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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Odd scratchings

My Patreon is active again

30 Thursday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Thanks to my three loyal Patreon supporters, who have been hanging on in there for the last three years. I haven’t been charging them over that period, but they’re kindly still in there. This post is just to announce that my Patreon is now live again, and more Patrons would be most welcome.

Note that there are five Patron places available on the ‘Eldritch Old One’ level. Patrons at that level get to ask a monthly question about Lovecraft’s life and haunts, and I’ll do my best to answer it here in a detailed public blog post. Most probably with a good bit of new research behind the post, if required.

Your patronage also supports my editorship of the free monthly Digital Art Live magazine for science fiction artists; my JURN open access search engine; and several other personal projects. Please consider becoming a Patron, and help Tentaclii’s work continue.

“It was only half-heartedly that they searched — vainly, as it proved” – H.P. Lovecraft, Call of Cthulhu

28 Tuesday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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The start of the university year looms once more, and for some that means the start of the sprint toward the final dissertation hand-in in January 2019. Want to amaze your tutor with your ‘mad scientist’-level search skills? Here are a few ‘power-up items’ that I recently noted over at my JURN blog, and which don’t require you to sign up to some online Cloud service.

* WorldBrain for Chrome. Locally copies the text of all the Web pages you visit, and makes the resulting cache searchable by keyword. Bookmarks and blogs are fine as a basic ‘outboard brain’, but if you need global domination this seems useful.

* Open Semantic Desktop Search. Genuinely free desktop search for Windows, enabling Google-like search across and inside your bulging folder of saved research texts and PDFs. It can also auto-OCR inside PDFs that don’t have OCR text, a new feature added in a December 2017 update. Worth trying as an open source alternative to the increasingly nagging and intrusive Copernic Desktop Search.

* My own JURN search-engine. Speedy keyword-search across all public ‘open access’ arts and humanities journals, plus the full-text from selected university repositories. Groups tests show it regularly outperforms all other such services, even Google Scholar, for finding free public articles.

A macabre Providence artist

27 Monday Aug 2018

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

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John La Farge (1835–1910, lived in Providence, Rhode Island). Bed-ridden early in his career and in need of the cash, La Farge produced fairly loose watercolour designs which were engraved by Henry Marsh (American, 1826–1912) and published as story illustrations in the Riverside Magazine for Young People. He later regained his health and turned to the more respectable, and probably more profitable, trade of stained-glass windows.

Lovecraft knew of him, since he mentions him by name in a letter to Moe, 24th November 1923. Lovecraft had written “The Rats in the Walls” a few months earlier, August–September 1923. An interesting co-incidence, given the picture seen above, I’d suggest. There was apparently also a ‘Bishop Hatto’ story by Sabine Baring-Gould.

Annotated Bibliography of Fiction Set in Boston

27 Monday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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An Annotated Bibliography of Fiction Set in Boston (working draft).


John French Sloan, Encounter on a Boston subway staircase.

Full Weird Tales scans continue to flow onto Archive.org

26 Sunday Aug 2018

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

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Scans of full copies of vintage Weird Tales are continuing to be archived on Archive.org. Regrettably my WordPress blog refuses to post a link that goes to these uploads sorted by texts-only / upload date. Because it gets freaked out by [] square brackets in the URL, and presumably thinks it’s under attack from script-kiddies. Here’s how to manually filter out the irrelevant ‘relevance’ fluff and sort at Archive.org…

Once that’s done you’ll see there have been ten new uploads in August 2018, and all from the ‘prime Lovecraft’ period.

Fairly dismal cover paintings during this period, by the looks of it, and one can see how the magazine might have struggled to attract new readers on the crowded news-stands.

The latest upload, Feb 1926, printed “The Cats of Ulthar”. This was the first public appearance, it having previously been published only in the amateur journal Tryout in 1920.

Paul Cook in the public domain, 2019

26 Sunday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings

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A range of texts drop out of copyright each year. At the start of 2019, for the UK it will be the turn of books whose authors died in 1948. One such will presumably be W. Paul Cook. Cook was an amateur journalist, printer and bookman, and a good friend of H.P. Lovecraft. He was later the author of the important long memoir In Memoriam: Howard Phillips Lovecraft. This text can be found in full in the handsome volume Lovecraft Remembered…

Although it appears that Lovecraft Remembered is now yet another Lovecraft volume being listed at very expensive ‘only for the rich book collector’ prices.

Given that the text appears to be coming out of copyright in the UK and Europe, an abridged version of In Memoriam might make for an interesting graphic novel adaptation project for someone.

Last year (start of 2018) the public domain also welcomed: Alfred North Whitehead (a British philosopher whose 1920s works influenced Lovecraft); M. P. Shiel (Lovecraft thought his “The House of Sounds”… “the most haunting thing I have read in a decade” when he read Shiel circa 1923); and of course Arthur Machen.

Fleur De Lys Studio: the plans

25 Saturday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Fleur De Lys Studio building in Providence. Complete plans, just in case you were wanting the “The Call of Cthulhu” building in your videogame.

Fleur_De_Lys

Digi-tech Librarian at Brown

12 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Nice job: press the turbo-charge button on a big push for digital scholarship at Brown University.

Microsoft Publisher magazine template

09 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Readers living in small towns in America, Canada and elsewhere may be interested in some new ‘donationware’ I’ve just designed and released, over on my JURN site. It’s a $23 Microsoft Publisher 2013 template for a ‘small town America’ magazine, aimed at those engaged in reviving and boosting their small town. A quick post on your own small town Facebook group etc, promoting my new template, will help support my JURN open access journal search service.

cover

The 28-page U.S. Letter-size template comes as a .pub source-file for MS Publisher 2013, Microsoft’s affordable and easy-to-learn DTP software (part of their popular MS Office family). The template can, of course, be easily adapted to suit many other quality location-based magazine audiences, and the small town theme is just there to give a new editor something to quickly build on.

Passing English of the Victorian Era

09 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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Historical weird fiction writers might enjoy Passing English of the Victorian Era: a dictionary of heterodox English, slang and phrase, as a free digital facsimile book. It also notes the type of user or source (“The lowest people”; “Californian”; “Low London”; “18th Cent.”, etc)…

popweasel

loblifer

Art project proposal: The Library of Doom

05 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings

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A quick idea I had for an art installation project titled “The Library of Doom”:

1. Collect and shelve one copy of all the books that have seriously prophesied some potentially real doom, but a doom that singularly failed to arrive. Ranging in time from Mathus to The Limits of Growth, The Population Bomb, etc. They can all be had for pennies as used books, on the likes of Amazon or from thrift stores.

2. Add a second room in the library for the more recent variants, which now effectively form a sort of semi-scientific version of the old literature of religious apocalypse. A thousand or more of these must have appeared in the past few decades — as Matt Ridley has ably pointed out, on largely phantasmal subjects such as…

population explosions, global famines, plagues, water wars, oil exhaustion, mineral shortages, falling sperm counts, thinning ozone, acidifying rain, nuclear winters, Y2K bugs, mad cow epidemics, killer bees, sex-change fish, cell-phone-induced brain-cancer epidemics”

3. Add a third library chamber, through which the visitor progresses toward the exit, in which the shelves are empty. This represents the (similarly unfounded) alarmism that humanity will have to endure from doomists in the near future.

4. House and shelve the comprehensive chronological collection of the “Books of Doom” in a suitably charnel-esque library, perhaps partly arranged as a maze as well as a series of wide corridor-rooms. Add an illumined exit that evokes the feeling of “into the light, after darkness”.

gothic_library_by_c17508Picture: Gothic Library by c17508

If anyone wants to actually create this as an art installation project, or even as a hybrid art/library collection that also has research functionality, then please feel free to do so. I’ll give the idea under a “Creative Commons Attribution” licence, so just give me a credit. I’d estimate at least 3,000 books, if the artist-collector were to make a thorough job of it. Maybe more, if official reports etc were included. Total budget, including library construction, might be $10,000, not including pricing the time of the artist and an assistant or the hire of the site (which is considered to be donated for free).

It might be done for less if each book were represented only by the spine of each book, printed actual-size on card and then shaped to form a realistically-sized and shaped book spine. Though that would have significantly less impact on visitors than shelving the actual books. It could even be done as a virtual videogame-world space, using a game engine such as Unreal.

Teaching Tolkien

04 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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Waymeet for Tolkien Teachers is a new website / signposting hub for those teaching Tolkien — perhaps alongside Lovecraft, Peake etc. It seems the intention is for the Waymeet to become an open “digital journal” on the topic (see the “submit articles” link on the menu), and as such it may interest readers who teach Tolkien-as-horror (barrow wights, Shelob, tentacled pool-dwellers, Black Riders, Mirkwood spiders etc).

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