Conference 2020.

For my own puny shelf I bagged the book A Century Less a Dream: Selected Criticism on H.P. Lovecraft, new in hardback for a mere $4, via a fire-sale book direct from Amazon USA. It was just $11 even with shipping to the UK, which was irresistible. It was fine on arrival, the only slight mar being a bar-code sticker firmly affixed to the back cover. I’ve also been able to bag a copy of the Lovecraft Annual for 2015 at a low price, and this should be arriving here shortly.


That was August. Please help me to continue the Tentaclii blog by pledging $1 a month or more via Patreon. It would be nice to get to $100 a month by the late Autumn/Fall, a year after re-starting Tentaclii. If you made new contacts at summer conventions and conferences then please let them know about the blog and my need for patrons.

The “first comprehensive checklist of Arkham House ephemera”

26 Monday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Don Herron has news that Derleth scholar John D. Haefele has…

the first comprehensive checklist of Arkham House ephemera, Modern Era, ever published [in the] September/October 2019 issue of Firsts: The Book Collectors Magazine.

Ah, but this is only the prelude. “Now You’ll Need Two Issues” added Don a few days later. September/October carries the introductory essay, with the actual list in the following issue.

New Ray Bradbury sculpture/statue unveiled in his home town

24 Saturday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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The new Ray Bradbury sculpture/statue is now in place and dedicated in his home town of Waukegan, Illinois, a lakeside town about 30 miles north of Chicago. Designed by Zachary Oxman and made by E & E Metal Fab. near Harrisburg, the ‘Fantastical Traveler’ memorial was unveiled for Bradbury’s 100th birthday in August 2019. It’s only had local media coverage, so far.

Locally funded by $125,000 in donations, the memorial heralds a planned 3,500-sq.ft. Ray Bradbury Museum in the town’s disused Carnegie Library. In the meantime the town hosts an annual Ray Bradbury ‘Dandelion Wine’ Fine Arts Festival.

The work was inspired by Ray Bradbury’s 1971 celebratory poem for NASA’s Mariner 9 mission…


If only we had taller been

The fence we walked between the years

Did balance us serene

It was a place half in the sky where

In the green of leaf and promising of peach

We’d reach our hands to touch and almost touch the sky

If we could reach and touch, we said,

‘Twould teach us, not to, never to, be dead

We ached and almost touched that stuff;

Our reach was never quite enough.

If only we had taller been

And touched God’s cuff, His hem,

We would not have to go with them

Who’ve gone before,

Who, short as us, stood tall as they could stand

And hoped by stretching tall that they might keep their land

Their home, their hearth, their flesh and soul.

But they, like us, were standing in a hole

O, Thomas, will a Race one day stand really tall

Across the Void, across the Universe and all?

And, measured out with rocket fire,

At last put Adam’s finger forth

As on the Sistine Ceiling,

And God’s hand come down the other way

To measure man and find him Good

And Gift him with Forever’s Day?

I work for that

Short man, Large dream

I send my rockets forth between my ears

Hoping an inch of Good is worth a pound of years

Aching to hear a voice cry back along the universal mall:

We’ve reached Alpha Centauri!

We’re tall, O God, we’re tall!


“with his chariots like a whirlwind…”

24 Saturday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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S.T. Joshi has undertaken a whirlwind tour of Lovecraft’s places, in the company of a documentary film crew, ranging from Quebec to New York City to Providence. His most recent blog post has an account of the trip.

At the conclusion…

In Providence I was happy to hand over to an official at Brown University a check for $10,000, constituting the initial sum raised by the sale of the library of W. H. Pugmire.

…in a week or two we expect to have still more books [of the Pugmire library] posted on the website, including some very choice items indeed. So keep a sharp eye peeled!

Protected: Moving Lovecraft’s House

23 Friday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Will Murray interview

22 Thursday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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Superhero-heavy comics blog Smash Pages has a new interview with Will Murray, mostly on Doc Savage. Black Gate has Will Murray on Doc Savage. I hadn’t realised he had published a 455-page Writings in Bronze ebook on Doc Savage in 2012. It seems to be well regarded and Murray had access to the Lester Dent archives. More of a compendium than a book of academic essays it seems…

“there’s more information on the history of Doc Savage than most Doc fans even knew existed. From Murray’s earliest fanzine writings to his latest commentaries on the fascmile reprints of Doc Savage magazine”

It’s good to know there are serious writings about Doc Savage out there, as I still have fond memories of him from the oversize Marvel b&w albums from the 1970s and 80s, and I also read and very much enjoyed a half-dozen or more of the books in the early 1980s.

I see this book was followed by the survey A History of the Doc Savage Adventures (2018) and the newly annotated The Savage Dyaries: The collected Doc Savage writings of Dafydd Neal Dyar, Volume 1 1979-1984 (2018), and there may be more.

Difficult to find more without digging though. Because Amazon spams with unwanted Shadow and Spider stuff in the search results — even when you’re specifically searching for “Doc Savage” in quotes.

Lovecraft’s Birthday, the 2019 round-up

20 Tuesday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Lovecraft’s Birthday, the 2019 round-up:

It’s the 129th!

* Released on H.P. Lovecraft’s birthday, from Hippocampus, An Imp of Aether. 279 pages of the late Wilum Pugmire’s writing in an affordable Kindle ebook.

* Lovecraft’s Letters to Wilfred B. Talman is said by Amazon to be shipping today.

* My own extensively annotated “The Cats of Ulthar”, new and free online. I think this ended up around 8,000 words. At 20 pages it should be printable as a five-sheet booklet.

* Revised and expanded 2019 edition of my big map of Lovecraft’s Providence. 5mb, printable. Added: Eddy’s Bookshop; Twin Islands (boyhood adventures); Fox Point (where he met and saw off visitors on the New York boat); St. John’s churchyard (a regular stop on ‘the tour’ for visitors).

* InnFest 2019. 20th-27th August 2019, “celebrating H.P. Lovecraft’s 129th birthday. Visitors [to the famous Second Life ‘virtual world’] will enjoy shopping [for Lovecraftian ‘virtual crafts and fashions’] and experience a week of exploration, events and entertainment featuring a fine calendar of music and stage shows at the theatre and other [digital 3D recreations of] locations in Lovecraft Country.” Not sure about the knick-knacks, but the location-builds can be quite something. Especially now that Second Life has VR.

* Dark Adventure Radio Theatre have their new Mad Science old-time radio serial adaptations of Lovecraft ready to go, and when last heard planned to release the collection… “on or about Lovecraft’s birthday, 20th August 2019”.

* In Mexico, the state of Veracruz and the writer Miguel Angel Vartak have “organized an exhibition of Lovecraft books and stories, a reading of Lovecraft’s poetry, live music and several lectures”.

* I also spotted a special ‘H.P Lovecraft Birthday’ Guided Tour of Brooklyn.

Various other stuff that’s just too cynically spammy to mention, to do with offering marginal discounts on Lovecraft-labelled beer and modern RPGs and suchlike. Try harder next year.


And finally, not quite on the birthday, but on the closest weekend… the many-tentacled NecronomiCon Providence 2019 rises from the depths again on 22nd-25th August 2019. I seem to recall that the new Selected Essays and Selected Poems Lovecraft books are due for release to coincide with this?

The R.I. Historical Society had their usual annual H.P. Lovecraft: A Literary Life walk on the 17th August, rather than the 20th. If you missed it then they have a H.P. Lovecraft Literary Walking Tour in October: “October 19, 20, 26 & 27, 2019”.

Rhode Island newspapers before 1923

18 Sunday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Congratulations to Providence Public Library. They’ve just bagged $250,000 from the National Digital Newspaper Program, for the…

Digitization of 50,000 pages of Rhode Island newspapers published before 1923.

Presumably online and open to the world, rather than locked down for library visitors only. In which case some previously unknown Lovecraft-iness might perhaps be found in the new material.

Call: Arkham Gazette #6

18 Sunday Aug 2019

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Submissions wanted: Arkham Gazette #6 (Arkham and Beyond). Includes a request for…

* Miskatonic University Expeditions, a list.

There is a short section in Miskatonic University listing a number of international expeditions and research projects sponsored by Arkham’s institute of higher learning. I don’t think anyone as ever dug through all of the vast corpus of scenarios to try to make a comprehensive list of all the expeditions assigned to the auspices of this august if ill-starred academy. Are you the person to brave such horror?

Call: Arkham Gazette #7

17 Saturday Aug 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Arkham Gazette #7 – Dunwich invites submissions. The call is dated 5th August 2019.

The editor seems to have some non-fiction articles already lined up, on “Caves and caverns of New England” and “Alchemists of New England”, and invites other bits and pieces which may or may not spin out into hokum and confabulation.

Ideas that caught my eye:

* The Sermons of Abijah Hoadley.

* August Derleth’s Dunwich, and how it differs from the HPL original.

* Annotated scenario list for Dunwich (by which I think RPG games is implied).

H.P. Lovecraft: A Literary Life

16 Friday Aug 2019

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The R.I. Historical Society have their usual annual Lovecraft’s birthday walk “H.P. Lovecraft: A Literary Life” on 17th August this year, rather than the actual birthday date of the 20th. I assume there may be a few tickets left.

They also have a H.P. Lovecraft Literary Walking Tour in October, in the run-up to Halloween: “October 19, 20, 26 & 27, 2019”, when I guess it may be cooler and less humid for hill-walking in Providence.

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