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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Podcasts etc.

On reading LOTR for the first time

24 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc.

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The Eldritch Paths takes to The Lord of the Rings, having got past the usual off-putting gripes from the Tolkien-haters (Lovecraftians will be familiar with the catechism, as it’s also used against Lovecraft). The Eldritch Paths’s final book report appeared yesterday, as “The Beauty and Horror”…

I was a bit reluctant to read the trilogy. The complaints I’ve heard about Tolkien being “boring”, Middle-earth as a setting being cliche, and that the novels having way too much description put me off. Eventually, I hunkered down and bit the bullet. To my surprise, I was blown away.

Lord of the Rings has genuine moments of horror. I’m not talking about cheap thrills here either.

Super. I envy him a first reading sans the movies, I wish I could experience it all afresh, but short of getting a blast of the black breath and losing my memory, that’s not going to happen.

It appears that Eldritch Paths read the book in print, but for those who prefer audiobooks these days then your only choice should be the unofficial unabridged reading by Phil Dragash with good headphones and an audiobook player that does bookmarks easily (e.g. AIMP). If this appeals, then be warned that Eldritch Paths’s book review has spoilers.

Answering the Call of Cthulhu

06 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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The new podcast Hypnogoria #110 is “Answering the Call of Cthulhu“. The second half of this is an excellent and clear examination of the recent £20 Call of Cthulhu Starter Set from Chaosium, with the box and the basics of the game explained for utter clueless newbies by a solo presenter who’s an experienced keeper (game master). He also makes some useful basic distinctions which clearly explain why Call of Cthulhu is different from the bulk of heroic fantasy RPGs.

Those delving into the game, and perhaps short of cash after forking out £20 for the Set, will also want to know that there’s a free Quickstart Rules PDF on the Chaosium site. I had repeated problems getting this to download, and couldn’t get it to complete the download even with a VPN. Apparently the PDF is the 2013 version, and the 2016 Quickstart print edition ($s) was “Revised”.

“Alonzo Typer” – does it contain traces of the lost “House of the Worm”?

03 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

≈ 1 Comment

The Lovecraft ghostwritten-story “The Diary of Alonzo Typer” has been given a fine new audio reading by Ian Gordon, and this is now on YouTube. The story is not often recorded for free and also in good listenable form. The new 57-minute recording is from the UK-based Horrobabble, who produce audiobooks and dramatised readings. Other revisions from them on YouTube include “The Horror in the Museum”, “The Mound”, “The Curse of Yig”.

The tale was written in mid October 1935, near in time to “The Haunter of the Dark”, as a unpaid favour to occult believer and apparent old sailor William Lumley. Lovecraft did however get a very grand prize in return as a thank-you gift — a copy of Budge’s masterly and authoritative translation of The Egyptian Book of the Dead. This was not just an old copy of the 1920 summary booklet from the British Museum. Lovecraft’s Library lists it as the 1923 printing of the revised and expanded second edition, with all three volumes in nearly 700 pages with illustrations. Very nice, and I can see why Lovecraft might have thought it ‘fair exchange’.

In an essay Joshi elaborates on the story’s Catskills-like setting that… “all the geographical and ethnographic data in the tale are due to Lovecraft’s own research”, presumably by raiding the filing cabinets to dig out the old notes made for the background of “The Lurking Fear”.

“The New York state setting of “The Diary of Alonzo Typer” does not, however, owe anything to Lumley (although he was a resident of Buffalo), and all the geographical and ethnographic data in the tale are due to Lovecraft’s own researches”

The debt to “Fear” in the story is obvious, and there are very slight dashes here and there of “The Outsider” and “The Descendent”.

But I also wonder how much of the lost novel The House of the Worm is visible in places in “Alonzo Typer”. Mused on heavily in early 1924, having probably been broadly plotted a year earlier in early 1923[1], Worm as Lovecraft describes it in early 1924 sounds quite similar to “Typer”…

“… the frantic message sent by a dying and prematurely aged father to the boy who ran away twenty years before because of a nameless dread of his new stepmother…. the heiress who lived in the dark house in the swamp. The young man comes, and finds his father alone in the house (or castle — I’m not sure whether I’ll put it in New England or Old England or the German Black Forest)…. alone, yet not alone…. for he looks furtively around him… and other forms flit through remote corridors, strangely attracting swarms of flies after them… and vultures hover over the whole swamp…… and the young man sees things when he goes out on one occasion….”

So far as I can tell, I’m the first to suggest this possibility, that “Typer” has some re-cast traces of Worm.

A series of clustered Commonplace Book entries seem to link with “Typer”…


From perhaps 1919 or 1920:

[55] Man followed by invisible thing.

[58] A queer village — in a valley, reached by a long road and visible from the crest of the hill from which that road descends — or close to a dense and antique forest.

[59] Man in strange subterranean chamber — seeks to force door of bronze — overwhelmed by influx of waters.

And 1922:

[94] Change comes over the sun — shews objects in strange form, perhaps restoring landscape of the past. (Compare to the unnaturally heavy cloud-borne darknesses, and later suggestion of ‘living’ clouds, in “Typer”)

[95] Horrible colonial farmhouse and overgrown garden on city hillside — overtaken by growth. (Compare to the moving bramble thickets in “Typer”)

[96] Unknown fires seen across the hills at night.

And early 1923:

[116] Prowling at night around an unlighted castle amidst strange scenery.

[117] A secret living thing kept and fed in an old house. (Similar to the older [79] Horrible secret in crypt of ancient castle – discovered by dweller.)

[118] Something seen at oriel window of forbidden room in ancient manor house.


I’d suspect these were all loose candidates for inclusion on House of the Worm. Thus to find them in “Typer” is suggestive.[2]

But… I don’t have access to Lumley’s draft to make a comparison and tabulate exactly what Lovecraft added. Joshi has it that the original was… “a hopelessly illiterate draft of the tale — set in an abandoned house near Lumley’s hometown”.

Where to get the draft? Lumley’s “illiterate” rough draft for “Alonzo Typer” was published in Crypt of Cthulhu, Volume 2, Number 2, “Ashes and Others” (Yuletide 1982). I had assumed, from looking at the issue’s bare contents-listing, that it was just a reprint of the published story. The issue has now been added to my “to get” list. The draft was also reprinted in: i) Black Forbidden Things: Cryptical Secrets from the “Crypt of Cthulhu” collection, now forbiddingly expensive even when obtainable; ii) in Medusa’s Coil and Others; and iii) as a definitive edition to be found in Joshi’s recent Collected Fiction, A Variorum Edition, Volume 4: Revisions and Collaborations (2017).

Though perhaps I don’t need to check, as Joshi in Lovecraft Studies #17 (1988) has a note on the untyped Lovecraft manuscript of the tale…

“The Diary of Alonzo Typer.” A.Ms., 20 pp.

The A.Ms. is written in a very late script with extremely small characters and many revisions and interlineations. The tale was ghost-written for William Lumley; Lumley’s version survives, and examination of it proves that Lovecraft wholly recast the story, retaining only a few phrases[3] of the original. It is probable that Lovecraft had Lumley prepare the T.Ms. (even though he states that he would prepare [type] it himself; cf. Lovecraft to R. H. Barlow, 21 October 1935; ms., John Hay Library), since the first appearance (Weird Tales, February 1938) makes many curious errors which cannot well be attributed to editorial emendation. All subsequent appearances derive from the Weird Tales text. (my emphasis)

The Weird Tales publication elicited a fascinating letter to The Eyrie from E. Hoffmann Price, in which he reveals a once-planned Mexico expedition in the company of H.P. Lovecraft and R.E. Howard…

What of Worm? Its title, at least, became public and saw print. Frank Belknap Long later alluded to the lost novel, in his “The Space Eaters” (1928)…

My friend wrote short stories. […] One of his tales, “The House of the Worm,” had induced a young student at a Midwestern university to seek refuge in an enormous redbrick building where everyone approved of his sitting on the floor and shouting at the top of his voice: “Lo, my beloved is fairer than all the lilies among the lilies in the lily garden.”

This was presumably where Mearle Prout picked up the title in the early 1930s, and used it for his own story.


Footnotes

1. [↑] A letter of February 1924 stated… “after trying serial stuff for Home Brew [i.e. early 1923] I experimented a bit with the novel form, and an idea partly shaped which will probably suit Mr. H[enneberger]’s requirements. It is a hideous thing whose provisional title (subject to change) is “The House of the Worm”, and he would soon be… “developing a monstrous and noxious idea which has for some time been simmering unwholesomely in my consciousness — a ghastly thing to be intitl’d The House of the Worm.” These details were known before the 2015 discovery of the lost 1924 letter and its Worm details, and are to be found in Selected Letters I.

2. [↑] I also suspect that “The Trap” may have been partly an attempt by Whitehead and Lovecraft to re-work some of the old House of the Worm ideas, perhaps related to the idea of the pictures conveyed in “Alonzo Typer”. Possibly also linked to Commonplace Book: “[80] Shapeless living thing forming nucleus of ancient building”.

3. [↑] Joshi elsewhere elaborates very slightly, considering that those snippets kept were simply “random phrases”, with the implication that they were kept to please the old fellow.

Neil Gaiman interview

29 Friday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

≈ Leave a comment

A new 90 minute Neil Gaiman interview just landed on YouTube…

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHPKTby9z6o?start=82&w=560&h=315]

A Lovecraft Dream

14 Thursday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

≈ Leave a comment

A new short animation, featuring a dreaming Lovecraft…

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkpj9h99g1w?start=29&w=560&h=315]

 

I assume hand-made drawings and then Adobe After Effects for the layering and animation.

Dream Quest in audio

11 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

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Lovecraft’s The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath, in an unabridged 2014 reading made by Martin Reyto and kindly made available as a free Public Domain recording.

It’s the best free reading I could find, though slightly sibilant when heard with good headphones. That can be cured in AIMP thus…

You may also want to boost the Bass, and I ramped it up quite a bit. The MP3 doesn’t take kindly to real-time pitch shifting, though.

There’s another fairly good one I’ve heard, which is to be found in the Eldritch Tales: A Miscellany audiobook, although this is paid and appears to only be available in the USA. There’s also a reading of Kadath in the $20 USB stick from the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society, from the Joshi corrected text and apparently with some music. Unlike Amazon, the Society seem willing to ship Kadath around the world.

It would be great to crowd-fund to pay someone like Phil Dragash to tackle this as a semi-dramatised unabridged reading with his voices, full sound effects, environmental ambience and music.


The zebra seen on the book cover above only appears for a short while, but is ridden by Carter. Later he takes to a yak. I wonder if this was a reflection of Lovecraft’s boyish desire to ride on some of the animals seen at Roger Williams Park in Providence, during his boyhood?

But perhaps it more likely reflects the boy Lovecraft’s ardent desire to get the zebra at the Roger Williams Park merry-go-round, rather than one of the more mundane horses…

Fantastico Mediterraneo

08 Friday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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Fantastico Mediterraneo, a video of a one-hour panel on Italian Sword & Sorcery. In Italian, but it may interest those looking for a fanzine article and who are willing to translate.

Aren’t they nice and smart? Good to see they still do things properly in Italy, and don’t look like tramps.

Evidently they also still know how to do fine typography and design, even for a flyer for an evening talk — this is also in Italy, the event being Aperitivo filosofico: Machen, Merritt, Mito, Immaginario, 12th March 2019.

“Among the most important precursors of Howard Phillips Lovecraft, Abraham Merritt and Arthur Machen were among those who made the fantastic into a real vision of the world, combining modernity with ancient suggestions drawn from myths and legends. If beings of Gaelic mythology and Mesopotamian divinities, their message is basically the same, and testifies to the irruption in the modernity of ancestral forces, awakened from their sleep of millenia. We talk about this with Giuseppe Aguanno, director of the series “I Tre Sedili Deserti” (the Palindromo) and translator of Merritt, and with Andrea Scarabelli, author of the afterword to “Il Vascello di Ishtar” by Merritt.”

Chasing after Monster Talk

06 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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I’ve been catching up with the Monster Talk podcast from the worthy Skeptic Magazine. Recent episodes of interest to readers of this blog will be…

* MonsterTalk: The Call of Tut-Thulhu. “This episode spends a lot of time talking about the unusual connection between H. P. Lovecraft and the discovery of King Tut’s Tomb.”

* MonsterTalk: Teaching with Monsters. “Dr. Thor Hansen has been teaching a course at Western Washington University that uses monsters to teach science”.

* MonsterTalk: Spouting off about Gargoyles. “Mathew Duman, author of An Education in the Grotesque: The Gargoyles of Yale University.”

It’s one I hadn’t yet plugged into my recently-discovered OneCast podcasting app on my Amazon Fire tablet. OneCast is genuinely free and ad-free and is very nicely designed, if you were looking for such an app. It has everything you could want, except for an imaginary ‘YouTube subscriptions to MP3, then treated as podcasts’, which would get me regular shows like ‘Ask Lovecraft’ as podcasts. OneCast also has a feed set that discovered everything I wanted, once I learned that it doesn’t like phrases only keywords. For instance, to find ‘The Lovecraft Geek’ don’t search for the full name, just search for ‘Lovecraft’ and then hunt and peck among the ‘Lovecraft’ results.

On the record

04 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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Most folks would be content to bung their new Lovecraft story reading on YouTube, along with the 30 others that now appear there each day. But H. P. Lovecraft’s “Dagon”, “The Cats of Ulthar” & “The Music of Erich Zann” does things more elegantly. A vinyl LP record, superb 12″ sleeve art, and a… “new original score by cinematic instrumentalists Anima Morte”.

Worth a peek just for the quality artwork by Karmazid.

The Lovecraft Geek podcast returns

20 Wednesday Feb 2019

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

≈ 2 Comments

I’m pleased to see there’s a new episode of The Lovecraft Geek podcast with Robert M. Price, The Lovecraft Geek Podcast, 19-001. 19 presumably stands for 2019, and the 001 is self-explanatory. My podcatcher software refuses to download locally (“cannot verify talkshoe.com”), but it streams fine.

Price says at the start that he needs more questions sent in. I had sent in a list of questions by email last October, but he doesn’t seem to have got them. More questions are needed, to: criticus@aol.com

He notes that Ulthar Press has a set of Price-edited books lined up. Already published is The Mighty Warriors (summer 2018), his edited collection of new stories likely to interest those who like 1970s sword & sorcery action — with the twist that here we have… “aging once great heroes” rather than rippling youths.

Also announced was the book Narcotic Pnakotic Fragments (I think I heard that correctly, presumably a play on ‘necrotic’), a collection of his essays on the Mythos cycle, from Ulthar Press.

Sounding rather further off in time, and also from Ulthar Press, were various anthology titles. Most interesting to Lovecraft scholars is probably Price’s mention of his The Exham Priory Cycle. Since it will include historic “precursor stories” to Lovecraft’s “The Rats in the Walls” as well as new stories influenced by the famous tale.

Chaosium is apparently getting back into everything from action figures to anthologies, and the latter seem likely to include Price’s long-languishing ‘Cycle’ anthology manuscripts. Including one with stories expanding on Lovecraft’s revision tales. Price didn’t say so, but I presume that Chaosium are flush with cash from the success of the big-budget videogame and its associated boost to the sales of the table-top game and related books.

Price’s next Crypt of Cthulhu magazine should ship in the next couple of weeks. Presumably that’ll be #112, but Necronomicon Press doesn’t have its table-of-contents up yet. Although a note elsewhere on the Web-o-sphere tells of one of the scholarly essays in it…

“First and Final Estimates: August Derleth Looks at Weird Tales Magazine” is to be included in Crypt of Cthulhu No. 112 (late 2018 or early 2019). This builds upon Haefele’s earlier discussion in August Derleth Redux: The Weird Tale 1930-1971 (H. Harksen Productions, 2009), emphasizing Derleth’s positive impact on the reputation of Weird Tales magazine.”

Coffee Canon

07 Thursday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

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This week the Coffee Canon coffee history podcast visits The Double R Coffee House in New York City, a New York hangout for H.P. Lovecraft and the Kalem Club.

A promotional card for the new branch at Lexington Av., which wasn’t Lovecraft’s preferred branch at 112 West Forty-fourth Street.

I had another look for information about Lovecraft’s branch. The Soda Fountain trade journal for 1921 ran a profile when it moved from 108 West Forty-fourth Street to 112. I can’t get more than a snippet or two of that, but the article noted…

It is directly across the street from Belasco’s theater, at 112 West Forty-fourth street.

That it was opposite a theatre is new to me, and would help to further explain the ‘theatrical’ aspect to its clientele — further confirming the information in the letter from Kirk. Another snippet of the same trade-journal article notes that board games such as dominoes, checkers and chess were available to drinkers. Pure “Sugar Cane Juice”, apparently a Brazilian drink, was available — which might have suited Lovecraft’s sweet tooth.

Too many books…

06 Wednesday Feb 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Podcasts etc.

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The painful truth.. too many books…

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCM1wtuBE0Q?rel=0&w=560&h=315]

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