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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Podcasts etc.

Free Stuff

02 Sunday Sep 2018

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

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A new Page has been added to this blog, Free stuff. This collects all my various freebies, plus PDFs hosted for guests. All links should now be working, if they had previously been broken by failed domain names etc. There may be a couple of lurking freebies I’ve forgotten about, but they’ll be added in due course.

Weird Editing at ‘The Unique Magazine’

31 Friday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries, Podcasts etc.

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PulpFest 2017 recordings don’t appear to have made it onto YouTube, but there’s a 50-minute panel discussion of Weird Editing at “The Unique Magazine” recorded at PulpFest 2015, on the editorial policies and practices at Weird Tales. The sound quality is listenable, given that it’s a convention panel recording and that those are usually notoriously bad (despite all the microphones present on the tables). But ideally you’ll still want good headphones and the volume turned up.

About ten minutes in there’s a rather curious five-minute monologue by someone who manages not to say very much about anything, but don’t be put off — after that the rest of the discussion is precise and very well informed.

Where exactly was this ‘weird editing’ going on? Chicago. I thought I’d do a brief survey of the actual addresses there, and along the way I discovered a highly likely reason why the editor Farnsworth Wright so inexplicably rejected Lovecraft’s “Cool Air”.

854 North Clark Street:

This address was noted by The Editor magazine in 1923 and O’Brien’s Best Short Stories in 1924. The address was also that of the Newberry Theater in Chicago. The new book Secret Origins of Weird Tales book gives the magazine’s 1923-24 years a detailed business history, if you want the full story of their time here.

450 East Ohio Street:

The later address of the Weird Tales editorial office in Chicago was then the Dunham Building, 450 East Ohio Street, seemingly from some point in 1926.

Interestingly this was the building of the Dunham company, “Manufacturers of Sub-Atmospheric Steam Heating Systems” and Air Conditioning. So this move to new offices may play into Lovecraft’s story “Cool Air” (written March 1926). Though perhaps only partly, in terms of the addition to the story of the technology involved, as there was an obvious precursor story in Arthur Leeds’s tale “The Man Who Shunned The Light” (1915). I suspect this story was used at one New York coffee-and-buns meeting, as a starting point for discussion on how the impoverished Leeds might improve it into a newly saleable story (see my book Lovecraft in Historical Context #4 for all the details and the story itself).

So far as I can tell, I’m the first scholar to notice the trade of the main occupants of the Dunham Building, and to connect that with “Cool Air” and the magazine’s move to a new office in 1926.

This then seems to neatly explain the decision of Farnsworth Wright to reject “Cool Air”…

Farnsworth Wright incredibly and inexplicably rejected “Cool Air”, even though it is just the sort of safe, macabre tale he would have liked” — S.T. Joshi, I Am Providence.

He may have rejected it not only because it was too close to Leeds’s 1915 story (published in Black Cat a decade earlier), but also for fear that his building’s owners would get to hear of it. And that they would then think that Wright had asked for the story from Lovecraft, in order to poke some macabre fun at them and their trade. In which case, they might even have given Weird Tales notice to quit. One can understand how Wright might have wanted to play it safe and reject the story.

840 North Michigan Avenue:

After a few years the editorial office moved to the new ‘Michigan-Chestnut’ building at 840 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. The building was formally opened in 1929, according to the city’s architecture books.

This was a 20,000 sq.ft. corner lot, with shops at street level and elegant offices and studios above. The upper floors were said to be designed with two floors of light and high-ceiling studios that were intended to accommodate the area’s burgeoning artists’ scene. Though there doesn’t appear to be much exterior evidence of such studios on this later picture.

Judging by this plan, the studios were at the back, away from the clangour of the street noise…

Built 1927-28, by the time the building formally opened in 1929 the artists had been priced out of the booming district. As is often the case with such art studio complexes, the studios were instead occupied as offices by more professional creative services such as architects and magazine production. (Stamper, Chicago’s North Michigan Avenue: Planning and Development, 1900-1930). The ‘Michigan-Chestnut’ building was the home of the editorial offices of Weird Tales magazine until 1938.

Finally, a 1930s or 40s postcard of North Michigan Av. at night, looking like a very suitable home for Weird Tales…

Today, 840 North Michigan takes the form of an early-1990s historical folly-store, and is a far cry from Weird Tales darkness… unless you count a Hitler-saluting teddy-bear as sinister…


Further reading:

* Robert Weinberg’s The Weird Tales Story (1977) was a short 144-page fannish survey of the magazine’s history to 1974. It was stitching together fragments and hazy memories about the early days in the 1920s, and apparently it got a lot wrong on the early history.

* Weird Tales: The Magazine That Never Dies (1988) was a story anthology, but also had an introduction that surveys the entire history of the magazine to 1988, with notes on where further information might be found.

* Scott Connor’s “Weird Tales and the Great Depression” in The Robert E. Howard Reader (2010).

* The Thing’s Incredible: The Secret Origins of Weird Tales (2018) is a proper in-depth business history of the magazine, but only of the turbulent 1923-24 period.

Don’t bother with the litcrit The Unique Legacy of Weird Tales (2015) if you’re looking for business history.

“An instant’s fumbling with the huge locks and he was free…”

27 Monday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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I’ve link-checked, repaired and added to my 2014 R. E. Howard audio-books list, in which I listed free recordings of Howard’s Conan stories in order of the story-world chronology.

Lovecraft – Collaborations and Ghostwriting

25 Saturday Aug 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, New books, Podcasts etc.

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I’m pleased to see that some previously unavailable collaborations and ghostwritten stories by H.P. Lovecraft are now available in audiobook. H. P. Lovecraft – The Complete Fiction Omnibus Collection – Collaborations and Ghostwriting (April 2018).

The reader John Finn sounds fine, judging by YouTube clips. He’s not the gravelly Wayne June, but he still has a very suitable voice for the task. If you want an extended audition, he has a free five-hour extract from his Complete Conan readings (though the three Trantor ‘complete Conan’ recordings are well worth paying more for: start with their The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian, then Bloody Crown, then Conquering Sword).

For everything Lovecraft that’s worth having in audio, as of today you’d want this new ‘collaborations and ghostwriting’ collection, plus…

* all of Wayne June’s excellent and definitive readings of the main Lovecraft. Usually branded as ‘The Dark Worlds of H. P. Lovecraft’, not all of which are available on Audible in the UK. (The early ones are on YouTube, albeit only in MP3 audio quality: Vol. 1; Vol. 2; and Vol. 3).

* The Complete Fiction of H.P. Lovecraft for $20 on a USB-stick from The H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society. For the minor and other items that Wayne June hasn’t read. A recording of Supernatural Horror in Literature is apparently also available to bona fide purchasers, as a free download.

* the audio for Eldritch Tales: A Miscellany, again for the minor items not covered by either Wayne June or the H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society (includes some dire juvenilia and does not include the essay “Lovecraft in Britain”, the latter being in the print version only);

* and the new reading of Fungi from Yuggoth and Other Poems to top it off.

Eventually someone will also add readings of the best of the essays, journalism and travel writing. It would be ridiculous to try a single selection of ‘the best of the letters’, even in a 48 hour reading. But one might produce some topographical place-based audiobooks by using descriptive sections from letters (‘Old Providence and its Cats’; ‘Lovecraft’s childhood in Providence’; ‘Exploring the graveyards, slums and marshland of New York City’; ‘Visions of Salem and Marblehead’ etc). Perhaps also one on his ‘Small Pleasures’, to feature an alternating mix of the whimsical and the macabre — cats, caves, candy and ice-cream parlors, used book stores, roller-coasters and fun-fairs, star-gazing, walking canes, conversation, extreme heat, ancient rooftops, bright lads, fountain pens, coffee, hoary old graveyards. Apparently the venerable S.T. Joshi is already planning the H. P. Lovecraft Cat Book which may be some kind of cat anthology. Though that’s unlikely to be an audiobook unless it becomes an unexpected bestseller.

As for Collaborations and Ghostwriting, in the UK £24 gets you 29 stories in 26 hours. Sadly there’s no contents list even in the Kindle ebook preview sample, but I think I know why that is and if so then it’s a valid reason.

Be aware that, as with the earlier Eldritch Tales collection, there are some real turkeys here (no, that’s not the reason why I think there’s no contents list). Stories done by Lovecraft when he was age 10, or as a quick favour or teaching-aid for friends, and never meant for publication under his name. The best are done as a ghost-writer, often in exchange for typing services (he hated typing, but the pulp magazines demanded double-spaced typing for submissions) or as a genuine collaboration. Yet there are also some really excellent stories such as the almost novel-length The Mound, almost as good as his main solo stories, and these have been previously unavailable in audio from a suitable reader.

H.P. Lovecraft’s Sonic Horror

21 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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“Dean Lockwood on H.P. Lovecraft’s Sonic Horror” a 2012 podcast interview from Surrounded by Sound, in which he talks about his book Reverberations: The Philosophy, Aesthetics and Politics of Noise.

See also Gary Hill’s 2006 book The Strange Sound of Cthulhu: music inspired by the writings of H.P. Lovecraft.

And possibly of interest to videogame developers, composers and environment designers is this 2012 technical conference paper…

Tom Alexander Garner and Mark A. Grimshaw’s “Climate of Fear: Considerations for Designing a Virtual Acoustic Ecology of Fear”.

Screenplay Archaeology

13 Monday Jul 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.

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A new podcast called Screenplay Archaeology opens with Episode 1: Guillermo del Toro’s At the Mountains of Madness.

adam-lee2. Picture: Adam Lee.

Robert M. Price interview

01 Sunday Feb 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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Robert M. Price has a long interview on the January 2015 edition of End of Days Radio podcast. Discussed from 45 minutes onward are: his Human Bible and Bible Geek shows | Price’s biog & howling demons | Lovecraft and movies | del Toro, Godzilla. Then he veers off into a long account of Gnosticism, and ends up at the end in The Bible and creation stories and the sources for the movie of Noah. Warning: the .mp3 is 220Mb.

The ‘demon cat’ in history

24 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

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MonsterTalk podcast recently had an episode discussing “Demon Purrsession: Tales of Demonically Possessed Cats”…

some of the strangest lore we’ve ever covered on MonsterTalk as we interview art historian Dr. Paul Koudounaris about demonically possessed cats.”

devilcat

More cat lore for the Kindle ereader, with the book Cats! : the cultural history.

Fascinating Nouns

19 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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Fascinating Nouns podcast recently had two interviews of interest: a new S.T. Joshi interview is which Joshi mostly gives the usual ‘Lovecraft 101’, and an H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society interview.

Free on 3

13 Tuesday Jan 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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I recently undertook my quarterly fly-by of BBC Radio 3’s talk based programmes, available online as “listen again…”. Sunday Feature : The Supernatural North and Landmark : 2001: A Space Odyssey are two 45 minute programmes that might appeal to readers of this blog.

Conan and The Birth of Sword & Sorcery

10 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., REH

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Pulp Crazy sneaks into the Tower of the Time and emerges, persued by Giant Apes, clutching a “Conan and The Birth of Sword & Sorcery” panel recording snatched from the jaws of PulpFest 2012…

Rusty Burke, Don Herron, Brian Leno, and John D. Squires discuss the contributions of Robert E. Howard and Conan The Cimmerian to the birth of Sword & Sorcery. Some great overall Robert E. Howard discussion as well.”

The Science of Uncanny Music

05 Friday Dec 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc.

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The Stuff to Blow Your Mind podcast talks listeners through The Science of Uncanny Music.

finlay-rohmerVirgil Finlay illustration used for “Tcheriapin” by Sax Rohmer in Famous Fantastic Mysteries, July 1951.

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