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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Conference: Tolkien and Horror

03 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Tolkien in Vermont, USA. On Tolkien and Horror. 5th-6th April 2019. Who knew?

A keynote titled “The horror of the unnarrated: Implications for Tolkien’s reader”, then sessions on…

Nature, Madness, and Humor
The Perils of Faerie
UVM Undergraduate Voices
Horror of Words
Horrors of Modernity
On the Borders of Horror

Hopefully there will be podcast audio online at some point.

Lovecraft Land theme park

01 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Mundo Tentacular: Lovecraft Land brings ‘news’ of a new Lovecraft theme park to open by 2022. Apparently, and presumably opening on April 1st. Here’s the gist of the post, in translation…

A new 250-acre theme park on the west side of Providence, dedicated to Lovecraft and due to start construction on 31st October 2019.

* Arkham USA – a 1920s reconstruction in precise detail, with actors.
* Walk the halls of Miskatonic University – talk with the professors.
* Stroll around R’Lyeh Island – with a giant animatronic Cthulhu.
* Mountains of Madness – a speeding toboggan ride into the City of Elder Things.
* Kadath Run – can you find a way into the Dreamlands and reach Kadath before Nyarlathotep brings down your dream-vessel?
* Raid on Innsmouth – participate in the brave battle to take the coastal town of Innsmouth from the clutches of sea monsters.
* The Colour out of Space – a VR/AR adventure.
* Dagon Water Park.
* Midnight fireworks show – biplanes and airships battle Mi-Gos in the illuminated skies.

Have a cow…

31 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH, Scholarly works

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Lovecraft had cats. Robert E. Howard had a cow…

“Yes, there was a cow. I saw the critter. Her name was Delhi, and hump shouldered to suggest Indian blood—Asian-Indian, I mean.” — E. Hoffmann Price to L. Sprague de Camp, 11th Feb 1977.

Bobby Derie snaps on the rubber gloves, and investigates in depth.

I can add that Lovecraft also had a cow. Apparently it was kept by his grandfather on the vacant lot which lay directly west of the Phillips mansion, when Lovecraft was a young boy…

… the family cow — a beloved possession reminiscent of the prehistoric Greene days ere my grandfather became an urban dweller.” (letter to Kleiner)

March 2019 on Tentaclii

31 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, Odd scratchings

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March 2019 saw 15,000 words posted here at Tentaclii. Two new $1 Patrons were added, Leslie S. Klinger and Martin Andersson, who together nudged the total up from $41 to $43 a month. Please encourage other likely readers to support Tentaclii — all it takes is pledging $1 a month or more via Patreon.

Content posted here during March 2019:

An important but overlooked point about Lovecraft’s time in New York was uncovered, his seeing Fritz Lang’s Siegfried in 1925, and the ‘what’ and the ‘where’ of the movie’s showing in New York was investigated. Along the way, a small but important new aspect of the career of Arthur Leeds was identified. It also led me to wonder why this event was not included in Letters from New York or I Am Providence, as the facts originate in a Lovecraft letter held at Brown University.

Other investigative posts also took me to New York City, first tracking down the locations of the Binkin bookstores from the 1970s back into the 1930s, and along the way getting more context for this aspect of the mysterious rediscovery of a horde of rare Lovecraft material in the early 1970s. Looking for Binkin on the edge of Red Hook then led me to find out about Lovecraft’s favourite bookstore in the pest-zone — Schulte’s Book Store — and to discover photos of the exterior and descriptions of the interior.

A likely inspiration for Lovecraft’s Akeley in “The Whisperer in Darkness” was suggested and investigated. I also took an illustrated plunge into The Endless Caverns with Lovecraft, and a long illustrated stroll around Lovecraft’s Roger Williams Park in Providence. The nature of the ‘Waldorf Lunch’ restaurants was also uncovered, and good photo of a Providence branch found.

Many new or forthcoming books were noted and linked, mostly scholarship and history books. But also some curiosities, such as a colourized facsimile of the Home Brew “The Lurking Fear”.

One important book, Frank Belknap Long’s memoir Howard Phillips Lovecraft: Dreamer on the Nightside, was also noted in a new affordable ebook version.

The Open Lovecraft page had about seven new additions of free scholarly works, found and linked.

A sprinkling of blog posts noted excellent art, one free font, and one graphic novel adaptation with page previews.

New arrivals of old scans were noted: the entire 1923 run of Weird Tales was linked up in a post; as was the useful Lovecraft essay “Some Backgrounds to Fairyland”; Hugh B. Cave’s book Magazines I Remember: Some Pulps, Their Editors, And What it Was Like to Write For Them was found, read and the useful bits extracted; also found was a short 1933 biography of Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright and some other similar snippets. I’d quite like to write a detailed book-length biography of Farnsworth Wright, but on calculating the likely cost it would be just too expensive to obtain all the needed materials, and even then it would probably only sell 20 copies.

I also noticed and linked some choice store discounts, a generous scholarship from S.T. Joshi in the field of Lovecraft Studies, and a major forthcoming Lovecraft auction.

And finally, I managed to get my ebook version published for my 22,000-word The Cracks of Doom: Untold Tales in Middle-earth book. This was not as easy as it sounds, as in the end I had to hand-code it in HTML in order to preserve the vital indenting of the print version. But it was useful, as the book had yet another round of close proof-reading and ten more additions exclusive to the ebook. Only one ebook copy has sold so far, and two in print (probably to the Tolkien Estate and their lawyer), but hopefully it will eventually start selling.

Exhibition: Masters of the Fantastic

30 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Launched with a opening party last night, the large new “Masters of the Fantastic” show at the Society of Illustrators galleries in New York City….

“an exhibition of more than 100 examples of the genre’s finest artistic works. MASTERS OF THE FANTASIC encompasses a full range of otherworldly images—from dragons, specters and demons, to the far reaches of deep space—in the form of paintings, drawings and sculpture”

The show runs until 8th June 2019. Originals, not prints, if Michael Whelan sending paintings such as his major ‘Hari Seldon’ painting (the Asimov Foundation trilogy cover) is anything to go by.

Weird Tales for April 1926

28 Thursday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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Seemingly new on Archive.org today, a reasonable but slightly contrast-heavy scan of Weird Tales for April 1926. “Wolfshead” by R.E. Howard, followed by “The Outsider” by H.P. Lovecraft. I like the header illustration on the Lovecraft story, although it’s a huge ‘spoiler’ for the ending.

From Howard to Barlow

27 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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Yesterday Antiques & The Arts Weekly perused the New York International Antiquarian Book Fair 2019, and noted…

“Richard Meli, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., dealer […] Here was a typed manuscript by Conan creator Robert Ervin Howard (1906-1936) [for sale…] inscribed “To R.H. Barlow with the best wishes of Robert E. Howard.”

Weird Tales magazine for 1923

26 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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Now flowing onto Archive.org, Weird Tales magazine for 1923 in good scans.

Weird Tales, March 1923.

Weird Tales, April 1923.

Weird Tales, May 1923.

Weird Tales, June 1923.

Weird Tales, July-August 1923.

Weird Tales, September 1923. (Table of contents at back)

Weird Tales, October 1923. (“Dagon” by H.P. Lovecraft)

Weird Tales, November 1923. (“) (“The Invisible Monster”, Sonia H. Greene with Lovecraft revising)

Weird Tales, December 1923 – January 1924. (“) (“Picture in the House”, by Lovecraft).

In the last, Lovecraft is also to be found in “The Eyrie”…

He is pleased at the pen illustration he had for “Dagon”, in the October issue…

Lovecraft, away with the fairies

23 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

≈ 2 Comments

New on Archive.org, Mirages fanzine for Summer 1966. This has “Some Backgrounds to Fairyland” (1932) by one H.P. Lovecraft. So far as I can tell this essay is otherwise not online and is only available in print in either Collected Essays, Volume 3: Science or Marginalia (1944). The same fanzine issue also has a 12-page “Chronology” for the life/work of Clark Ashton Smith, though I expect this has probably been superseded since the late 1960s.

Never intended as an article or for publication, Joshi has it in Collected Essays that Lovecraft’s “Some Backgrounds to Fairyland” was… “Presumably an extract of a letter to Wilfred B. Talman, dated 23rd September 1932”, with the original of this letter apparently being no longer available for scholars to consult. Thus the unstated implication is that we can’t be sure that Derleth didn’t tweak or abridge it for publication in Marginalia (1944).

It runs to 2,800 words. In the first third Lovecraft surveys mythic beliefs with more or less scholarly accuracy, and then steps onto far shakier ground as he briskly summarises a handful of historical theories which have since been swept away by the archaeology, genetics and linguistics. But these are nevertheless interesting for presenting a clear view of what competing historical-ethnographic theories might be seriously entertained by a highly self-educated layman of the late 1920s. As such they seem to illuminate the roots of Tolkien, re: hobbits and dwarves, Tolkien having just started his professional career at Leeds at that time. Lovecraft, for instance, has it that…

“A third theory […] postulate some hitherto unknown race of dwarfs (either Mongoloid or otherwise) which populated wide areas of Europe at a very remote though not palaeolithic period. This theory has considerable vogue at the present time [my emphasis], and is upheld by the existence of certain prehistoric excavations in Southern Austria which seem to have been made by men of less than normal stature. […] Recent discoveries of large numbers of Erdstalle in Austria make it likely that the Danube region was at least a leading seat of the prehistoric dwarf-Aryan conflict. These artificial caverns, plainly constructed by a race not over five feet tall, and holding artifacts indicating a late stone, copper, and early bronze-age date, are occasionally of great elaborateness; some apparently being temples, while others are clearly refuges (like the burrows of small animals) from enemies of larger physique. About 700 of them are known…”

In such apparently widespread musings of the late 1920s (I assume Lovecraft was a few years behind the times on this, in 1932) one might glimpse the deep refuges of Helm’s Deep and the hobbit-holes of the Shire.

The Erdstalle are as Lovecraft described them and they appear to baffle both the scientists and the historians to this day. The “artifacts” Lovecraft mentions don’t appear in the current writings on them that I can swiftly find, and the earliest they can be reliably dated by modern means is A.D. 950, via coal found inside one — but they could be far older. There are now known to be far more than “700”, so they were a widespread phenomenon of central Europe. Who or what inhabited them is now unknown.

Tolkien and Howard

23 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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DMR asks “Was Tolkien a Robert E. Howard Fan?” and digs out the slim evidence. It all boils down to what L. Sprague de Camp remembered in 1983 of a snatch of conversation had with Tolkien in a garage in 1967, so it’s pretty slim as evidence goes.

One can also find certain elements that are a good fit. I remember on my complete listen-through of Howard’s Conan in audiobook, a couple of years ago now, that I thought there were about four or five good points of close comparison between one of the really long Conan stories (the novel?) and The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien’s personal reading habits did go in for the more popular easy-to-read end of things, presumably because he spent so much time professionally with more ponderous material. The publication dates / place of publication / date of composition dates all fit together nicely, I seem to remember. The ‘action style’ of writing more or less fits, so there could also have been some stylistic inspiration alongside plot-points.

But we shall never know, now, so it didn’t seem worth writing it up.

Footy!

18 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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How to rig up a footnotes-insert system for free WordPress.com blogs.

Howard Days 2019 – the schedule

12 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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Howard Days schedule announced for 2019. These are the Robert E. Howard Days in Cross Plains, Texas.

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