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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Scholarly works

HPLinks #43 – Lovecraft and philosophy, “Thing” in Russian, a new Dexter Ward audiobook, imaginary cities, drawing Cthulhu, and more…

26 Thursday Jun 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #43.

I’m pleased to say I’ve nearly completed my move to Windows 11 (‘superlite’, not the monstrosity that is the regular version). I only have a bit more work to do on the OS and on various bits of software, plus a few more niggles to fix. The move to a new OS was arduous, but worth it, and Windows 11 opens up access to newer software and local AI options. Thanks for your patience on this. HPLinks now returns to a fuller format…

* In the latest Taiwan Humanities Bulletin, “A Schopenhauerian Reading of Lovecraft’s Fiction: The Will, the Intellect, and Never-Ending Struggle of Life in Cosmic Horror” (2025). Freely available online, in English.

* Now freely available at the Stanford Repository, seemingly after a five-year embargo(?), “Lovecraft and the Question of an Uninhabitable Universe”. A final-year undergraduate dissertation from 2020, and likely a brave one given the fevered political climate of elite U.S. campuses in 2020. The author argued that…

… his work can be understood as a continual attempt to convince its reader that the universe is uninhabitable. My case rests on a belief that Lovecraft’s arguments for this provocative claim could not be made through philosophy alone — the structure of his thought closely resembles that of a theologian. I locate in his work a rich, albeit unwitting, correspondence with philosophers and theologians of history such as Giambattista Vico, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Karl Lowith.

* New in Russian, a close examination of three Russian translations of “The Thing on the Doorstep”. Freely available online, and in HTML — which means auto-translation should be trivial.

* Newly published, a new issue of the open-access scholarly Journal of Gods and Monsters. A special issue on The Exorcist movie, and includes a review of Folk Horror on Film: Return of the British Repressed (2023).

* Five years in the making, and shipping this week, The Oxford Handbook of Biblical Monsters. Also includes surveys of modern “Monstrous Angels”, plus “Demons and Monsters of Mesopotamia”, and “Ghosts of Mesopotamia”, which means ancient Babylon and the Babylonian Empire.

* Librivox has just released a new unabridged reading of Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. Free and also Public Domain — which means you can freely re-use and re-mix. A little high and fast for me, but a good ‘full controls’ media player such as AIMP would sort that out.

* I found a good vintage picture, new to me, of the colonial-era Old State House, Providence, aka the ‘Rhode Island State House’ or ‘Colony House’ or ‘Independence Hall’. On Benefit Street, but not to be confused with the Old Court House also on Benefit Street. Lovecraft knew this College Hill landmark. For instance Lovecraft was one of the antiquarian guests present there when a lavish period-costume reconstruction was staged in 1936, part of the tercentenary celebrations. He had included the place, in passing, in his novel Dexter Ward.

“In 1760 Joseph Curwen was virtually an outcast, suspected of vague horrors and daemoniac alliances which seemed all the more menacing because they could not be named, understood, or even proved to exist. […] Ostracised though he was, he did not lack for civic spirit of a sort. When the Colony House burned down, he subscribed handsomely to the lotteries by which the new brick one — still standing at the head of its parade in the old main street — was built in 1761. […] He replaced many of the books of the public library consumed in the Colony House fire…” — Lovecraft, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

* The Online Review of Rhode Island History has a new summer-time article on the “Exodus to the Shore: Resorts for Ordinary People”. The article offers some deep background context for Lovecraft’s own access to and enjoyment of the coastline.

* Talking of summer holidays, the Howard Days events in sizzling Texas have spurred a good deal of R.E. Howard activity, including online. I’ll hope to have a round-up of the Howard Days 2025 links in my next HPLinks. In the meanwhile, enjoy DMR’s new review of the biography Robert E. Howard: The Life and Times of a Texas Author.

* Pulpfest trails DocCon, the Doc Savage convention to be held in early August in Pittsburgh. Along the way, this long article usefully reveals that the… “We Are Doc Savage: A Documentary on Fandom — a feature-length documentary two years in production, that explores the history of Doc Savage fandom — [is] now available on DVD.”

* The 2025 conference poster “Resurrected Criminals, Time-Loops, and Faustian Bargains: The Speculative Edge of 1940s Film Noir” is freely available online, and finds that some of the approaches of 1940s noir… “draw from the narrative traditions of Weird Tales and the writings of H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith”

* New on YouTube, a long tour of the Lovecraftian in Bethesda’s chart-topping post-apocalyptic Fallout videogames… “The Fallout franchise has long maintained a Lovecraftian subplot, which I often call ‘The Dunwich Mystery'”.

* New from the University of Alicante, Spain, the book Vt pictura poesis: Literatura y arte en Amarica Latina y Espana (2025). Includes the chapter “A traves del polvo de plata: Visiones de la ciudad imaginaria en Ruben Dario y H.P. Lovecraft”. (‘Through silver dust: Views of the imaginary city in Ruben Dario and H.P. Lovecraft’). The chunky 722-page book is freely available online as a PDF, via the University repository.

* The Austrian educational studies journal Medienimpulse reviews The Last Day of Howard Phillips Lovecraft, in its translated form as Der letzte Tag des Howard Phillips Lovecraft, and finds the graphic novel could be used in the classroom. The review is freely available online.

* Officially free to download, the new book Approaching Xero: The SF Prehistory of Comics Fandom (2025). Donations are welcome, and will go into a long-running British fan-fund.

* And finally, what might be a second edition of the book How to Draw Cosmic Monsters: Create Scenes from H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, which Amazon UK now has as set to be published 2nd September 2025. I spotted this some years ago. Either it was never published until now, or the September release will be a second edition / reprint.


— End-quotes —

“… we went out on the flat roof and saw the thing in all its unlimited and unglassed magnificence. It was something mightier than the dreams of old-world legend — a constellation of infernal majesty — a poem in Babylonian fire! Added to the weird lights are the weird sounds of the port, where the traffick of all the world comes to a focus. Fog-horns, ships’ bells, the creak of distant windlasses — visions of far shores of India, where bright-plumed birds are roused to song by the incense of strange garden-girt pagodas, and gaudy-robed camel-drivers barter before sandal-wood taverns with deep-voiced sailors having the sea’s mystery in their eyes. Silks and spices, curiously-wrought ornaments of Bengal gold, and gods and elephants strangely carven in jade and carnelian.” — Lovecraft sees New York City at dusk from across the river, standing on Hart Crane’s rooftop, in 1924.

“The older part of this necropolis is on a hill, and as we wander’d among the hoary slate head-stones we feasted our eyes on many a gigantick elm or incredibly antient house. […] Edgar reveal’d an imagination of high quality, and upon one occasion call’d my attention to the inimitably Babylonian effect of a certain granite memorial of pyramidal outline, as glimps’d thro’ distant trees against the iridescent sunset.” — Lovecraft enjoys Amesbury in the company of the young boy Edgar Jacobs Davis, May 1923.

“Whether a renaissance of monarchy and beauty will restore our Western civilisation, or whether the forces of disintegration are already too powerful for even the fascist sentiment to check, none may yet say; but in the present moment of cynical world-unmasking between the pretence of the eighteen-hundreds and the ominous mystery of the decades ahead, we have at least a flash of the old pagan perspective and the old pagan clearness and honesty. And one idol lit up by that flash, seen fair and lovely on a dream-throne of silk and gold under a chryselephantine dome, is a shape of deathless grace not always given its due among groping mortals — the haughty, the unconquered, the mysterious, the luxurious, the Babylonian, the impersonal, the eternal companion of superiority and art — the type of perfect beauty and the brother of poetry — the bland, grave, competent, and patrician cat.” — Lovecraft, part of his talk “Cats & Dogs”.

The latter seems to place the origin of the domesticated and venerable cat even further back than Egypt, being ultimately “Babylonian” in Lovecraft’s eyes. Possibly Lovecraft was thinking of the only mention of cats in the Bible, where the author notes with distain that cats are allowed to sit on the idols of Babylonia (Baruch 6:22) — from the context, these must have been semi-domesticated ‘temple cats’.

HPLinks #42 – Florida, Lovecraft’s Last Day as animated series(?), NYC Lovecraft Festival, Arcade postcard and more…

20 Friday Jun 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Podcasts etc., REH, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #42.

I’m pleased to say I’ve survived installing the latest version of Windows 11. Not many do survive, it seems, judging by the dire headlines in the techie news outlets. But this was a special ‘superlite’ installer — no bloat, no Microsoft account, no adverts, no ‘apps’, no ‘your hardware is insufficient’, no forced updates, etc. And it’s the version after Microsoft’s many problems of the last nine months have (hopefully) been fixed. There were many roadblocks, but they were pushed through. It’s all faster and snappier than Windows 7, and even looks like Windows 7 (install Open Shell + StartAllBack, and change the wallpaper). Many bits of freeware now have better versions, or replacements if they no longer work (e.g. Text Cleaner becomes UnWrap 2.1, the old Explorer++ becomes the native Explorer + QTTabBar for persistent tabs). I’m still getting peripheral software installed, presets re-loaded, my Lovecraft caches indexed for keyword-search, and various small shoggoths are continually being encountered and squished… but another weekend and it’ll be done. Due to this intense activity, here is another shorter-than-usual weekly HPLinks, and with a postcard instead of the usual quotes. Thank you for your patience.

* Wormwoodiana has news of the new book Borderlands and Otherworlds (2025)…

“The essays discuss in particular supernatural fiction of the Nineteen Twenties, occult thrillers of the Thirties, and the English Fantastic in the Forties and Fifties.”

* New at the Cabinet Obscura blog, “Three “Weird Tales” Writers in Florida, 1933-34”.

* The French ‘BD’ (short graphic novel) Le dernier jour de Howard Phillips Lovecraft (‘The Last Day of Howard Phillips Lovecraft’) is reportedly to have an official English translation. It appeared in French at Halloween 2023.

This graphic-novel is also to have what might be an animated screen adaptation(?) in the hands of a substantial commercial studio… “BOOM! Studios Adapts The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft“. Hence the English translation, presumably. Unless the English translation is to appear as a series of ‘adapted’ floppy spinner-rack comic-books? It’s all rather unclear.

* Broadway World reports Radiotheatre to stage 14th Annual H.P. Lovecraft Festival, 23rd-27th July 2025 in Greenwich Village, New York City…

Now in its 22nd Season, the multi-award winning, critically acclaimed Radiotheatre brings a true American theatrical tradition to the stage….the live spoken word drama…only with 21st century technology to make it a truly unique experience. For their 14th Annual H.P. Lovecraft Festival, Radiotheatre presents “The Whisperer in Darkness” live including a great cast, original orchestral score, fantastic projections, and cinematic sound design.

* A new German podcast on YouTube has the editors discussing their essay collection Kulturelle Spiegelungen zwischen H. P. Lovecraft und Deutschland (a new book on Lovecraft and Germany). In German, but don’t forget that YouTube now has all sorts of new-fangled AI auto-translate.

* The R.E.H. Foundation has announced the 2025 Robert E. Howard Awards Winners, and I see there’s also now an online “What’s Up with REH?” panel recording from the Howard Days 2025 event.

* New on Archive.org, R.E. Howard’s poetry collection Singers In The Shadows, as a scan of the 1977 edition.

* Also new on Archive.org to download as a PDF, Lin Carter’s Dunsany paperback collection Beyond the Fields We Know (1972), as a good clear scan.

* Newly for sale at Honest Abe’s Pulp & Paper Emporium, “Dagon” in The Vagrant (1919), and the rather less expensive The Arkham Sampler Volume 1 Number 3 (special ‘Lovecraft photos issue’, 1985).

* And finally, new on eBay is this fine postcard of The Arcade in Providence, with a flanking store. Seen here in its 1900s prime, the Arcade was a key place in Lovecraft’s childhood. I recall he continued visiting after childhood, in order to have his hair cut. Note the tall ‘Lovecraft-alike man’ lurking between the columns, whom the colourist has done her best to make inconspicuous in the picture.

HPLinks #41 – Derleth’s portraits of the Kalems, Madness sketch, Ethnos article, Crumb, and more Doom…

10 Tuesday Jun 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Housekeeping, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #41.

A slightly smaller HPLinks this week, because I’m set to install Windows 11. Then there’s all the work that follows on from such a gigantic move to a new OS. Eeek! Don’t worry, though, it’s a ‘superlite’ version of the installer ISO with absolutely no bloat, junk, sign-in, apps, ads, privacy-invasion, forced updates, hardware requirements or other Microsoftie nonsense. Just the OS, and a fast stripped-down one at that. Being installed to a new SSD drive too. This seems the best way to go as Windows 10 dies and Windows 7 can no longer support local AI installs. I seriously considered the Linux OS for two weeks, but in the end… too much trouble to fathom/learn all its arcane ways, and also seemingly far too easy to break the OS just by trying out some new software. Thus I was pleased to discover the now-mature Windows 11 ‘lite’ and ‘superlite’ installers, in which the horror of 11 not just ‘suppressed a bit’ but actively ripped out. After install, my task will then be to make Windows 11 look as much like faithful ol’ Windows 7 as possible. I may be some time.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. He’s making available the out-of-print H.P. Lovecraft’s Favourite Horror Stories, Volume 1 under his own Sarnath POD and ebook imprint. He adds… “I will reprint volume 2 of this series in a month or so.” He also gives Derleth’s description of the people present at a September 1938 post-Lovecraft Kalem meeting, via Derleth’s newly transcribed journal for 1938. One example…

Arthur Leeds, an aging man betraying all the marks of faded gentility, with tired eyes, a well-trimmed moustache, iron grey hair standing out against his dark skin, an odd little old-fashioned wing collar contrasting his black coat, his neatly combed hair with the aspect of wetness and cleanliness.

It looks like this is the first time these descriptions have seen print. See Joshi’s post for more such vivid descriptions of the Kalems, in a long quote. Joshi adds, re: Lovecraft and Kalem mentions by Derleth… “I will eagerly await the examination of the journal of 1939 (which David E. Schultz has already transcribed)”.

* New at Project Gutenberg this week, Arkham House: The First 20 Years 1939-1959 in what appears to be plaintext free of OCR errors.

* From the HPLHS and new to me, their Mountains of Madness Sketch Replica…

* Currently on eBay, a catalogue for a 1979 ‘Lovecraft art’ exhibition in France.

* New in Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology (June 2025), “Cthulhu Anthropology: H.P. Lovecraft and the Discipline of Difference”. Freely available online. The first half of the article is largely a mix of academic obeisance and ‘Lovecraft for beginners’, but the second half (starting at “The Other as Danger? Lovecraft in Anthropology”) has some meat. Though the author is regrettably unaware of the specific non-Boas currents in anthropology which Lovecraft was tapping into, other than making one glancing and unelaborated mention of James Frazer…

Sir James Frazer’s ‘The Golden Bough’ plays a major role [in The Call of Cthulhu]

This may be news to S.T. Joshi, who states in his book on Lovecraft’s philosophical thinking and intellectual influences that…

I cannot see that Lovecraft was much influenced by Frazer’s ‘Golden Bough’, for all the frequent citations of it in his stories” (H.P. Lovecraft, The Decline of the West, p. 24)

Here is Lovecraft stating the matter for himself…

I might say, with all proper modesty, that the subject of anthropology and folklore is by no means strange to me. I took a good deal of it at college, and am familiar with most of the standard authorities such as [Sir Edward Burnett] Tylor, [Sir John] Lubbock, [Sir James] Frazer, [Jean de] Quatrefages [de Breau], [Margaret] Murray, [Henry Fairfield] Osborn, [Sir Arthur] Keith, [Marcellin] Boule, [Grafton] G. Elliot Smith, and so on.” — Lovecraft, The Whisperer in Darkness.

All British, except for an American and two Frenchmen. The one American was a very prominent eugenicist who had studied at Cambridge University in England. One of the Frenchmen was a member of the Royal Society of London. The Anglophile Lovecraft was evidently looking largely to Britain for his reading on such matters, and the British despised the American anthropologists. In 1919 Lovecraft had also read deeply in the anthropology of religion, as the field then stood, and this evidently formed many of his enduring ideas. Jean de Quatrefages seems to have been essentially a biologist, and was the first to suggest that new races might be formed by inter-breeding. Marcellin Boule gave us the view of the ancient Neanderthal type as likely to have been brutish, hairy and ape-like.

* A new in-depth biography of another key American outsider creative, Robert Crumb, may be of interest to Tentaclii readers.

Also, note that some 170-pages of Crumb’s serious / biographical / historical comics are set to be newly collected as Existential Comics: Selected Stories 1979 – 2004. So far as I know, he never did anything related to Lovecraft, but I welcome being corrected on that point.

* In Amsterdam at the Black Cat Library on 21st June 2025, a Soiree Lovecraft event with lecture. Seemingly to launch a new novel, which at a guess may feature Lovecraft the man? Booking now.

* And finally, a video of “All the Lovecraftian references in Doom: The Dark Ages”. In Spanish, but YouTube now has AI auto-dubbing into English.


— End-quotes —

[As a creative writer] “I am a paradox anyway — for there have been periods when astronomy, geography, physics, chemistry, & anthropology meant more to me than any form of pure literature or aesthetics.” — Lovecraft to Clark Ashton Smith, December 1929.

“An abridgement of Frazer’s Golden Bough is valuable as a compendium of odd folk-beliefs” — Lovecraft’s “Suggestions for a Reading Guide” (1936). With the faint implication that was all it was good for.

“I believe a Georgian doorway has more real significance for an ordinary American than an Inca masque or Italian primitive has. In order to make the Inca or Renaissance object of equal significance — equal relationship, that is, to the actual experience & tradition stream of the beholder — one would have to take exhaustive & specialised courses in Peruvian anthropology & cinquecento art & life. It is childish to imagine that the layman can have any real knowledge whatsoever of the life & feelings of the various cultures represented by museum objects, so that the illusion of reaching the heart of the past through such symbols is sheer moonshine. The little aesthete who raves over Etruscan vases & Minoan goldsmith work is really — apart from the element of abstract art appreciation — doing nothing more than playing around in the sand with pretty pebbles for which he invents vapid little stories. He is not half as close to a knowledge of the real thought & feeling of ancient Etruria or Crete as is the historian & archaeologist, whom he tends to despise as a dull, prosy old soul. [And in some more leftist-minded people such as Long,] certain theories of life & art [also] makes you dangerously liable to overlap into the zones of frivolous mock-under understanding & merely derivative experience, without your fully realising the transition.” — Lovecraft to F.B. Long, February 1931.

HPLinks #39 – join the Esoteric Order, Lovecraft’s Dark Enlightenment, sculpting Lovecraft, Dunwich revived, Mayfair magazine, and more…

25 Sunday May 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in AI, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #39.

* S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated (19th May 2025). Among many other items, he is currently seeking a new acolyte to join his very own secret Esoteric Order. He also notes the ‘zine…

Nightlands no. 3 (Autumn 2024), containing my article ‘H.P. Lovecraft and Weird Art’ (an article I wrote years ago as liner notes for an album that never appeared)

* In German, a philosophy journal article whose fragmented title might best translate into English as ‘The Dark Enlightenment of H.P. Lovecraft’, from Weimarer Beitrrge No. 68 (2022, freely available online 2025)…

… he develops an atheistic-materialistic philosophy not only in his literature, but also in essays and especially his extensive correspondence, which can be understood as a “dark enlightenment”. What Adorno and Horkheimer do in their dialectics of the Enlightenment, based on de Sade and Nietzsche also applies, ‘mutatis mutandis’, for Lovecraft. His work unfolds an “intransigent criticism of practical reason” and its agent, the too “self-evident subject”. [Only by understanding the] basic positions of Lovecraft’s philosophy, as developed in essays and letters, does his poetics of form [become clear and] open us up to the full understanding of his literature. His works also provide directional concepts for the philosophy and philology of ‘the eerie’. […] Against this background [I engage in] a reading of his “The Color Out of Space” (1927)

* From Russia, “Preserving the Author’s Style in Translating The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath“ (April 2025). A short conference paper, freely available online. Partly in English.

* Deep Cuts considers the very late “Of Gold and Sawdust” (1975), by Lovecraft’s friend Samuel Loveman.

* “Making an Ultra-Realistic Portrait of H.P. Lovecraft” via 3D digital sculpting and texturing. A link from a few years back, but I don’t think I’ve linked to this ‘making of’ page before. Only to the results.

* New on Archive.org, a pack of three Historic Males SD 1.5 LoRAs including Lovecraft. These are free character add-ons for generating images with Stable Diffusion 1.5. Historical personage add-ons having been last week removed from CivitAI (the main Stable Diffusion download website) along with living celebrities. I guess CivitAI didn’t have either the manpower or the cultural savvy to know if a celeb was dead or alive, and thus they junked the lot.

Tip: you may want to put “Spock” in the negative prompt, if the LoRA wants to veer towards Star Trek’s Captain Spock. That seems to restore Lovecraft’s face. The above is an Img2Img style transform + the LoRA, starting from a Bondware Poser 13 render.

* Feuilleton has lengthy comments on the ‘history of Lovecraft in comics’ academic paper (linked to in my previous HPLinks). Reading this history has spurred him to finish his own unfinished adaptation of The Dunwich Horror… “This, then, is my major project for the next twelve months. The book as a whole will take at least this long to finish”.

* The Alan Moore World blog has “Lovecraft was an American William Blake”…

In writing about Lovecraft, as I’m doing at the moment, I want to understand where he was, to become him, as it were. We’re both pulp writers trying to express our vision of the truth. In this current book Yuggoth Cultures, I’m trying to divine that knowledge.” (Moore, 1993).

Sadly, it appears that his Yuggoth Cultures was left in a London taxi-cab and thus lost. Not sure how the book overlaps with Moore’s comic-book series Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths, but I’ll take it on trust that Alan Moore World knows that the published comics and the lost book are different things.

* I missed noticing this event, but managed to snag the poster at a small size. A ‘Lovecraft festival’ on the videogame service Steam, which has now been-and-gone.

But from this I was able to track down the larger and more appealing artwork (same artist, no artist credited) that the poster was partly made from…

* Bounding Into Comics reviews the new Re-Animator movie 4K UHD set, and itemises the many additional extras newly packaged with the movie.

* The publisher Dark Horse is preparing to ship a ‘special hardcover’ edition of Richard Corben’s “Lovecraft and backwoods terror” graphic-novel Rat God. 184 pages with “remastered lettering”. Unfortunately it’s also being coloured, having originally been in greyscale. Due in the autumn of 2025…

Terrible things stalk the forests outside Arkham in this chilling original tale from comics master Richard Corben.

* Viking (an offshoot of Penguin Books, last I heard) is reported in the book trade as being set to publish Penguin Weird Fiction later in 2025… “an anthology of stories featuring H.P. Lovecraft, Edith Wharton and Arthur Conan Doyle, among others”. The advance notice makes it sounds like the stories feature these authors as characters, but I suspect it’s not that interesting. Just another cash-in reprint, I expect.

* New on Archive.org, a set of Mayfair magazine (for several decades a leading mass-market British equivalent to the U.S. Playboy), which search shows had in its February 1970 issue a reprint of Lovecraft’s “From Beyond”. George Underwood was the artist…

* Another new batch of short SF/fantasy readings at LibriVox. This time around there are four by Lovecraft’s one-time protege Henry Kuttner, all public domain. Also, I didn’t realise any stories by Marion Zimmer Bradley had slipped into the public domain. But at least one of her stories must have, since she’s in this collection.

* And finally, a reminder to those who may be visiting Providence this summer, that I have a free Lovecraft’s Providence Map online.


— End-quotes —

“”Polaris” is rather interesting in that I wrote it in 1918, BEFORE I had ever read a word of Lord Dunsany’s. Some find it hard to believe this, but I can give not only assurance but absolute proof that it is so.” — Lovecraft to Dwyer, March 1927.

“As to the charge of modernism against me because of my predilection for Poe & Dunsany, why, Sir, I refute it!” — Lovecraft to Kleiner December 1919 (he instead hails his predecessors in the 18th century gothic, discovered and read in his childhood attic).

“When I think of Dunsany, it is in terms of “The Gods of the Mountain”, “Bethmoora”, “Poltarnees, Beholder of Ocean”, “The City of Never”, “The Fall of Babbulkund”, “In the Land of Time”, and “Idle Days on the Yann”.” — Lovecraft to Fritz Leiber, November 1936.

“… a few weird [stage] dramas such as Dunsany’s ‘Gods of the Mountain’ & ‘Night at an Inn’ have demonstrated how a natural expert can weave horror, dread, & mounting tension with skilfully managed dialogue.” — Lovecraft to Natalie H. Wooley, March 1935.

“I infinitely prefer Dunsany to Cabell — he was a genuine magic & freshness which the weary sophisticate seems to lack” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, August 1926.

“Imaginative artists have been few, and always unappreciated. [William] Blake is woefully undervalued. Poe would never have been understood had not the French taken the pains to exalt and interpret him. Dunsany has met with nothing but coldness or lukewarm praise.” (Lovecraft, “In Defence of Dagon”, January 1921).

HPLinks #37 – Fungal horrors, Lovecraft’s lexis, Spanish Lovecraft filmfest, Lovecraft in strings, Lovecraft tarot, and more…

07 Wednesday May 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #37.

* The Palgrave Handbook on Fungal Horror in Popular Culture has a call for submissions, though with a rather tight deadline of 1st June 2025. Edited from Sweden in English, the forthcoming book has “33 commissioned chapters” but apparently now seeks… “approximately 10 additional original essays” of 7,000 words. The book will be academic but broad in scope, covering…

popular culture such as, but not limited to, literature, film, television, comics/graphic novels, computer games, art, and memes.

* New from Italy, the essay “Alice in Borderland and Lovecraft: liminal worlds, mental abysses and the nihilism of the unknown” (2025). In Italian, but here linked in a Google Translate version (should work). Examines the Alice in Borderland Netflix TV series (adapting a Japanese manga comic) via Lovecraft.

* New from Brazil and under full Creative Commons Attribution, an article which translates as “Lexis and the Construction of Cosmicism in the Works of H.P. Lovecraft: a corpus linguistics perspective”.

* Spain’s major International Fantastic Film and Terror Festival (‘PUFA’) returns for its second year, with the 2025 festival… “dedicated to the literary universe of H.P. Lovecraft”. 30th June to 6th July 2025.

* Creative orchestral news from the Ukraine, 6th May 2025…

At the end of the concert program, ‘After reading Lovecraft’ by contemporary Ukrainian composer Oleksandr Rodin was played in Kharkiv for the first time. The audience heard mysterious reflections of Lovecraft’s horror stories and philosophy, evoked through the sounds of a string orchestra. […] Kharkiv Music Festival took place at Kharkiv National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, one of the safest places in the city and located just 19 miles south from the Russian border.

* The HPLHS Store’s “new to old” listing page pops up a H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival – Best of 2023 DVD. So I guess it’s new, or perhaps new stock?

* At RPG web-a-zine Noble Knight, a new “Publisher Spotlight: H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society” plus a mini-interview.

* A new Italian ebook I mondi del Professor Challenger : politiche, tecno-logiche, ambienti (‘The Worlds of Professor Challenger: politics, technology, environments). Being the latest #88 (2025) issue of the book-a-journal Studia Humaniora. Professor Challenger being the Conan Doyle adventurer character. Freely available for download as a Creative Commons .PDF (see bottom of page).

* Talking of reflections on Conan Doyle… new to me is the story collection Sherlock Holmes: Adventures in the Realms of H.P. Lovecraft Volume One (2023) and Volume Two (2023). A mega anthology featuring Will Murray, among others. Which is a good sign, though the reviews for volume one are variable and there are none for volume two. Sounds like the books might not suit Sherlock purists.

* A new call for submissions to Gramarye, the journal of the venerable Chichester Centre for Fairy Tales, Fantasy and Speculative Fiction, based here in the UK and the first such centre. Deadline: 21st September 2025.

* A new free reading of the Solomon Kane tale “Red Shadows” by Robert E. Howard, read by the fine and increasingly prolific Josh Greenwood. Use the freeware MediaHuman Youtube to MP3 converter to get it without the YouTube adverts.

* SFcrowsnest this week reviews the book An Informal History Of The Pulp Magazines by Ron Goulart.

* New to me, The H.P. Lovecraft Tarot | Second Revised Edition (2002). Never heard of it before. Time for a third and AI-enhanced edition, perhaps?

* The remastered Elder Scrolls: Oblivion videogame has added an apparently new official “Side Quest With A Lovecraftian Twist”…

‘A Shadow Over Hackdirt’ stands out for its chilling vibe and gripping tale. This quest pulls inspiration from H.P. Lovecraft, dropping you into the unsettling town of Hackdirt to investigate a merchant’s missing daughter. The place feels off from the start—quiet streets, strange locals, and an eerie sense that something’s watching. As you dig deeper, you uncover … [spoilers]

Oblivion was the successor to the all-time classic Morrowind. I played Oblivion to the end in the original, and I’d suggest it’s well worth considering in its big new ‘remastered’ blockbuster version. Blander and more generic than a re-play of Morrowind + mods, but very enjoyable as fantasy RPGs go.

* And finally, AI is getting startlingly good at precisely geo-locating the exact spot an image was made, just by closely examining what it shows. Astral Code has a long article and the tests to prove this, and it appears that even a photo of some random beach sand can be good enough. Could this emerging technology help Lovecraftian and pulp author researchers identify the ‘until-now unknown’ location of historical-biographical images? One wonders if it might also work on old postcard images of places?


— End-quotes —

“I have always been fond of maps & geographical details (I’ve drawn a map of ‘Arkham’ to keep my local references straight), & my lifelong antiquarianism has caused me to lay zestful stress on historic backgrounds & traditional architectural minutiae.” — Lovecraft to Fritz Leiber, November 1936.

“In the Boston North End [the] old tangled alleys have now been swept away. […] I remember when the precise location of the artist’s house in the story [“Pickman’s Model”] was hit by the razing process. It was in 1927, and Donald Wandrei […] was visiting the East for the first time. He wanted to see the site of the story, and I was very glad to take him to it — thinking that its sinister quaintness would even surpass his expectations. Imagine my dismay, then, at finding nothing but a blank open space where the tottering old houses and zigzag alley-windings had been!” — Lovecraft to Duane Rimel, February 1934.

“For the past year I have had such a knowledge of Paris that I’ve felt tempted to advertise my services as a guide without ever having seen the damn place — this erudition coming from a ghost-writing job for a goof who wanted to be publicly eloquent about a trip from which he was apparently unable to extract any concrete first-hand impressions. I based my study on maps, guide-books, travel folders, descriptive volumes, & (above all) pictures — the cards secured from you [Galpin] forming the cream of the latter. Fixing the layout of the city in my mind, & calculating what vistas ought to be visible from certain points (pictures seen under a magnifying-glass furnish a splendid substitute for first-hand vistas), I cooked up a travelogue which several Paris-wise readers have almost refused to believe was written by one never within 3,000 miles of the place.” — Lovecraft to Galpin, November 1933.


HPLinks #35 – a different Alcestis, Hobbes and other philosophy, magic detectives, Brown, modernism, Moebius, pop-ups and more…

24 Thursday Apr 2025

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HPLinks #35.

* The HPLHS Store now has the new Alcestis book version in stock…

… not only had the pair of them written a new prologue for the piece, but also presented after that a version of the play itself that was substantially different from other known translations, so we consulted with a classics scholar. In the end, instead of the lovely but simple pamphlet containing Sonia and Lovecraft’s version of Alcestis, we originally intended to produce, we are creating a casebound volume containing an explication of all of the new discoveries about this piece in the form of a paper by Helios Editor/Publisher N.R. Jenzen-Jones and classics scholar Carman Romano; Sonia and Lovecraft’s edition of Alcestis, complete with their prologue, and newly commissioned illustrations by several of our favorite artists.

* “Music for a blind idiot god: towards a weird ecology of noise” (2024). On “the horror of noise” in Lovecraft and others. Freely available for download.

* In the latest issue of the open-access journal Diaphonia, “Uma interlocucao entre estado hobbesiano com “O mito de Cthulhu” na literatura de H.P. Lovecraft”. It’s an awkward title to translate but, with reference to the abstract, this would about cover it: ‘A discussion between the absolutist Hobbesian state and the totalitarian sovereignty of Cthulhu as described in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”. Freely available online.

* A new contribution on ‘The Weird’ from Graham Harman, a leading philosopher in the field, “Weird Fallibilism: Feyerabend, Lakatos, and Justified True Belief” (2024). Freely available for download. Drawing on Lovecraft, he suggests the description of ‘weird fallibilism’ for a situation in which… “1) truth never corresponds to reality, and (2) objects never correspond to their own qualities”.

* A review in the new edition of Mythlore of the academic book Magic, Magicians and Detective Fiction: Essays on Intersecting Modes of Mystery (2025). The review is freely available online.

* The new academic book Deviant Landscapes: A Journey to Exotic and Imaginary Places and Spaces (2025). Intriguing title, but the only somewhat relevant chapter appears to be “Atmospheric Narrative Landscape, Stimmung and Place-Making in Edgar Allan Poe’s “Silence — A Fable””. Stimmung is German and means broadly ‘mood/atmosphere’.

* The recent visit by S.T. Joshi made me aware of the wider Weird Fiction Collections at Brown University. It’s not just the Lovecraft letters.

* Brown University Master of Fine Arts student Roman Johnson is reported to have been given the latest S.T. Joshi Fellowship by Brown University. No details yet about his research topic or aim.

* A Masters dissertation for Texas State University, “Our Eyes are Yet to Open: H.P. Lovecraft and Modernist Horror” (2023). Freely available online. The abstract shows a clear focus and the author examined the essays and letters as well as three tales…

examines Lovecraft’s essays and correspondence to highlight his concerns and philosophical perspectives with his modernist contemporaries. [A study of three tales shows that] Lovecraft’s fiction exhibits various themes and techniques associated with literary modernism more prominently than one might initially assume. [Integrating aspects of early modernism] allowed him to express his fears and philosophical viewpoints about modernist concerns through terrifying and cosmic imagery.

* Robert Silverberg on HPL’s “gloriously overwrought” Shadow Out Of Time, an article extracted to HTML from Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine (December 2005).

* Now on Google Books with a preview, the new biography Robert E. Howard: The Life and Times of a Texas Author.

* In the field of vintage comics appreciation, Deep Cuts has a new long post. Finding that there was an Italian edition of the Heavy Metal magazine ‘Lovecraft special’. The images shown reveal that the cover used an enlarged and coloured version of that issue’s fine b&w Moebius drawing. The long post has exhaustive details of the different editions, and many interior page and details. Here’s a good cover image I snagged from eBay, where collectors will still find several copies of the Italian edition for sale.

* Newly listed on eBay UK, Lovecraft’s Selected Letters: 1929-1931 from a UK seller and at a sensible £20 price. Though sadly there’s no ‘Click & Collect’ on offer, or I’d have had it. Still, some Tentaclii reader (with a big and accessible letter-box, able to take chunky books) may want it at that price.

* And finally, also on eBay and new to me, the Necronomicon Pop-up Book (2017) by ‘Skinner’ and Rosston Meyer…


— End-quotes —

“144. Hideous book glimpsed in ancient shop — never seen again.” — from Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book of story germs and ideas.

“To Whomsoever May Open This Book: This is set down as a Warning to you, Sir or Madam, that you are not to open this Book beyond the Place mark’d by a red Riband. It wou’d be better for you to throw the whole Book unopen’d into the fire; but being unable to do so myself, I cannot hope that you will. I do nevertheless adjure you to look nowhere in it beyond the Riband, lest you lose yourself to this World, Body and Soul; for truly, it is a Tomb for the Living.” — Lovecraft pens an original ‘book warning’, in his best circa-1780 style, in a letter to Morton of March 1937.


HPLinks #34 – Providence, Witch House, cosmic DC, Dexter Ward and more…

16 Wednesday Apr 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #34.

* In the new April 2025 issue of the academic journal Horror Studies ($ paywall), the lead article is “Dark Epiphany: The Lovecraftian in twentieth-century existential literature”.

* A call for papers from the British Fantasy Society. Their BFS Journal plans a special issue on ‘War in Fantasy’. I’m guessing that an article on “Dagon” and “The Temple” as wartime stories might have a chance? Or perhaps Derleth’s elaboration of the Mythos as a cosmic battleground?

* Newly published, issue 25 of the scholarly journal The Green Book: Writings on Irish Gothic, Supernatural, and Fantastic literature. A special issue on the author Le Fanu, it includes an overlooked poem by him and “a recently rediscovered monograph of Le Fanu written by his publisher”. Also a topographical article on his associations with places in Dublin.

* HorrorBabble has a new free audiobook of Lovecraft’s “The Dreams in the Witch House”. This is a new 2025 recording and also includes subtitles (presumably for those who like to ‘read along’, or perhaps who need to see words spelled as they are spoken?).

* New on YouTube, Ray visits “H.P. Lovecraft Locations in Providence, RI”. He offers a swift 13 minute tour, made with a more-or-less steady camera and deftly edited.

* S.T. Joshi has also been in Providence, and his latest blog post is “A Trip to Providence”. Joshi dived into the immense Clark Ashton Smith Papers at Brown, which he catalogued forty-five years ago, but which he can now survey with a more experienced eye. He found, among other items, more unpublished letters (now destined for the “forthcoming edition of Smith’s Miscellaneous Letters”), and nine unpublished juvenile stories.

* Joshi’s new blog post also notes that the Best Adventures of Solar Pons is appearing in two paperback volumes, with the first having already appeared. These are the Sherlock-alike stories penned by August Derleth. Looks very affordable and the tales are something I have wanted to read for a while now, but… at present Amazon UK is iffy about shipping to the UK and there’s no eBay listing.

* New this week. “From Beyond: Five DC Titles that Scratch that Cosmic Horror Itch”. It’s a glossy listicle, but one from DC Comics itself. As such it’s a useful survey of Lovecraftian themes in their titles, made even more useful by good page illustrations from the comics discussed (DC being notoriously touchy about others showing their interior artwork).

* Talking of comics, some readers may be interested in the newly published book Drawn to the Stacks: Essays on Libraries, Librarians and Archives in Comics and Graphic Novels (March 2025). Apparently the first such book on the topic. The contents list suggests it is heavily and predictably leftist, but also that it has a number of essays addressing specific weird and supernatural titles. Also of note are the new books Horror Comics and Religion: Essays on Framing the Monstrous and the Divine (2024), and Supervillains: The Significance of Evil in Superhero Comics (2025).

* The new ‘post-apocalypse in the English countryside’ videogame, Atomfall, apparently has a touch of Lovecraft. The indie British-made game is described by DigitalSpy as a blend of…

Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham – whose name is given to Wyndham village in the game – and [the 1970s British TV series] Survivors, with some Wicker Man thrown in, and a bit of eldritch flair akin to something from H.P. Lovecraft’s The Colour out of Space.

* A new free reading of a long ‘El Borak’ desert adventure tale by R.E. Howard. “Hawk of the Hills” runs just over two hours, and has a good narrator.

* Robert E. Howard Days 2025: Events Schedule for June 2025. This year’s theme is ‘100 Years of Robert E. Howard’.

* Also R.E. Howard related, I note a minor update for the Stable Diffusion LORA plug-in Stygia, now at version 1.2. Designed for generating background images suitable for Conan tales set in Stygia or similar. These early (and arguably the most ‘creative’) SD releases are now very well supplied with LORAs and the tide is ebbing. Thus from now on I shall probably only mention Lovecraft / R.E. Howard / 1930s-noir SD LORAs in HPLinks — rather than in their own post.

* Talking of AI, AI 2027 is a dedicated and new ‘future scenario’ website, which actually goes out to 2030. Gripping, detailed, very lengthy and fairly plausible stuff which arises from serious think-tanking and war-gaming. Possibly of interested to Lovecraftians, in terms of the competing visions of future-AI as a blind tentacular all-devouring Lovecraftian monster, or a benign super-shoggoth that will “advance civilization by decades in a year or two”.

* And finally, I see from a current eBay listing there was a 1974 Signet mass-market U.S. paperback reprint of Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, although this was “abridged”(?) and the book padded by Derleth with several other tales by other authors. New to me…


— End-quotes —

“One long-destroyed tale [I wrote as a boy] was of twin brothers — one murders the other, but conceals the body, & tries to live the life of both — appearing in one place as himself, & elsewhere as his victim. (Resemblance had been remarkable). He meets sudden death (lightning) when posing as the dead man — is identified by a scar, & the secret finally revealed by his diary.” — Lovecraft to Kleiner, February 1916.

“[Dexter Ward] may get to 75 pages or so before its natural and logical conclusion appears. It centres around old Providence…” — Lovecraft to Donald Wandrei, February 1927.

“… of the tale now drawing toward its close [in its writing], and which I shall call either The Case of Charles Dexter Ward or The Madness out of Time. Like Midas of old, curs’d by the turning to gold of everything he touch’d, I am this year curs’d by the turning into a young novel of every story I begin. [… Ward ended up as 51,500 words, but… ] the typing of manuscripts of this length is utterly beyond the powers of a feeble old gentleman who loses interest in a tale the moment he completes it.” — Lovecraft to Frank Belknap Long, February 1927.


HPLinks #31 – letters for sale, astronomy talk, REH, “From Beyond” filmed, Great Old Ones return, and one last Houdini ‘miracle escape’ (perhaps)…

26 Wednesday Mar 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #31.

* For sale, “Three autograph letters from Lovecraft to Clark Ashton Smith, 1929”. Newly at Honest Abe’s pulp and paper impoundment, but they could be liberated for a mere third-of-a-bitcoin. In one of these Lovecraft observes that…

Today neither Poe nor Baudelaire could expect the slightest hearing in a standard magazine.

* New on YouTube, a reading of “The People of the Pit” (1918) by A. Merritt, Since the tale was a precursor to the famous Lovecraft-fave The Moon Pool of the same year, it seems highly likely that Lovecraft encountered this story at some point. It’s here read, across 46 minutes, by the very able Josh Greenwood.

* On YouTube, a recording of “When The Stars Are Right: H.P. Lovecraft and Astronomy, a one-hour talk by Edward Guimont at the Seagrave Observatory, 5th October 2024. Starts at 2.00 minutes in, when the audio improves greatly.

* New and free in open-access, the academic book Fear of Aging: Old Age in Horror Fiction and Film (2025). Includes the chapter “‘With Strange Aeons Even Death May Die’: Aging in the World of Cthulhu”. Meaning in Lovecraft’s Mythos, not the wider mythos, games, movies etc.

* New from the University of North Texas Press, the chunky new hardcover book Robert E. Howard: The Life and Times of a Texas Author. Released 15th March 2025, apparently. It’s on Amazon UK already but is oddly listed in the “Paranormal” category, and it seems only Amazon US is able to ship it to the UK.

* The Robert E. Howard Foundation Press report that they are now shipping new “Ultimate Editions” of the letters.

* And there’s a further rich haul of R.E. Howard, in the latest LibriVox Ghost and Horror Collection #78. Public-domain readings of four REH tales including “The Skull in the Stars”. Also one by August Derleth.

* New on Archive.org, Mad Dreams And Monsters: The Art Of Phil Tippett and Tippett Studio.

* Some New York City readers may be interested in Syd Mead: Future Pastime, a large retrospective exhibition of the paintings by the science-fiction master. Being staged at a venue near Madison Square Gardens, New York City, and open from 27th March – 21st May 2025.

* An open-access / Creative Commons Attribution book review in Spanish, of El Gabinete Magico: Libro de las bibliotecas imaginarias (2023) (‘The Magic Cabinet: A Book of Imaginary Libraries’). The review is in HTML, and thus easy enough to auto-translate. The book is the…

product of almost thirty years of reading” and writing, distilled into “seventy-five entries”, a book in which “a tremendous amount of work is crystallized, tracing sources and organizing data”… “As an additional tool, the work’s name index, arranged in double columns and with a smaller font size, contains fifty-four tight pages that include the names of the writers and literary works, characters, films, articles, stories, and poems cited, not excluding the implicitly alluded references, identified in parentheses, and the authors or works where the aforementioned characters are located, preceded by an arrow. In this way, the interested reader can independently track down a specific writer or character in imaginary libraries, among other information.

Given this amount of effort, it seems curious Lovecraft is never mentioned in the book (I have access to a copy that can be searched). One would have thought that “The Shadow Out of Time”, at the least, would have merited a passing mention.

* I spotted another eBay scan of a postcard that may be of use to Lovecraftian RPG gamers, as a ‘vintage’ game prop…

U.S. Navy Hospital Corps training lab, Newport, Rhode Island.

* Here in the UK, “Filming set to begin on new horror film”. Billed as… “a respectful and faithful adaptation” of “From Beyond” by H.P. Lovecraft and with some substantial acting names attached to the project. But also…

stretching the boundaries of the genre with modern, scientific concepts” and modernising the tale… “a physics researcher tracks down her disturbed mentor to stop an experiment that could rip open a portal to a dimension of unimaginable horrors.

* Veteran Lovecraftian band The Great Old Ones release their new Lovecraftian album Lands Of Azathoth on 27th March 2025.

* Did you think the Fanac Fan History project had come to an abrupt halt? Nope, it’s just that the Site Update History has moved to a new URL. Today’s additions, one sees, include the [ERB] Burroughs Bulletin #23 (New Series). Lots more scans of ye olde skool fanzines to discover, and all free. Dig in.

* The Cancer of Superstition has supposedly been “found” and was due to be published as a new book on 24th March 2025. Paper only, and I guess it should be arriving in the mail about now for the pre-order buyers. Probably best to wait to see what the reaction to the actual book is on the Houdini forums, before ordering, I’d suggest.

* And finally, an excellent new March 2025 reading of Lovecraft’s “Cool Air” from The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast. The very listenable voice of Josh Greenwood reminds me a little of the great Gordon Gould, but with more rumble and bounce. There’s an advert and intro, then the story. The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast is definitely one worth following.


— End-quotes —

“Most of my nearly 43 years in New-England I have spent in semi-numbness & shivering from the rarely-interrupted cold […] as you can well appreciate from remembering [how] the poor old man shiver’d in Cleveland back in [19]’22, when the 5 o’clock lake breeze began to rattle the library windows!” — Lovecraft to Galpin, June 1933, delighting that he at last has reliable steam-heat in his rooms (he had moved to 66 College Street, and a house supplied with abundant heat by the adjacent boiler-room of the John Hay Library).

“At about 12:30 a.m. I was seated at my table writing when a curious & persistent popping or crackling outdoors arrested my attention. Lifting the dark curtain & peering out, I beheld a red world as light as day, with the falling snowflakes glittering weirdly. Seeking the source of the uncanny glare, I repaired to a north window. There, in full view, was the most impressive sight my eyes have ever beheld. Where that evening had stood the unoccupied Chapman house, recently sold & undergoing repairs, was now a titanic pillar of roaring, living flame amidst the deserted night — reaching into the illimitable heavens & lighting the country for miles around. The heat was intense — even here in the house — & the glare was stupendous. […] A high east wind was blowing, & the sparks flew freely, but ice-coated roofs saved the neighbourhood.” — Lovecraft to Kleiner, February 1920.

“And it is recorded that in the Elder Times, Om Oris, mightiest of the wizards, laid crafty snare for the demon Avaloth, and pitted dark magic against him; for Avaloth plagued the earth with a strange growth of ice and snow that crept as if alive, ever southward, and swallowed up the forests and the mountains. And the outcome of the contest with the demon is not known; but wizards of that day maintained that Avaloth, who was not easily discernible, could not be destroyed save by a great heat, the means whereof was not then known, although certain of the wizards foresaw that one day it should be. Yet, at this time the ice fields began to shrink and dwindle and finally vanished; and the earth bloomed forth afresh.” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, 1935.

“I literally don’t know what it is to be too hot. The hotter it gets, the more energy I seem to have — mental and physical alike. I perspire freely, but am comfortable for all that I can relish temperatures of 97° and 98°, and never want it cooler than 80°. Of course, I don’t know how I’d be in those inland regions [of the USA] where the summer temperature gets up around 120° — but judging from the available evidence I could stand it better than most.” — Lovecraft to Robert E. Howard, October 1935.


HPLinks #30 – Dragon-Fly, insectile Lovecraft, weird spaces and landscapes, dead goths, AI Shadow trailer, Barry’s Library, and more…

19 Wednesday Mar 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Picture postals, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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HPLinks #30.

* On eBay, “two issues of Barlow’s The Dragon-fly, 1935 and 1936. The listing offers some interior pictures.

* New in open-access, the Routledge book The Insectile and the Deconstruction of the Non/Human (2023)… “tracks the insectile across the archives of psychoanalysis, seventeenth century still-life painting, novels from the nineteenth century to the present day, and post-1970s film.” Includes the chapter “The Insectile Informe: H.P. Lovecraft and the Deliquescence of Form”…

What resonates not only throughout Lovecraft’s work, but also across the scholarship establishing and legitimising him as a writer stretching his ear towards the non/in/anti-human, is the discourse of the valorisation of form: ‘man’ — the ultimate apparition of form— emboldened against the murmur, the buzzzzzzzzz of a background without form.

* A new open-access book from Italy, in Italian. In translation the title is Geometries of Terror: architectural spaces and weird literature (February 2025). Includes, in Italian…

   — The Localization of the Supernatural Between Weird and Modernism

   — Howard Phillips Lovecraft’s “The Tomb” and the Representation of Places of the Unknown

   — The Word and the Void: Ghostly Spaces in Western Literature

   — The Architecture of the Unconscious: Hauntings, Places and Non-Places in the Works of Robert Aickman

The book is under Creative Commons Non-commercial, thus translations for a non-profit ‘zine or blog are possible.

* The open-access Journal of the Short Story in English has a new special issue on ‘Creative and Critical Responses to Landscape and Temporality in Short Fiction’ (2024). Includes “Fragmented Temporality, Digression and Experiments in Consciousness Representation: Arthur Machen’s “The White People””.

* Leslie Klinger, talks about his annotated books in a new podcast interview, including his two hefty volumes of annotated Lovecraft.

* I’ve newly found a postcard of the “Dunwich Woods”. Actually of the English Dunwich, perhaps circa the 1920s, but it could easily be from Lovecraft’s Dunwich. Possibly of use to RPG gamers, as part of a prop pack?

“Dunwich Woods”

* The editors of the Cardiff University open-access journal Studies in Gothic Fiction have issued a February 2025 official notice — they have suspended activities and are no longer accepting submissions. The seventh and final issue was themed ‘The Popular and the Weird: H.P. Lovecraft and Twenty-First-Century Adaptation’, and is still available online for now.

* More Lovecraft and modern philosophy. In the Italian PhD thesis Ontologies of the Future in Contemporary Philosophy: Stiegler and Meillassoux (2021), near the end one finds the long chapter “Overpassing Mediation: Meillassoux and Lovecraft”. Meillassoux being a French philosopher. Freely available online, in English and open-access.

* In Spain, the event CTHULHUton 2025 at the end of March 2025…

* Comic-book industry/history magazine publisher TwoMorrows has been left unpaid, following the financial collapse of the huge Diamond distributor. Diamond had long distributed comics and associated niche magazines to retail stores. TwoMorrows ask readers of their long-running ongoing magazines (Cryptology, RetroFan, Comic Book Creator, Jack Kirby Collector, etc), to “renew their magazine subscriptions” if possible, to help with cashflow. To those of us in the UK they’re offering “new lower international shipping rates” or bookshop distribution via Turnaround Distribution. Lovecraftians everywhere may be especially interested in the one-off monster books page.

* On YouTube, an impressive trailer/visual-pitch for a big-budget movie adaptation of “The Shadow Out of Time”.

* And finally, the sumptuous illustrated catalogue for the auction of The Library Of Barry Humphries, 26th March 2025. Freely available online, as a .PDF file. Slaver over the gothic and weird goodies you could have had, if only you’d sold a couple of bitcoins and the auctioneer’s hammer had fallen in your favour.


— End-quotes —

“[On the streets of College Hill] I acquired a fascinated reverence for the past — the age of periwigs and three-cornered hats and leather-bound books with long-fs. My taste for the latter was augmented by the fact that there were many in the family library — most of them in a black windowless attic room to which I was half-afraid to go alone, yet whose terror-breeding potentialities really increased for me the charm of the archaic volumes I found and read there. […] Living in an ancient town amidst ancient books, I followed Addison, Hope, and Dr. Johnson as my models in prose and verse; and literally lived in their peri-wigged world, ignoring the world of the present.” — Lovecraft, “Ec’h-Pi-El Speaks”.

“As a devotee of the past, I have naturally read more English than American books, and have felt profoundly the charm of those scenes and events amongst which my race-stock was moulded and developed; so that my conception of home and of natural beauty has come to centre in that soil around which so vast a majority of ancestral associations hover — “This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.” — Lovecraft, “In Defence of Dagon”.

“I am not really literary in the purest sense of the word. Books & authors, as such, do not interest me; since I want only what they transmit. It is beauty — the beauty of wonder, of antiquity, of landscape, of architecture, of horror, of light & shadow, line & contour, of mystic memory & hallowed tradition — that I worship, & I never think of talking about books when I can talk of the stars or the hills or the abbey towers of dim, far lands or the steep roofs that cluster on the slopes of archaic towns. That is why I have read so relatively little, & why science with its breathless mysteries & inconceivable vistas has so often crowded mere letters from my sphere of paramount interest.” — Lovecraft to Donald Wandrei, February 1927.

“So many promising & deeply interested weird fans live in places where bizarre books are unobtainable — places like Milltown, Mont., Asotin, Wash., Auburn, Cal., West Shokan, N.Y., &c. &c. — that we feel we ought to give them the benefit of whatever volumes of the sort we may chance to possess. Hence a rather active programme of borrowing is carried out among ‘the gang’. And it is not only the small-towners who need to borrow — for even the largest city libraries are sometimes devoid of the most important weird items.” — Lovecraft, to Natalie H. Wooley, January 1935, on the ‘underground library’ he helped to run in the 1930s.

HPLinks #29 – Schultz, Pera, ‘We Are Providence’ stage play, Faunus in PDF, a pagan thesis, antique monsters, clouds and more…

13 Thursday Mar 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

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HPLinks #29.

* Deep Cuts has a guest article examining “The Multi-Dimensional Career of Weird Literature Editor and Book Designer David E. Schultz”. A man well known to Lovecraftians as one of the editors and annotators of the triumph-of-scholarship that is the Lovecraft’s Letters series of books.

* A Spanish news site has a new article on “Filme de Edgar Pera com Pessoa, Lovecraft”, which reveals the director is set to follow his acclaimed ‘Lovecraft meets Pessoa’ movie Telepathic Letters (2024) with… “an upcoming project inspired by Lovecraft tales”. No further details as yet.

* Popping up on Abebooks, a 1983 French ‘BD’ comic-book adaptation of Lovecraft’s “Innsmouth”. New to me…

* Forthcoming on the New York stage, two plays about Lovecraft’s life. ‘Lovecraft in Brooklyn’ has been staged before, but is now being paired with ‘We are Providence’ which is billed as… “a new play set in Providence, Rhode Island”. The two plays are part of a spring and early-summer series that also features one with R.E. Howard…

On 24th April 2025, the series continues with ‘I have Known Many Grim and Loveless Gods’ [about] creator Robert E. Howard on the last day of his life reckoning with his creations and his mother’s illness.

* Robert E. Howard Days: The 2025 Howard Days Official Poster, revealed.

* Now in Kindle ebook, the first two volumes of Roy Thomas’s Barbarian Life: A Literary Biography of Conan the Barbarian. The third has yet to be an ebook, and note that Amazon misleads by selling a “Barbarian Life (3 book series)” that only has two ebooks. The three-book paperback set is significantly more expensive than the ebooks, at £45 UK.

* A new archive for Faunus, the Arthur Machen journal…

all [50] back issues of Faunus will shortly be available to members to download in PDF format for the first time

* All copies of the core An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia have suddenly become insanely expensive on both Amazon and eBay. Time for a budget ebook edition?

* New from Spain, “Revising paganism in the fiction of H.P. Lovecraft” (2025), in English. It appears to be a Phd thesis, for the University of Granada. Judging by the contents pages it seems something of an encyclopedia on the topic. Freely available online.

* Set for June 2025, the new Oxford Handbook of Biblical Monsters.

* S.T. Joshi’s new The Wind in the Portico: Horrors from Classical Antiquity (2025). Available now, a collection of…

instances of horror fiction, poetry, drama, and other work from classical authors (some of them translated by myself—taken from my book Classical Papers), but writings by John Buchan, H.P. Lovecraft, Edward Lucas White, Rudyard Kipling, and many others utilising classical myth and history for their horror tales.

* Newly on Archive.org, the article “The Vortex of the Weird: Systemic Feedback and Environmental Individuation in the Media Ecology of Ito Junji’s Horror Comics”. This led me to track down its source, Stockholm’s Orientaliska Studier No. 156 (2019), a special journal issue on ‘Manga, Comics and Japan’. Now freely available online.

* A new £130 academic book from Springer, “The Call of the Eco-Weird in Fiction, Films, and Games” (2025). Includes the chapter “Departing the Place Once Familiar: Lovecraft’s Eco-Weird Thought”.

* Back in 2019 I looked at Lovecraft’s spring 1931 musing on the possibility that rain clouds and drizzling mists might be partly influenced by fluxes in incoming cosmic-rays. 1931 was long before the idea was first proposed in 1959 by Ney in his Nature paper “Cosmic radiation and weather”. In 2025, an interesting bit of additional research evidence… “Cosmic-Ray Showers Play Pivotal Role in Triggering Lightning Flashes” on earth.

* Some of the indie titles among this week’s wave of Lovecraftian videogame news, Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss (first-person thriller/investigation), The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu (four-player co-op adaptation of “The Mound”, by the makers of the worthy game Zeno Clash), and Cthulhu’s Reach: Devil Reef.

* Newly released and of possible interest to Mythos writers, the desktop writing assistance software NovelForge 3.x now has full LLM AI assistance. Still standalone and affordable, at $60. AI’s can be used free, and there’s a video showing how.

* And finally, some readers may be interested in seeing the documentary movie We Are As Gods (2021), on the life and legacy of the counterculture publisher and Long Now thinker Stewart Brand.


— End-quotes —

“Effective weird-fictional language, through rhythm & associative word-values, must always have a certain undercurrent of menacing tensily — shadows, gathering clouds, & all that. […] Very, very few things in Weird Tales ever achieve the desired degree of atmospheric menace” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, November 1930.

“In Quebec one of the most striking things is the sky — the odd cloud formations peculiar to northern latitudes and unknown in R.I. [Rhode Island]. Mist and vapour assume fantastic and portentous forms, and at sunset on Labour Day I saw one of the most impressive phenomena imaginable from my vantage-point on the Citadel overlooking the river and the Levis cliffs beyond. The evening was predominantly clear; but some strange refractive quality gave the dying solar rays an abnormal redness, while from the zenith to the southeastern horizon stretched an almost black funnel of churning nimbus clouds — the small end meeting the earth at some inland point beyond Levis. From a place midway in this cloud-funnel, zigzag streaks of lightning would occasionally dart toward the ground, with faint rumbles of thunder following tardily after. […] With such bizarre skies, I do not wonder that the northern races excel those of the south in fantastic imagination.” — Lovecraft to C.A. Smith, September 1933.

The young Lovecraft photographs cloud types, New Year 1907…

CLOUD PHOTOGRAPHY. This work was performed by a new 6.5 × 8.5 camera. The following types were taken:

 Cumulus
 Cirrus
 Stratus
 Cirro-Stratus
 Cirro-Cumulus
 Cumulo-Stratus
 Cumulo-Nimbus, or Thunder-Cloud.

Celestial views were also taken.

“It seems, in the light of recent discoveries, that all matter is in a state of balance betwixt formation and disintegration, evolution and devolution — and that the infinite cosmos is like a vast patch of summer sky, out of which little cirrus clouds gather here and there, presently to be dissolved into blankness again. The universes we know correspond to the little cirrus clouds of that summer sky, being merely transient aggregations of electrons condensed from that field of ungrouped electrons which we call space, and soon to be dissolved into that space again. This process of formation and destruc­tion is the fundamental attribute of all entity — it is infinite Nature, and it always has been, and always will be.” — Lovecraft, “The Materialist Today”, 1926.


HPLinks #28 – Whelan and Mountains, authenticity, REH Borak audiobooks, Sinking City 2, and more…

05 Wednesday Mar 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in 3D, HPLinks, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

HPLinks #28.

* Artist Micheal Whelan recalls his career breakthrough 1976: Year in Review (Part One)…

Staking everything on a letter from Donald Wollheim that promised a [book] cover assignment, bolstered by recent success selling his work at conventions, Michael packed his VW Beetle and with trailer in tow headed to New York City to pursue illustration…

At the foot of this portion from his pleasingly-illustrated memoirs, Whelan also notes that he will shortly be…

adding a small preliminary painting from [Lovecraft’s] “At The Mountains of Madness” to our shop. An exclusive preview of the original art will be available for our paid subscribers on Substack before the art is released to our shop on Wednesday, 5th March [2025] at 11am EST

* In the new £140 academic libraries book on Authenticity and Adaptation (Palgrave, Feb 2025), the chapter “”I have looked upon all that the universe has to hold of horror”: The Authentic Lovecraftian Image in Film and Television”. Seeks to identify an authentic core of Lovecraft-inspired visual media, amid its exuberant abundance…

The ‘Lovecraftian’ can be seen everywhere in twenty-first-century visual culture.

* New in Italian and available via Amazon Italy, Yog-sothothery, Oltre La Soglia Dell’immaginario Di H.P. Lovecraft (‘Yog-Sothothery: H.P. Lovecraft Beyond the Threshold of Imagination’) (October 2024). Being a multi-author volume of what sounds to me like literary essays, in Italian. The essayists explore Lovecraft’s…

fantastic stories, considered among the most innovative and intense ever committed to paper, [in] seven essays […] which take the premise that ‘to appreciate Lovecraft you need to have suffered a lot’.

* At the University of Rennes, France, the three-day Le Festival Sirennes. Set for 20th-22nd March 2025…

* In Spanish, another journal review of the book A traves del abismo: H.P. Lovecraft y el horror ontologico (2024) (‘Through the Abyss: H.P. Lovecraft and ontological horror’). Freely available in open-access.

* The German Lovecraftians want a team leader for their Literature Team, which is…

currently working on a volume of essays from German-speaking countries, and a translation project of Lovecraft’s letters and essays

Also, some readers may wish to know that the Tolkien Society’s Amon Hen mag-a-journal is still seeking a volunteer graphic designer, and has been for over a year now.

* New on YouTube, Robert E. Howard’s “Blood of the Gods” (featuring his El Borak adventurer character) in audiobook, Part One and Part Two (120 minutes total). Plus another El Borak tale “The Daughter of Erlik Khan” (150 minutes). Both with a good professional reader. Since the 2012 El Borak audiobook is off-the-market (read from the Del Ray collection by another reader, Michael McConnohie) and totally unavailable, these seemingly-new El Borak recordings are very welcome. Several commenters complain about “ads” in these YouTube readings, but I assume they’re somehow clueless about ad-blockers and/or .MP3 YouTube downloader freeware such as that offered by MediaHuman.

* Want even more desert adventure from Robert E. Howard? Yup, there’s more, via a free audiobook from Horrorbabble reading “King of the Forgotten People” (53 minutes). 1930s adventurer Jim Brill goes seeking a missing scientist in the far reaches of the Gobi Desert.

* Also of note in free audiobooks. New and free on Librivox, the collection The Lost Valley and Other Stories by Algernon Blackwood. Also The Magician by Somerset Maugham. The latter centres on a lightly disguised Aleister Crowley circa 1907/08, and… Lovecraft it is not. Though the final description of the creepy Victorian house interior in the Staffordshire Moorlands is well done.

* One of the best big-budget Lovecraftian videogames of recent years now has a Kickstarter page for its planned sequel, The Sinking City 2. The campaign launches on 6th March 2025.

* Possibly of use for Mythos writers for games, the free Llama-3.1-8B-BeyondReality, a relatively lightweight free and local AI specifically designed for suggesting “interactive fiction scenarios” for “text-based adventures”.

* And finally, E-Arkham makes a growing series of fab monsters for the free 3D software DAZ Studio. Load, pose, choose a suitable eerie lighting preset, and then render in 3D. And potentially also then use these renders as seeds for AI enhancements / stylisation in Stable Diffusion. All his items are rather expensive at present, but those experienced in DAZ and Poser know to Wishlist and then come back when the big 70%-80% discount sales are on. All royalty-free, so you can use your renders commercially if you wish.


— End-quotes —

“The advent of Spring — even technically — is surely pleasant to think of. — […] a warm day sent me splashing through the mud & melting snow of the fields & woods […] I never before saw the ponds & brooks so high — & when I crossed the broad gorge of the Blackstone I found the lower banks [of the river] completly over-flowed; with great trees & cottage roofs projecting above an aqueous expanse like reliques of sunken Atlantis.” — Lovecraft to Toldridge, 29th March 1934.

“A sense of rushing through chartless corridors seized me, and I saw dates dancing in aether—1923—1924—1925—1926—1925—1924—1923—crash! Two years to the bad, but who the hell gives a damn? 1923 ends 1926 begins! Even the spring had delay’d so that I might see it break over Novanglia’s [New England’s] antient hills! I have lost 1924 and 1925 [to New York City], but the dawn of vernal 1926 is just as lovely as I view it from Rhodinsular [Rhode Island] windows! […] There is no other place for me. My world is Providence. […] The vista from my pseudo-ariel desk corner [at 10 Barnes St.] is delectable — bits of antique houses, stately trees, urn-topp’d white Georgian fence, and an ecstatic old-fashion’d garden which will be breathlessly transporting in a couple of months. Westward, from the brow of the hill, the view is awesome and prodigious — all the roofs, spires, and domes of the lower town, and beyond them the violet expanse of the far rolling rural meadows. [The State House and its] proud copper dome is the dominating feature of the Providence skyline. The view from this dome is said to be absolutely unparalleled — countless steepled towns, league on league of undulating countryside, and the beautiful blue bay to the south, gemmed with emerald islets. One can, the genial sexton says, see as far as Newport on good days; and he has promised to let me up there with a spy glass whenever I feel like making the climb.” — Lovecraft to Belknap Long, 1st May 1926, on Lovecraft’s return home from his long exile in New York City.

“… glimpses of a charming and mysterious gap in the far-off, vapour-wreath’d purple hills. There birds sang, and the sun filter’d down thro’ delicate vernal foliage and trac’d strange faery patterns on the grass and sand of the lane.” — Lovecraft describing his habitual place of outdoor writing, used daily while visiting Dwyer in “the West Shokan hinterland”. — Lovecraft, Travels in the Provinces of America, 1929.

“And so I emerg’d from under the Roman arch and beheld the city. The morning sun was high and brilliant, and the summerish air told me at once that I had at last set foot in that gentle Old South of which I have so often dream’d. Green and white were omnipresent — springtime leaves and grass, and delectable expanses of aethereal cherry-blossoms …” — Lovecraft in Washington, to Aunt Lillian, 21st April 1925.


Grok 3 Deep Search, currently free

20 Thursday Feb 2025

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Elon’s Grok.com is currently free to Google accounts, and is offering the new Grok 3 + its DeepSearch module for an unspecified limited time. It’s very very impressive, for those who give it a well-formed question/instruction-set, and it currently tops the world’s AI rankings. Impoverished scholars may want to use it now, as later Grok 3 + Deep Search will only be accessible via a top-tier X (Twitter) subscription at $40 a month.

May not be accessible in Europe, due to their AI regulations.

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