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Category Archives: Odd scratchings

Stockholm H. P. Lovecraft Festival

12 Friday Oct 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Stockholm H. P. Lovecraft Festival, Sweden, set for November 2018.

“The programme is a work in progress but at this juncture includes the short subject “Hypnos” (Juho Aittainen, 2016) and the feature They Remain (Philipp Gelatt, 2018). We will also have the honour of welcoming director Ludvig Gur and actor Kola Krauze who will tell us about their Lovecraft adaptation “The Outsider”, filmer in the Stockholm area this summer. After we wrap up the film screenings and discussions at Serieteket (around 7pm) those interested can reconvene at the pub Queen’s Head, Drottninggatan 108, for something to eat and drink. We also have a Lovecraft quiz ready to be unleashed, if enough people are interested. If you feel like testing your mettle please drop a line to lovecraftfestival@gmail.com and register for the quiz!”

Audiobook bookmarking for the Windows desktop

09 Tuesday Oct 2018

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

≈ 2 Comments

Why has it always been so difficult for makers of Windows desktop media players to offer simple and easy bookmarking for audiobooks? Maybe they think we’re all using mobile apps on devices nowadays. But there are plenty of audiobook listeners who use Windows desktop + wireless headphones, and wild .mp3 files. Podcasts especially.

Anyway, I finally got fed up of making a screenshot of the audio file being played and its current playback time, to serve as a makeshift bookmark. I went looking for what’s available.

I first tried to fix up my usual VLC player, on discovering it had just the one working bookmarking script that offers bookmarks which persist. The script worked, but was a very clunky fix. I then tried PotPlayer and MusicBee, but after much searching I couldn’t find the supposed bookmarking functions in either one. Both were uninstalled. WorkAudioBook is also free, but is really meant for language learners who need to consult teacher about strange words heard during their listening, and it has rather an old interface. Perhaps the likes of iTunes for Windows desktop offers bookmarking, but there’s no way I’m installing such highly intrusive bloatware. The same goes for any dedicated player Audible may offer.

Eventually I found a player that really does do simple and sensible bookmarking, is currently developed, is genuine freeware and looks nice. It can even rename its bookmarks. AIMP 4.51 appears to be the only maintained freeware that offers simple persistent bookmarks on Windows. Why the others don’t offer this is a complete mystery.

Once the audiobook files are loaded (drag and drop is the easiest option) and saved to a playlist file, then you bookmark the playing audio by pressing the Bookmark star, which you can see in the above screenshot. It’s then easy to start an audio file at the bookmark you made, edit or remove it. You can have multiple bookmarks. You can rename bookmarks. In its Preferences you can also set “Ctrl + B” to instantly load the Bookmarks Manager.

The only problem seems to be that when you select a bookmark without the playlist loaded, the file loads but not the playlist it belongs with. Which means that users will first need to load their audiobook playlist, then load the desired bookmark. No great hassle, but we could all benefit from having one less niggling little workflow to remember.

AIMP also has a graphic equaliser, which is nice for removing sibilance in readings, such as that on Phil Dragash’s magnificent full-cast unabridged LOTR. The user can also adjust playback speed by a fraction, for a slightly slower or faster reading. Pitch can also be shifted, if you have a gratingly high-pitched interviewee on the audio of a podcast. These settings are retained even when you exit and reload the software, and can be saved out to named presets. All this makes AIMP a fine replacement for my Impulse Media Player, which until now I’ve used alongside VLC for audiobooks (despite its lack of bookmarking). Sorry Impulse, I luvved you long time, but… uninstalled.

In AIMP, playlists can themselves be bookmarked after a fashion, by dragging them over to the ‘local files’ panel from either their host folder or from the right-hand playlist panel. By doing that, they make a shortcut which persists in the AIMP interface. Or you can just send the playlist to the Windows desktop as a shortcut, and thus load the audiobook currently being listened to straight from the desktop.

AIMP does not need to be using its own playlist format in order to bookmark. The bookmarks are stored in XML in C:\Users\YOURUSERNAME\AppData\Roaming\AIMP\Bookmarks.xml

There are also many skins for AIMP, but for a simple night / day switch of the basic colour scheme the user just hits the “Switch the theme” icon up in the top right of the interface. You can see the ‘night interface’ above.

VLC is still needed as a videoplayer, though. VLC also usefully offers the ability to easily take a pure screenshot from any frame of a video. I had no success with saving VLC playlists out to standard .M3U playlists for opening in AIMP. Nor older Windows .WPL playlists. But it’s no great hardship to re-make old saved playlist files as you listen again to albums and audiobooks. As with most audioplayers, AIMP can also scan your dedicated audio and music folders and then load everything in them into its sortable database. Once that’s done, search filters and keyword search become possible.

All in all, AIMP appears to be the only viable option for regular listeners of downloaded audiobooks, mp3-saved YouTube playlists or long lectures, podcast .mp3s, and similar audio that doesn’t come to you through proprietary channels such as iTunes and Audible.

Update: AIMP also has a fine free Android app you can download from their website. This also does bookmarking.

State of Fantasy, 1977-2011

07 Sunday Oct 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Yesterday I stumbled across Dave Cesarano’s 15,000-word catch-up overview of epic/high fantasy from 1977 to 2011. I found it usefully informative, as someone who hasn’t taken much notice of newly-published epic fantasy books since Thomas Covenant t’wuz a lad, and who thus welcomed hearing a fan’s succinct plainly-spoken overview of how it all turned out.

It turned out badly, it seems. On the one hand, a cadre of sour Tolkien-haters racing ever-downwards into despair, gore, rape and angst, all chasing an adolescent’s shallow idea of what “edgy” and “realism” is meant to look like. On the other hand, waves of badly-written lacklustre Tolkien pastiches, foaming out to ever-wider lengths at the behest of cynical publishers. And in between the two, the slowly widening chasm of tone-deaf political axe-grinders.

That’s the impression that I came away from Cesarano’s essay with, anyway. Possibly there are other weightier surveys of the epic fantasy novels of the period, akin to Joshi’s sweeping critical take on the history of recent weird fiction. Though I don’t know of any offhand.

But if Cesarano’s fan-viewpoint is to be trusted, and I’ve no reason to doubt his sincerity, then evidently I didn’t miss much in terms of the big post-Covenant works. Except perhaps for Tad Williams’s Memory, Sorrow & Thorn series (though he’s on record was wanting to infuse leftist “politics” into the genre), and some Marion Zimmer Bradley. Elsewhere I hear good things about Ardath Mayhar’s first Dunsany-like book How the Gods Wove in Kyrannon, and her later Crazy Quilt: The Best Short Stories. Also Jon Brunner’s The Compleat Traveller in Black (1986) and David Gemmell’s debut novel Legend (1984). If I’d have heard about those in the mid 80s, rather than the gloomy-but-worthily ‘grown up’ Thomas Covenant books, which eventually killed my interest, then I might still be reading fantasy.

Anyway, here are the links for Cesarano’s “The State of Fantasy Since 1977”. Keep in mind that he’s talking about epic fantasy novels here, and is not straying off into short-stories, anthologies, fantasy-steampunk, schoolboy wizards etc.

Introduction: The State of Fantasy in 1977.

1. Fantasy: 1977-1989. (If you’re short of time, just start with “1982”).

2. Fantasy: 1990 – 2000. The Age of the Doorstops and Gimmicks.

3. Fantasy: 1999 to 2011. Disillusionment and Nihilism.

Conclusion: Fantasy: 1977 to 2011. Wrapping It All Up.

A Decadent dissolving…

06 Saturday Oct 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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I see that the 2013 Kindle edition of H.P. Lovecraft: New England Decadent has vanished from Amazon UK and USA. The extended essay was an early and well-regarded examination of Lovecraft’s ‘decadent’-influenced period (which lasted to about 1926), both in his writing and life.

So it’s just as well I got the ebook when I did, back in 2013. Thankfully I find that it’s still on my Kindle, as the print-on-demand paper price is a bit steep.

Why has it vanished? Well, it was republished in a corrected form for WaterFire Providence in late summer 2013, as a fundraiser. So my guess would be that they were only permitted to offer it for a time-limited five-year period?

The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard – on sale

05 Friday Oct 2018

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

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The Kindle ebook edition of the Del Ray The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard is currently at a mere £1.49 in the UK and about $2.49 in the USA.

The Amazon page also links to a downloadable audiobook on Audible, but be warned that in the UK it’s definitely not the same as the proper audio CD which is narrated by Robertson Dean…

Those in the USA can get the proper Tantor Media CD (shown above) as a download at the Tantor website for a current price of just $6.99. It appears that Tantor can’t sell it into the UK or Europe due to copyright on a few of the stories, but you might have some luck via an American friend or via a VPN. Be wary of pushing credit card or PayPal details through a VPN, though.

Sherlock Holmes and Science Fiction

02 Tuesday Oct 2018

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Restored hi-res artwork by Tom Walker, originally split across two pages for the short article “Sherlock Holmes and Science Fiction”, New Frontiers fanzine, August 1960.

It trailed a forthcoming anthology book titled The Science-fictional Sherlock Holmes, which had the same illustration on its cover and which now appears to be rather rare and collectable…

The authors apparently “Knew Their Stuff about the Holmes conventions and respected them” according to one reviewer, in contrast to later anthology plumpers.

More on Everett McNeil

02 Tuesday Oct 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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When I wrote my book on the life and work of H.P. Lovecraft’s cherished friend and correspondent McNeil, Good Old Mac: Henry Everett McNeil, 1862—1929 (2013), some of McNeil’s books were not yet scanned and online. Since 2013, a few more books have appeared online:


1903: I’ve very pleased to see that the Library of Congress has placed his Dickon Bend the Bow, and other wonder tales online in a very good scan, uploaded in summer 2017. This is his early-career collection of his original ‘wonder-tales’ for younger children. Not included in Dickon was his short dream-fantasy for children, “Where the Great Red Owl Lived” (1903), which I reprinted in my book on McNeil.


1908: The historical adventure novel The Boy Forty-niners. Two young boys go in search of gold in 1849. They journey with the pioneers… “across the prairies and the mountains in a ‘prairie schooner’ [wagon] and came, at last, to the freshly opened gold fields of California”. “McNeil’s Boy Forty-niners, and Fighting with Fremont are never on the shelves [because they are so popular]” — reported the New Orleans Library Annual Report for 1911.


1919: Buried Treasure, a tale of an old house. Here McNeil tried a new publisher, Duffield, rather than his usual Dutton. Duffield obviously prompted him to this ‘commercial’ publisher-driven detour away from his usual historical epics for boys. The probable failure of Buried Treasure in the girls’ market seems to have coincided with the onset of his severe poverty and his move to the notorious Hell’s Kitchen, NYC. His modest apartment there, soon to become the regular meeting-place of the Lovecraft Circle, would become the ‘ground-zero’ of modern horror.

During the writing of my book on McNeil I managed to get a cheap 1920 edition of Buried Treasure in print (it had a standalone ghost-story section shoehorned into the plot), and I wrote in my book on McNeil and his work…

“The distinct lack of survival of the book on the current second-hand market does suggest sales were lower than expected. What may have let the book down, in the eyes of McNeil’s fans, was the radical departure from his normal subject matter: the novel wrangles a cast of a dozen children rather than his usual one or two boys; the group is led by a jolly woman aunt; the girls of the group are in the lead for much of the time; the ghost involved is that of a girl; there is an elderly female to be rescued from a dastardly male lawyer; and there is even a sub-plot involving a broken doll. Buried Treasure has no journey across wild landscapes, no interaction between striving boys and valiant adventurous men, no desperate odds, and not much history. This uncharacteristic novel has the hallmarks of a publisher who has dictated a heavy distortion of a writer’s natural subject-matter and approach, probably with a cynical eye on ‘the market’ and ‘what sells’. Buried Treasure is workmanlike and entertaining, but McNeil’s avid audience must have felt a little peeved after spending good pocket-money for such a ‘girl-ified’ book — a book of a type that already saturated the market.” [My footnote for the latter claim: “See the review by Angelo Patri given at the end of this book, for an indication of the relatively rare nature of good boys-only novels in the children’s book market of that time.”]


Also uploaded summer 2017, a late 1924 letter as published in Weird Tales for January 1925. The letter championed Frank Belknap Long…

“Everett McNeil, of New York City, in explaining his vote for “The Desert Lich” by Frank Belknap Long, Jr. [Weird Tales, Nov 1924], writes: “A good tale of this kind is a difficult thing to write. It is difficult to give it just the proper perspective, so that no part stands out with disproportionate prominence; to put into it that subtle feel of horror and weirdness that attracts, instead of repulses, the imagination, that makes the reader shudder, and yet read on. It is difficult for the author, when picturing the weird or horrible, to exercise a proper repression, to go so far and then to stop, leaving the rest to the readers’ imagination. These difficulties I think Mr. Long has overcome with unusual skill. In addition, I like the way he has put his story into words. There is personality in his style. In short, I think this story an unusually good tale of its kind, and I feel that it is no more than fair that, when he does a good piece of work, he should be told that it is good work. Hence this letter. Congratulations on your ‘new’ Weird Tales. Success!!”

Long had most likely known McNeil since about 1920 or 1921, probably firstly via visits to McNeil’s Hell’s Kitchen apartment in the company of Morton, Morton having almost certainly met McNeil at Dench’s gatherings (which were held near the wharves of Sheepshead Bay). Lovecraft first saw McNeil at a Dench gathering in 1922, and shortly after went with Long to visit McNeil in Hell’s Kitchen.


Books by McNeil still not online, due to questionable copyright renewals:

Tonty of the Iron Hand.
Daniel du Luth, or Adventuring on the Great Lakes.
For the Glory of France.
The Shadow of the Iroquois.
The Shores of Adventure, or, Exploring in the New World with Jacques Cartier.

The later post-Tonty novels appear to have had their copyrights erroneously renewed as if they were translations rather than fiction (since they are fictionally claimed as ‘translations’ in the frontispieces, to give them added veracity in the eyes of their boy readers). For instance…“© on translation; Myron L. McNeil”, renewed 31st May 1957 for The Shores of Adventure. These ‘renewals’ may be the reason the later books are not yet scanned and online. But the books are surely now in the public domain, as McNeil died in 1929.


Update: Now online to borrow from Archive.org…

The Shadow of the Iroquois (1928)

The Shores of Adventure (1929)

Please become my patron

30 Sunday Sep 2018

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Well, it’s the end of September. I hope readers have enjoyed this blog’s renewed stream of postings. Just a reminder that my Patreon currently stands at $8 a month in total, and as such I’d welcome a few more patrons to give it a boost. As little as $1 a month, from just a few more patrons, would be very encouraging to me.

“In my youth I was a veritable bicycle centaur” – H.P. Lovecraft.

25 Tuesday Sep 2018

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28th October 2018: “Tour de Tentacle”. 65 Weybosset Street, Providence. Booking now. Eastside Monthly reports…

Billed as ‘a weird bike odyssey in Providence’, this collaboration between the Lovecraft Arts & Sciences Council and Confluence Placemaking begins and ends at dusk at The Arcade [in Providence, Rhode Island] “for a dark cosmic reckoning.” Event organizers promise ‘tentacles and beer’, but note that this is BYOB as in [bring your own] bike.

PulpFest 2018 reports

24 Monday Sep 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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Posted a few days ago, a handy round-up of Reports and Recordings from PulpFest 2018. Links to convention reports, plus a series of author interviews as .MP3 files.

Pulp Writing: Open with a Punch

23 Sunday Sep 2018

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A G. W. Thomas article, from back in June 2018, “Pulp Writing: Open with a Punch”…

I miss the pace [of the pulp magazine stories]. Modern writers have nothing on the Pulps for opening a story in a hurry, a blinding punch or slap of color. Once delivered, they just kept on writing to the searing end. That’s what I miss. Reading by the seat of your pants.

Julian S. Krupa

17 Monday Sep 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Cover for Mark Reinsberg’s Ad Astra fanzine, January 1940, by Julian S. Krupa. Newly colourised.

Julian S. Krupa (b. 1913) was an American illustrator from a Polish family. He trained at the Bauhaus in Germany, but left for America with his family. There he produced a science-fiction “serial illustration” titled Adventures of Richard Arnold / Przygody Ryszarda Arnolda which appeared in a Polish newspaper. He worked with the Ziff Davis Publishing Company from 1938, and had a good deal of artwork in Amazing Stories circa 1939. He also contributed to Ad Astra and probably other fanzines. He served in the Marines during the Second World War. In 1946 he was noted in the press as having the “JSK Recording Studio” in his basement at home. His grandson has left a short memoir of him which reveals he was also a talented violinist, performed at a World Fair, and did a radio show from his basement. After the war he worked for a company that made illustrations for training films used by the Navy and NASA. He later moved into doing marketing work for Radio Shack’s audio equipment, before retiring.

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