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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Scholarly works

Lovecraft’s many after-lives

11 Thursday May 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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International Journal of Role-Playing is now up to 12 annual issues. It was located in the Netherlands but has now moved to a new home and URL in Sweden. Published in English.

The latest issue (2022) has “Recomposing Lovecraft: Genre Emulation as Autopoiesis in the First Edition of Call of Cthulhu”. This suggests that the new fusing of sub-genres in the then-new game, built atop Lovecraft’s Mythos, was a response to… “perceived threats to the American way of life during the early Reagan Era”.

Also, new on Archive.org, “The Developing Storyworlds of H.P. Lovecraft”. Found in a 2014 collection from the University of Nebraska. This discusses Lovecraft’s inherent “transmedia adaptability” and the ever-growing range of new fan-work and products based around his Mythos.

The new journal The Incredible Nineteenth Century: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Fairy Tale has published its first issue. Two articles, plus book reviews. Online now, in open-access. The journal has a gushing but useful summary review of a book, re: Lovecraft’s commercial and fannish after-lives. This review would fit well with a reading of the above two articles.

Howard Days 2023

02 Tuesday May 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in REH, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

The Silver Key has posted a long recap of the 2023 Robert E. Howard Days which have just successfully finished for this year. Also a “Howard Days Wrap Up” at the Rogues in the House podcast.

SpraguedeCampFan ran day-by-day posts, and his final one “Time to Come Home” has links to all the previous posts. There are abundant clear photographs.

Plus Savage journal entry #41 reports on a trip to Howard Days 2023, with photos.

The R.E. Howard Foundation has a post on “The journey of REH’s writing table: a piece of literary history”, on Howard’s lovingly restored writing table. This was a feature of this year’s Howard Days.

Wild Stars also has a set of pictures.

There was coverage in the local Brookhaven Courier, “Museum celebrates author Robert E. Howard”.

The Robert E. Howard Days: 2023 Events Schedule. No YouTube, podcast or audio files as yet, that I can find. I seem to recall that in previous years, the panel recordings surfaced online in due course.

Also in REH, and available along with the new affordable Collected Letters at Howard Days, I see we have a new edition of The Dark Man scholarly journal. ‘New’ since I last noticed it. Issue 13.1, January 2023 includes what appears to be a substantial survey of Conan’s predecessors. The issue is also interesting re: the editors being open to an essay on Tolkien.

I would assume that we’re moving toward the time of year when potential contributors for January 2024 should be thinking about what they might submit in the late summer?


Coming next, PulpFest 2023.

Book: Science Fiction And Fantasy Artists Of The Twentieth Century

27 Thursday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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New on Archive.org, with a public PDF download, McFarland’s Science Fiction And Fantasy Artists Of The Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary (2009). This is no longer discoverable on the McFarland catalogue site, and Amazon UK and USA both have it as “out of print, unavailable”. There are no used copies or copies on eBay either. Thus, I think it can justifiably be linked here without harming anyone’s wallet in these difficult times.

It’s a scholarly two-column reference work that was aimed at academic libraries, judging by the original retail price of $135 (probably about $220 in today’s money). There are two introductory survey essays, one to 1975 and another from the 1970s through to the year 2000. The author then crisply details the biographies of nearly 400 selected artists in 500 or so pages, nearly all North American but with some 70 British artists manning the tail-guns. The book doesn’t cover the field of children’s science-fiction, work for the screen, or comics work (Corben is in, Moebius isn’t), and as far as I can tell it has little to say about the art of books native to Russia, Germany or Japan.

The book will also serve as a handy reference guide to collectors of the various artbooks issued by these artists, though there are surely more to be discovered. One hopes that somewhere in the world is a collector with the whole 20th century caboodle of these artbooks in mint condition, and that he’ll leave them all to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum or suchlike.

I wonder if this PDF freebie book has been released on Archive.org in order to drum up interest for a new updated edition circa 2025? One imagines there would be a market for a greatly expanded two-volume $500 set.

Various new books

26 Wednesday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Newly listed at the Hippocampus website, the forthcoming books Implications of Infinity: Collected Essays by George Sterling and A Splendid Poison: The Letters of Ambrose Bierce and George Sterling. Both edited by S.T. Joshi and David E. Schultz, and at a pre-publication discount via the publisher.

This reminds me that it’s about the time of year when thoughts might be turning to the key Lovecraft journal, The Lovecraft Annual. In terms of potential contributors starting to polish their submissions, ready to send off to S.T. Joshi.

In other forthcoming books, I see that The Spirit of Revision: Lovecraft’s Letters to Zealia Brown Reed Bishop is being newly listed in hardcover on Amazon UK. This will be an “enhanced second edition” from Helios House Press, having previously been available from the HPLHS (and, at a much higher price, from Amazon). The new edition is set for release on 31st May 2023.

Note that these letters are apparently also in the new Letters to Woodburn Harris and Others volume from Hippocampus.

French translation of the letters of Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft

25 Tuesday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, REH, Scholarly works

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In France, the translator of their new Lovecraft editions is interviewed in interview with La Petit Journal. This is free and in HTML, so can be easily translated. The chat brings news of the next project…

Q: Today, a subscription is launched, until 4th May 2023, for the French translation of the correspondence between Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft. How important is this exchange between the two authors, in terms of a better understand Lovecraft’s work?

A: We see the man at work, and in his exchanges with a friend and fellow author. They talk about literature, publishing, history and politics. It is, in a way, the “behind the scenes” of Lovecraft at work.

Q: What will this new French translation of the letters offer, compared to the original?

A: We have some original documents, but above all we intend to enrich this correspondence with our own critical apparatus. Along with several iconic documents: photos of the authors, of their friends, of the places where they lived, reproductions of their letters, covers of the magazines where they published, etc.

The crowdfunder is at a site I’d not known about, fr.ulule.com, as La correspondance de Robert E. Howard et Howard P. Lovecraft. It’s already been nearly 400%+ funded.

The Mould Shade Speaks

23 Sunday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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Deep Cuts has dug up the horror poem “The Mould Shade Speaks” (1919) by early Lovecraft collaborator Winifred Virginia Jackson.

… very little of Jackson’s poetry has been reprinted, and much of it is uncollected or largely inaccessible for those without access to newspaper archives and obscure and expensive amateur journals, although a selection of poems have been republished in the appendix to Letters to Rheinhart Kleiner and Others.

PDF chatters

18 Tuesday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, Scholarly works

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I’ve learned of an interesting new type of text extraction and query AI. They seem to have become public during March / Easter and I’d not previously been aware of them. You upload a single PDF, have an AI auto-tag, segment, summarise the segments, and cross-page links built for its various topics and facts, etc. Probably more, ‘under the hood’.

All this is done in order to make the PDF more searchable in the form of “chat”. After upload and analysis you can “chat” with the uploaded PDF, by asking it natural-language questions. Results have natural language answers, and links to the relevant page-numbers. Which means you can check that the AI isn’t getting it wrong (as they often do) due to dodgy ‘facts’ in the model inputs and/or confabulation when forming the reply.

Such things are exemplified by the likes of ChatPDF, Humata, Unriddle, Docu-Talk and Docalysis. Doubtless Microsoft Office is also ‘on the case’ with this sort of thing, if they don’t already have it in Office 365. I no longer have access to 365, and it’s difficult to discover a good overview explaining their vast range of new AI assistants.

Anyway, the new assistants are perhaps useful for those who want to plump up a traditional back-of-the-book index, and be sure they’ve not missed anything. Doubtless you’ll think of other uses.

As usual with such services, you don’t know where the PDFs or the questions are going after they hit the remote servers in Whereizitagin. So sending PDFs or asking questions that could reveal business or research secrets is not advisable. But I imagine that this sort of ‘one-book analysis’ is not too processor-intensive, so doubtless there will be local non-cloud versions soon enough. If there aren’t already.

But I also wonder what would happen if one uploaded a single-file PDF of the collected fiction (or even letters or essays) of H.P. Lovecraft. To what extent would it be like ‘talking’ with Lovecraft, and how original would it seem? In other words, would it be doing a minimum of comparing statements across disparate pages, then bringing them together in a way that offers a more powerful insight into the topic in question? And could a further ‘style model’ be built from the PDF, which would mean that the replies are given in a Lovecraftian manner?


Meanwhile, a second fully and properly ‘open source’ chat AI is released, OpenAssistant. The first was OpenChatKit a month ago.

“Of his madness many things are told…”

17 Monday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Lovecraft as character, Scholarly works

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A new consideration of Lovecraft’s own “psychopathologie” and also a survey of “the various diagnoses that have been issued” for him posthumously. Regrettably the new article in the journal L’Evolution Psychiatrique is both in French and behind a paywall. But there’s a generous sampling for free and in HTML, which means Google Translate can be used. The author concludes that not only did Lovecraft keep madness at bay by writing it out in various ways…

Writing is for him an addictive, continuous, protective and necessary exercise: he never stops writing.

But that he also embarked on…

an extraordinary journey of self-therapy

The Story of Saxon and Norman Britain Told in Pictures

15 Saturday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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New on Archive.org, a key ‘picture-book history’ from a series that Lovecraft collected and enjoyed after he saw some of them offered at budget prices in the local Woolworth store. The upload of The Story of Saxon and Norman Britain Told in Pictures (1935) is of a good clear scan, and the 122Mb PDF file is freely available for download.

Also uploaded a few months ago “to borrow”, another in the series, The Story of Tudor and Stuart Britain Told in Pictures.

The Weird Tales Story reviewed

13 Thursday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Gary Romeo usefully takes a comparative look at The Weird Tales Story in its three editions, including the “expanded and enhanced” third edition of 2021. This is then reviewed, and the new additions and omissions noted.

It seems the third edition is still only available in paperback, at present. No ebook, at least not on Amazon UK.

The Dark Man journal also has an online review of the latest edition.

Tolkien Gleanings issue 3

09 Sunday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

My Tolkien Gleanings issue 3 is now available. A free 48-page ‘zine for Tolkien scholars, collectors, and others.

Collecting my January-April 2023 ‘Tolkien Gleanings’ blog posts into one handy PDF. The clickable Web links are retained in the PDF. Also articles, reviews, and a gallery of vintage material.

Also available via Gumroad, if you care to make a donation for it.

Happy Easter.

New ebook: Lovecraftian People and Places

09 Sunday Apr 2023

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Hurrah, I see that Ken Faig’s Lovecraftian People and Places (April 2022) now has a Kindle ebook edition, published before Christmas 2022. The table-of-contents is available at Hippocampus. There you’ll also find details of his print books Lovecraftian Voyages (effectively his biography of Lovecraft), his other book of essays The Unknown Lovecraft, and three books presenting the life and work of Lovecraft’s friend Edith Miniter.

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