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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Joshi in France – the report

06 Thursday Jun 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books, Odd scratchings

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated with an illustrated report on “A Trip to France”, made to promote the French translation of his monumental Lovecraft biography. Among much else, he ventured down into the Catacombs of old Paris…

Traversing this site was a suitably grisly experience for a devotee of the weird and macabre.

Suitably primed, he later discovered the young artist Laurent Gapaillard, who does epic architectural prints in the Piranesi and Prout style, and from my cursory searches seems to be known in France for his book illustration and concept art for videogames.

The French ‘Lovecraft & Sonia’ play Howard, Mon Amour is being translated to English, and Joshi hopes to find a publisher for it.

Also, Joshi has had a copy of his The H. P. Lovecraft Cat Book in print. The hardcover first edition has sold out already.

H.S. Wells

31 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Waverly Rare Books Auction, 6th June 2019. A non-mint first edition of The Lord of the Rings, and a first-edition first-printing of H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine. On the latter, I never knew that the publisher managed to get Wells’s name wrong in the book. “H.S. Wells” appears on the title page. One for the trivia-quiz! Or perhaps a new time-travel story, to explain the apparent slip.

May on Tentaclii

31 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Another month has flown past on Tentaclii. A lush English springtime has been freshly unfurling below Tentaclii Towers, although it’s often been sunk in rain over the last few days. The migrating swifts arrived right on time, in terms of matching the timings of an old and authoritative local Natural Kalender from the 1850s, and the rest of nature has been swooping and chirping in delight under blue skies and generally ignoring the overheated doom-mongers. Of course I’m in inner-city Stoke-on-Trent, but you’d be surprised how rural it can get once you stray off the main roads and onto the canals, cycle-paths and all the ‘little ways through’ that weave through the urban grot-spots. Despite my occasional strolls through this alluring backdrop, 17,000 words were posted here during May 2019 for Tentaclii readers.

There have been some changes at Tentaclii, as you’ve likely noticed. As regular readers will know, I had made this blog wholly “Private”, for a few months. Then I was recently told that it would be better to switch the blog back to “Public”, but to make certain posts “Private” and seen only by my blog’s Followers/Viewers. That seemed a better all-round solution than a wholly “Private” blog, and a good halfway-house between “Public” and “Private”. Accordingly, I switched the blog back to “Public” a couple of weeks ago.

Sadly, it didn’t quite work as had been suggested. After a week back in the “Public” mode I found I had been a little mis-informed. After setting up some scheduled “Private” posts, I discovered these are only visible to a blog’s Admins and Editors. Not to my Followers/Viewers.

The fallback option was then to password-protect these posts, which a blogger is generously allowed to do in a free WordPress.com blog.

Thus, I’ve decided I’m keeping the blog generally “Public”, but each month some of my posts will now be password-protected and Patreon-only. I’ve contacted my Patreon Patrons accordingly, and they can get access to these special posts. (It should theoretically be a one-time entry of your password at Tentaclii, if you allow it to be stored locally in your Web browser). Tentaclii‘s general Followers/Viewers will see that there’s been a password-protected post — but won’t be able to access it without their password. Expect about eight to ten such posts per month. I’m not sure if the wider public and search-engines also get to see the headline for the password posts, but I suspect not.

This password option is not ideal, as it’s a bit clunky and may not always be seamless for my Patrons. But it’s better than placing the special posts over on Patreon, because that would break Tentaclii‘s searchability by keyword.

I’ll try to post a list of password-only posts, in my usual end-of-month round-up of Tentaclii activity. This month there were only a few Patreon-only posts…

(27th May) Neutaconkanut – site of Lovecraft’s last important summer walk. (new-found pictures).

(26th May) “Two pictures of places poignant to Lovecraft” (new-found photographs of Providence).

(23rd May) “Lincoln Woods explored” (700 words, map, many newly-found 1920s pictures of Lovecraft’s other favourite outdoor place in the city inc. his sitting-rock and the Druid stones as they were before the 1930s road works).

(20th May) “Inside the Providence Art Club” (a newly-found 1910s picture of the interior).


In terms of my other daily posts, the month of May has seen the usual Web links posted to art, music and audiobooks. A very pleasing small pen-and-ink portrait of Lovecraft was snagged from eBay, in an old fanzine. Several music-related posts were either substantial, or discovered artists currently doing serious work in Lovecraftian music. This has spurred me to re-install and update my old music software, so there may be more music-related posts over the summer and autumn. I’m pleased to find that it’s all a lot easier than it used to be, with VirtualMIDISynth for which I was very pleased to find a free soundfont emulator for my old Turtle Beach Montego II sound-card.

Picture-based tours relating to Lovecraft were taken to: the Salem Pioneer Village; Providence’s Italian Quarter; into Lovecraft’s boyhood railway worlds; and around the Providence of the sketch artist Whitman Bailey (1884-1954).

In keeping with the springtime mood, Providence’s parklands and verdant shorelines were surveyed and an extensive picture-based exploration of Lovecraft’s Seekonk was undertaken, building on my previous work on this. For my Patreon patrons this focus then ran on, being able to read new password-protected posts on the Lincoln Woods, Neutaconkanut and other leafy places Lovecraft knew, complete with many new photos recently found.

About a dozen relevant new and mostly scholarly books were noted, briefly evaluated where possible, and linked. My ‘Open Lovecraft’ page also saw a number of new additions of links to scholarly works.

Several possible new discoveries were made, including a possible picture of a 25 year-old Lovecraft in the Providence Public Library, and a new Lovecraft-era picture of the Providence Art Club interior. I also made the plausible surmise that “Dagon” partly originated in Lovecraft’s experience on the islands of the Seekonk, which expands and deepens the conclusion I had already reached on my earlier book essay (“In the hollows of memory : H.P. Lovecraft’s Seekonk and Cat Swamp”, in my Historical Context #4).

As a pop-cult bonus, I posted a long and annotated ‘view and skip’ viewing guide for ‘the Tennant years’ of the British TV show Doctor Who.

More daily posts, next month. Remember, a mere $1 a month as a Patreon supporter gives you access to the password-protected posts here!

New R.E. Howard letter

27 Monday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings, REH

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Found, a new Robert E. Howard letter. After painstaking initial sorting through seven new boxes of archival material…

we now have a new, verified Howard letter for the correspondence collection.

Including a delightful potted biography from Howard himself. Click the link to see the letter in full.

Assistant away…

24 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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This may be useful for those who frequent Amazon. How to fix the extremely annoying and totally unblockable “Amazon Assistant” pop-up nag from Amazon, on Amazon? It can’t be blocked as a pickable element with uBlock and nor can PoperBlocker detect and handle it as either pop-up or overlay. Nor can I see any way via ‘View source’ to get a unique div name. The additional problem here is that even when one keeps clicking “No thanks”, the pop-up still keeps coming back again and again.

To fix it…

* Download their wretched browser extension from the Chrome store, and install.

* Then once it has loaded in Extensions, immediately disable it and keep it disabled.

* The nags at the Amazon home page(s) should then stop.

Book And Magazine Collector on Lovecraft

21 Tuesday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, Book And Magazine Collector #193 (2004) with a good short potted introduction to Lovecraft’s genuine rarities and his basic publication history. Also the (then) not-so-rare. Oh, to have had Selected Letters Vol. 1 for just £15!

The Seekonk: York Pond makeover

17 Friday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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One of Lovecraft’s favourite places in both childhood and adulthood, York Pond in Blackstone Park on the banks of the Seekonk, appears to be set for a pedestrian path makeover. The proposals are dated April 2019 and plan to add…

“pedestrian improvements along the Boulevard to link the adjacent community to the Seekonk River and incorporate a network of paths along York Pond [to the Seekonk]”

I’m not sure if the paths have backing from the city or not. Possibly they’re just a proposal to help greenwash a development? But if they do go ahead, then is there an opportunity here to site the Lovecraft statue as part of these changes? Or some similar memorial? Poe also haunted the shoreline here, which might suggest an artistic plaque or bas-relief depicting Poe and Lovecraft together. At the very least some temporary inaugural installations in wicker-sculpture might be sited around the completed paths, which could use themes drawn from the work of Poe and Lovecraft. Here’s an example of the sort of wicker-sculpture I mean, to be seen each spring near me in my local woods here in the UK…

Howard fandom in the late 1970s and 80s

13 Monday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings, REH, Scholarly works

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A new issue of The Nemedian Chroniclers has appeared online in free PDF. This is #26 and has a detailed article on “The rise of the new Hyborian Legion, part four”, surveying the APA element of R.E. Howard fandom in the late 1970s and 1980s. The earlier parts of the series are found in the previous issues, #23-#25.

Lulu say “no”

11 Saturday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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In my day, a book by H. P. Lovecraft was in the school’s official ‘book pick’ brochure for 12 year-olds with pocket money to spend. In fact that was how I first encountered him…

Today, on Lulu.com, the hand-wringing prudes say “no” to accessing any book tagged with ‘Lovecraft’, even scholarly works…

Windy City 2019 photos

05 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Pulp Flakes has an extensive set of photos from the pulp convention and marketplace Windy City 2019. It looks rather sparsely attended, but I’m hoping that’s only because he got the pictures very early to avoid the crowds.

Lovecraft Collectors Library: the poetry volumes

05 Sunday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, The Lovecraft Collectors Library, Volume III and The Lovecraft Collectors Library, Volume IV. Both Lovecraft’s poetry rather than essays or letters. But still interesting, if you don’t have The Ancient Track.

Derleth’s first Lovecraft biography, 1945

04 Saturday May 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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An eBay listing brought to my notice the book H.P.L.: A Memoir (1945), by August Derleth. It’s in part a short basic biography of Lovecraft, as it was understood at that time, with bibliographies. Published as a $2.50 hardback of 122 pages, with apparently a list of Derleth’s own work in the rear.

It would be interesting to get this, if only to get a better handle on what the interested readership of the late 1940s, 50s and 60s understood about Lovecraft’s person, prior to the famous de Camp biography of 1975. Sadly it seems to be unavailable except on the high-priced £50+ collectors’ market.

Joshi’s Bibliography has a main entry on it, but only very tersely states: “broadly surveying his life and work”. I Am Providence is a little more forthcoming…

Derleth’s small monograph can hardly be called a biography… two [chapters] are biographical and one critical; all three are quite undistinguished.

The reader — curious as to Lovecraft’s reception by a new generation in the 1940s and early 50s — is rather left wondering about such basic matters as: did Derleth get the facts basically right, or not?

The I Am Providence bibliography also notes…

Derleth, August. “Addenda to ‘H. P. L.: A Memoir.’” in Lovecraft’s Something about Cats and Other Pieces (1949).

Again, we have to learn elsewhere that this reprints Clara L. Hess’s letter to The Providence Journal newspaper (19th September 1948), with a few additional facts and memories gleaned from an interview that Derleth obtained with her (presumably in late 1948).

While these items have obviously been superseded, they might form the basis of an article examining “what could the interested reader of 1960 have known about Lovecraft’s life?” But the current cost of obtaining both volumes, and similar supporting vintage materials, suggests that I won’t be the one to write that.

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