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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Where No Fear Was: A Book About Fear

14 Friday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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New on Librixov in free chaptered audiobook, A. C. Benson’s Where No Fear Was: A Book About Fear (1914).

Benson was the Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge. A writer of short stories, including what are said to be ghost stories in the English tradition and the Edwardian style. An occasional translator of the macabre into English. A poet and a writer of at a least one popular song lyric. He published his diaries in 1926.

Partial contents listing.

His 1914 book on fear was admired by the likes of Wilfred Owen, who read it while recovering in a bleak northern war hospital in 1917. One assumes that Lovecraft perused the book at some point, out of professional interest. Although it’s not listed in the edition of Lovecraft’s Library that I have access to. He would almost certainly have a read at least one review of it, in the likes of The Spectator.

Lovecraft was aware in passing of Benson’s essays, since he noted them in the United Amateur in July 1917 while profiling another amateur…

“Apart from fiction, Miss Barnhart is fond of books on travel and of light essays such as those of Mark Twain, Stevenson, and Arthur Benson.”

If he had read these same essays is another matter. But he did read his equally prolific brother, E.F. Benson, who also wrote rather more impressive ghost and horror stories among much else. Lovecraft read and admired these stories, noting Benson’s work in his “Weird Story Plots” work-book. He also mentioned Benson in his survey “Supernatural Horror in Literature”.

Course: Cats in Western literature

13 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Explore “Cats in Western literature” with a short course at the British Library in London. Starting 10th January 2018 and running on Thursday evenings. Limited places, booking now. It’s just around the corner from three of London’s main train stations, St. Pancras, King’s Cross, and Euston.

Picture: La Casa by Javier Alcalde of Spain, at DeviantArt.

MN90: Wandrei

12 Wednesday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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MN90 does tiny blipticles on Minnesota history, spoken audio micro-articles in 90 seconds as downloadable MP3 files, with music and FX. One of their latest is “Pen Pals with H.P. Lovecraft”…

In 1926, Donald Wandrei was a 19-year-old university student when he decided to write a fan letter to H.P. Lovecraft. Britt Aamodt has an account of Wandrei’s summer hitchhike trip to visit the horror writer and how that friendship led Wandrei, years later, to found Arkham House to publish and preserve Lovecraft’s fiction.”

I like the idea, but they probably need to get MN90’s uploaded to YouTube as videos with static pictures. Then people can easily make and share their own playlist compilations of the episodes. 90 seconds seems too short, judging by this Wandrei release. I’d say 3 minutes would be a better format.

Incidentally I’m pleased to see the Hevelin Fanzine Collection appears to have switched from tiling their fanzine page-images, switching over to big static single page scans. Tiling is no protection for big public domain images, as there’s a fairly easy capture/re-assembly workflow. But my guess would be that the apparent changes at Hevelin’s transcription portal are to accommodate transcribers who want to download and OCR. OCR can increasingly be machine-learning trained to work with awkward things such as hand-lettered comic books and also, one assumes, the stencil-punched and ink-leaked words on old Gestetner duplicated fanzine pages. But the change also has the effect of making it easier to extract, clean and fix fannish artwork… such as this from Virgil Partch in The Acolyte for Winter 1945, depicting Donald Wandrei in uniform…

Picture: Virgil Partch sketch of Donald Wandrei in The Acolyte for Winter 1945. Newly extracted and cleaned.

On Abe this week

10 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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New on AbeBooks this week…

* W. Paul Cook, H. P. Lovecraft: A Portrait. With an essay on Cook himself.

* Kenneth W. Faig, Jr., H. P. Lovecraft: His Life, His Work. With Chronology of the Life, as known in the late 1970s.

* An Archive of Mailings from the ‘Necronomicon”, the Howard Phillips Lovecraft Amateur Press Association.

* “At the Mountains of Madness” in Astounding Stories, February-April 1936.

Manuskript 0.8

09 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Writers may be interested to know that the free open source Scrivener-clone Manuskript has today popped out a Manuskript 0.8 version for Windows. Until Scrivener 3 for Windows finally appears ($45, 2019?), Manuskript is the best option for Windows desktops for fiction writers.

Though not for serious non-fiction. I’ve looked all over its UI and the wiki / changelog / website and it seems to completely lack a footnotes system or any plan for one. Scribus is useless at footnotes, and while Affinity Publisher is free it is still stuck in a footnote-less and buggy beta. So if you need open source software it seems your only currently-developed option for non-fiction is LibreOffice Writer.

The first thing you’ll want to do in Manuskript, when trying it, is change the tiny squished font in the main writer. Font settings are not easy to find initially, but are down in: Edit | Settings | Views | Text Editor | Font. You can also change padding, line-spacing, background colour and more. The full-screen view has its own font and background controls, also found by digging into the same Settings panel. Don’t accept the clunky defaults, and figure on spending about 30 minutes setting up the UI and fonts.

With Pandoc installed it can import more file formats than it supports ‘out of the box’.

The Phantagraph in the 1930s

08 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org this week, a clean scan of The Phantagraph for July 1936 (Vol. 4 No. 4), with the Lovecraft Fungi poem “Nostalgia” (c. 1930?) on the cover. Also a short but useful signposting article on ‘weird music’, as it stood in the mid 1930s.

After the first substantial issue, July-August 1935 (“Volume 4, No. 1” because it was deemed a continuation of the Bulletin of the Terrestrial Fantascience Guild) the Hevelin collection also has some complete online scans of Donald Wollheim’s Phantagraph from the 1930s. Though with the archive’s ‘plastic hold-down’ scanner-strip visible across the scans…

* November-December 1935. (Letter from Lovecraft praising an article by C. W. Lonsdell on writing good science fiction; Lovecraft poem “The Dweller”; tongue-in-cheek article-squib “How I Get My Inspiration”, on how to ‘write Lovecraftian’ for Weird Tales).

* [July 1936 at Archive.org]

* June 1937. (Lovecraft poem “Halloween in a Suburb”)

* July 1937. (Lovecraft poem “The Well”, and Lovecraft’s c. 1920-21 prose poem “Ex Oblivione”)

* August 1937.

* September 1937.

Archive.org has one 1940s issue, and the Hevelin collection has a number of 1940s issues.

The FictionMags Index has a complete index and tables of contents. The above links are to the only online full scans that I can find from the 1930s.

In 1967 a slim hardcover collected the very best of the publication as Operation: Phantasy. The Best from The Phantagraph (Table-of-Contents).


I’ll add links to this page as and when I find future complete scans of the 1930s issues.

Howard Days 2019

07 Friday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, REH

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The dates for the Robert E. Howard Days 2019 have been announced: 7th and 8th June 2019 in Cross Plains, Texas. All the regular events, plus the promise of… “a few surprises for you”.

Ben Freiberg has a fine and seemingly comprehensive online collection of recordings of talks and panels from the ‘Howard Days’ held in previous years, with good audio.

Amateur Correspondent

03 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, the Amateur Correspondent for May-June 1937 (Vol. 2, No. 1), with H.P. Lovecraft on the cover in the now well-known Virgil Finlay cover art. Inside this issue of “the magazine for the amateur fantasy writer” is a lively short tribute to Lovecraft from E. Hoffmann Price. Lovecraft had died a few months earlier in March 1937, so this issue was a tribute issue. But not wholly so when one looks inside — the reader senses that the news of the death was then still slowly percolating through fandom.

Archive.org also has the Amateur Correspondent for November-December 1937 (Vol. 2, No. 3) with Clark Ashton Smith giving lengthy advice to writers on “Atmosphere in Weird Fiction”.

Tools for semi-automated comics translation

01 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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That rather nice comics panel I showed here a while back can be translated to English.

Maps for Lovecraft’s letters

01 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Maps, Odd scratchings

≈ 1 Comment

The eastern part of America, visualised as a map of the Greyhound long-distance bus routes for 1935.

Lovecraft was, of course, an experienced bus-hopper in the summer months. Though in his later years his poverty could usually only countenance the cheaper options for such transport, and the Greyhound lines were not the cheapest….

“We’ll have to investigate Chauncey. Westerly coaches pass through Hope Valley (so do the New York Greyhounds), but the fare is probably rather formidable.” — letter to Morton, January 1933.

He may also have juggled a cheaper fare by not going all the way…

“I generally proceed by coach out some main highway, then striking across country afoot till I reach another coach-bearing highway along which I can return. In this way I have explored many regions which I never saw before — some delectably-unspoiled” — 1933 letter.

Still, the map is indicative of the key destinations that could be reached by the long-distance coach-bus routes, and may be something to print out and slide in alongside the volumes of his letters. In order to keep track of him, as he reels off the more major placenames to his correspondents. The more fine-grained map of his home ground, which I posted here earlier, would be needed for the smaller little towns and settlements in Mass. and Rhode Island.

More generally useful, especially for those outside the USA, is an Erik Nitsche map of the ‘mental picture’ that Americans had of the nation’s patchwork of regions in 1939, without all the state lines confusing matters…

I also found a good map of the British Empire, as the Anglophile Lovecraft would have known and understood it, in a map of 1929…

The dozy-looking “Prince in whom we all delight” turned out to be a duffer, but was replaced by someone better (see the excellent movie The King’s Speech for the story).

Have you enjoyed Tentaclii this month?

30 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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I hope you’ve enjoyed, and perhaps even profited, from reading Tentaclii this month.

I count 76 blog posts sent into the luminiferous aether during November 2018. With a total of 20,000 words, not counting the PDFs (such as my free chapter on Lovecraft and Zimbabwe). Some posts were quite substantial, and had new discoveries about the lives of those in the Lovecraft Circle. There was also a short (but very popular) post which surveyed the Black Friday sales.

If you can help me out with a $ or two per month via Patreon, please, then it would help greatly with the ginger-beer supply needed to fuel Tentaclii through another month of blogging.

Recommending Tentaclii in social media, and linking here, is also very useful.

Thanks again for reading!

“Borges leitor de Lovecraft”

29 Thursday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Added to my Open Lovecraft page…

* R. F. de Medeiros, “Borges leitor de Lovecraft”, Nau Literaria, Vol 4. No 1, 2008. (In Spanish. “This article analyzes J. Borges’ short story ‘There are more things’, seeking to unveil the way in which the writer assumes the authorial identity of H. P. Lovecraft, realizing what he calls a ‘posthumous tale’ by the American writer”).

There appear to be no MP3 audiobook readings of this short story online, only someone reading the story’s Wikipedia entry (such fun…). There’s one commercial physical CD from Penguin from 2010, of all his fictions. But oddly Borges appears to have nothing in English translation on Audible. Apparently the Penguin recording is tinny and the reading rather fast, so one might want to rip from CD to files and then use AIMP to pitch-shift, equalise the sound and slow down the speaker.


Also added to Open Lovecraft:

* B. Siegel, “In Defense of Dagon: Intertextuality in “The Shape of Water””, 2018. (Detects influences from Lovecraft and the Bible in del Toro’s movie The Shape of Water).

* A. Barroso, “Fear and (non) fiction: Agrarian anxiety in “The Colour Out of Space””, 2018. (Masters dissertation for East Michigan University, 2018).

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