Now online as a .PDF, Henry Kuttner: A Memorial Symposium (1958).
Henry Kuttner: A Memorial Symposium
20 Saturday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
20 Saturday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
Now online as a .PDF, Henry Kuttner: A Memorial Symposium (1958).
20 Saturday Nov 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Axis Mundi brings news of a new festschrift in Italian, a book of essays celebrating 60 years of work by the scholar Gianfranco de Turris. He has written extensively on the fantastic, and has so far won the Italian Prize for Science Fiction eleven times. Among other essays in the new volume, note the long one on de Turris and Lovecraft, and another one surveying the reception of Arthur Machen in Italy.
Possibly of interest to someone wishing to translate to English, for their own journal. He has also been an anthologist of a major two-volume collection of Italian Mythos fiction, Return of the Old Ones.
18 Thursday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
Spring 2022 Colloquia at Providence College, Rhode Island.
15 Monday Nov 2021
Posted in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
The Inklings and Horror: Fantasy’s Dark Corners – Online Winter Seminar 2022.
Meanwhile, modern Gnostics Talk Lovecraft in a new podcast round-table…
all about weird fiction/horror writer H.P. Lovecraft and the ways his work and mythos intersects with Gnostic ideas.
13 Saturday Nov 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Ask Lovecraft brings news of a new look at the question of Lovecraft’s copyrights. Alex Houstoun, editor of the journal Dead Reckonings, has newly published Copyright Questions and the Stories of H. P. Lovecraft.
Shipping now, in a handmade zine-y-thing format. Though according to Etsy only in paper and only within the USA.
08 Monday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Kipling, Scholarly works
Following my recent post on Kipling’s classic early science-fiction “With the Night Mail: A Story of 2000 A.D.” (1905, written 1904) I was pleased to find the sequel on YouTube: “As Easy as A.B.C: A Tale of 2150 A.D.” (1912 two-part serial, written circa 1907, in book form 1917). Comparing the two titles might make you think the sequel moves ahead by 150 years. It did, at least for the serial magazine publication. But as the authoritative Kipling Society says, Kipling later rolled the date back to 2065.
The year 2000 is an orderly world of high-technology, in which the British Empire appears to have been untroubled by either world war. The Empire has imperceptibly shrunk and morphed into the relatively light-touch global Aerial Board of Control (A.B.C.). A sort of ‘Commonwealth of the Air’, melded with a global Post Office and Merchant Shipping Service and in efficient charge of the world’s commerce and communications.
Heinlein is said to have been strongly influenced by the overall style of the first story, which was a huge ‘hard sci-fi’ breakthrough for its time. This second story is less serious in tone, probably Kipling’s wise choice. The wry humour sweetens the digestion of a clutch of grim themes.
[Spoilers follow]
By 2065 the A.B.C. has become a no-nonsense world government of-a-kind, with a garden-city London as the capital. It is efficient and incorruptible, partly because a kind of libertarian affluence is now ubiquitous and no-one can be bothered by such hard work. Human “executive capacity” has anyway become so hard to find, in a world in which a plague has reduced the global population to some 500 million, that the A.B.C could not rule the world even if they wanted to. The supine 1920s League of Nations or aggressive 1930s Axis it is not, and the A.B.C. ably services a world in which a plague has caused people to become nomadic and extremely averse to crowds and public touching, and to largely live very private and isolated lives. Under the benign oversight of the A.B.C. the world’s people can seemingly go anywhere they like, affluent and seasonally flitting from place to place in their fliers in search of privacy. Robot-like machines work the farm fields. So long as they do not interfere with commerce or the food supply or badger their neighbours, the tall and long-lived people of the time seem free to go live where they want. Think wild camping, gone high-tech glamping with airships, and with healthy ‘social distancing’ enforced by genetically-engineered screens of super-fast growing trees.
There are of course a tiny number of remaining anti-civilisation luddites, short and aged-looking and emotion-fuelled. Their cult-like groups flare up rarely in places such as the re-forested farming backwater of Chicago, where they aggressively agitate for the old ways and annoy the hell out of normal people. They can sometimes be reasoned out of their madness (as Russia tries to do), or can be persuaded to go about their amusingly primitive ways in a quasi-zoo akin to our ‘living museum’ format.
In terms of the technology Kipling’s ideas about a future ‘world-government based on airpower’ would become a commonplace by the 1930s (the later Wells, etc). Kipling’s original airship utopia had already gone beyond such things (“war went out of fashion”), though a small airship fleet armed with crowd pacifier-rays and sonic-stunners is maintained in case of need.
The talk of “plague” in the second tale throws a rather ghoulish back-light on the ‘isolated Greenland sanitariums’ of the first tale, and perhaps tells us why the airship crew solemnly ‘doffed their caps’ as the hospital ship passed in the dawn. In the second tale there are hints that the plague was linked to a tuberculosis that had developed in the abhorred “crowds” of the old world, who had once engaged in endless “talking” and “touching” due to their “settled living” in one place. There are hints that the Aerial Board of Control’s real problems for the post-2065 future will arise from other factors. The dwindling world birthrates in a post-plague world. The ennui and growing lack of curiosity among small-enclave populations, most still living in a plague-defence mindset. The obsessive yearning for privacy in a world of ubiquitous communication and open travel. It all sounds rather familiar.
Though it should be said that there is one strong hint that the birthrate problem will have a technological solution, so this is not a doomed ‘Radium Age’ civilisation, just one with its own interlocking set of problems to solve. Kipling seems there to be setting himself up for a third story. Yet he wrote no other A.B.C. tales, and not a single later author appears to have adopted Kipling’s Aerial Board of Control universe.
Anyway, I was pleased to find “A.B.C.” available on YouTube. Several other YouTubers have it but in a rather poor bathtub Librivox recording.
For those wanting a text to work from for their own audio production, note that The SF Encyclopedia warns that “Night Mail” is presented “incomplete” in the volume Kipling’s Science Fiction (Tor, 1992), though doesn’t state why or what was cut. I can see no problem with the first story. Perhaps the commenter was not aware of the marked differences to be found between the two 1905 versions, and again with the 1909 version. The British 1905 version has a section of about 20 lines entirely missing from later printings, for instance.
For those wanting the original art, Marcus L. Rowland’s free PDF edition of both tales collects the various original illustrations/paintings and also has the original surrounding…
weather advisories, classified advertisements, shipping notices, and a wide range of other snippets, intended to suggest that the tale was in fact appearing in a magazine published in 2000.
Some of these are delightfully humorous and also informative, so don’t skip them in the audiobook.
08 Monday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
Deuce Richardson celebrates “The Fiftieth Anniversary of DAW Books” and the role of Donald A. Wollheim therein.
For about fifteen years—under Wollheim’s firm guidance — there was an SFF golden age at DAW Books that may never be equalled.
I certainly have fond memories of several of them, though I seem to recall that relatively few made it to the UK other than on the used bookstalls. I’m uncertain if they were ever distributed new on the spinner-racks, over here. Other than in the UK’s rare specialist sci-fi shops and the dealer tables at 1980s conventions. Now there’s a topic for a fannish dissertation if someone is looking for such, Perhaps titled: Laser Focus: how British literary sci-fi fans built collections and developed tastes in the 1970s and 80s.
For those who can afford to collect DAW, rather than just pick up a couple of fondly remembered titles again, there’s a Starmont book which comprehensively covers the period, Future and Fantastic Worlds : A Bibliographical Retrospective of DAW Books (1972-1987) by Sheldon Jaffery. Not on Archive.org.
Gawd, look at those dates though. Actually they help me get into the world of Lovecraft a bit, in that (by comparison with the 2020s), those still living in Lovecraft’s 1920s could easily recall how things were in the 1870s and 80s. Much as many can today. Such drifting-away eras and their worldviews must have still been mentally and emotionally close to many oldsters in 1920s and even into the 1930s.
06 Saturday Nov 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
The Robert H. Waugh Library of Lovecraftian Criticism, newly announced in three volumes at Hippocampus.
I’m fairly sure the first two have already been published, though not in this handsome three-volume shelf-trembler set. The third book appears to be new for 2021…
This third volume of his essays continues the pattern of his earlier books, The Monster in the Mirror and A Monster of Voices. Here we have studies of Lovecraft’s use of the imagery of wells in “The Colour out of Space”; the cosmic history of alien species in At the Mountains of Madness and “The Shadow out of Time”; the role that the fictional Miskatonic University plays in Lovecraft’s fiction; and the influence of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle on several Lovecraft tales. Other essays discuss Lovecraft’s influence on such science fiction writers as Arthur C. Clarke, Fritz Leiber, and Philip K. Dick, as well as such understudied tales as “Cool Air” and The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath. And Waugh’s long rumination about Lovecraft’s response to the Nobel Prize winners of his day displays to the full the author’s wide-ranging expertise on world literature.
05 Friday Nov 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Now listing and available on Amazon and in Kindle ebook, S.T. Joshi’s new book The Recognition of H. P. Lovecraft: His Rise from Obscurity to World Renown. 357 pages, with the usual free 10% sample for Kindle owners.
02 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
“Ray Bradbury fan donates lifelong collection to University of South Carolina” and this is now accessible…
The Anne Farr Hardin Collection of Ray Bradbury Books, Fanzines, Pulps, Magazines, Correspondence, Photographs, Memorabilia, and Ephemera is now accessible to UofSC students, faculty, staff and visiting researchers by appointment with the Irvin Department.
There’s also an online exhibition version of the collection highlights, Ray Bradbury Now and Forever.
The “Ray Bradbury fan donates…” link is more than a press release, and is a good read in its own right.
02 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
Dark Worlds Quarterly has a fine new illustrated timeline of Henry Kuttner’s Fan Letters to Weird Tales.
Talking of Weird Tales, S.T. Joshi’s Blog has updated. Among other items he brings news of a forthcoming collected stories of Robert Barbour Johnson, an author best known for his Lovecraftian ‘in the subways’ Weird Tales story “Far Below” (1939). I recall there’s already been at least one such collection, though perhaps not complete? The new book will also collect some of Johnson’s essays.
01 Monday Nov 2021
Posted in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
The Save Ancient Studies Alliance (SASA) host ‘Lovecraft’ with S.T. Joshi, in a new podcast. The aim was to… “explore how the ancient world inspired the work of horror author H.P. Lovecraft”.