Who knew? The Heinlein Society’s Heinlein Journal has morphed from a ‘last seen in 2014’ newsletter-style format, to a stylish new mini-journal format. Four issues so far, twice a year, $5 each.

12 Tuesday Oct 2021
Posted in Scholarly works
Who knew? The Heinlein Society’s Heinlein Journal has morphed from a ‘last seen in 2014’ newsletter-style format, to a stylish new mini-journal format. Four issues so far, twice a year, $5 each.

07 Thursday Oct 2021
Posted in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
The Save Ancient Studies Association will be hosting a discussion with a leading Lovecraft scholar S.T. Joshi, who will explore how the ancient world inspired the work of horror author H.P. Lovecraft.” 30th October 2021.
Sounds good. Hopefully they’ll post a recording on their YouTube channel.
Also, Save Ancient Studies seems a very worthy cause, and worth supporting and promoting if it’s within your orbit.
07 Thursday Oct 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Miskatonic Missives, a spin-out paper publication from the Voluminous podcast…
each issue of Miskatonic Missives serves as an ideal companion guide for exploring one of H.P. Lovecraft’s most fascinating letters. Every issue includes a reproduction of the full text of the letter in question, supported by a variety of relevant reference material, including contemporary and modern fiction, academic writing, poetry, and artwork.

Hmmm, “contemporary and modern fiction”? I presume that must be new unpublished work then?
06 Wednesday Oct 2021
Posted in Scholarly works
Great news, I see that the second edition of the Lovecraft autobiography Lord of a Visible World can now be had from Amazon as a £5 ebook. The “Look Inside” preview re-assures that it is the real thing (rather than some Amazon database snaffle), albeit shorn of the nice Ohio University Press design/formatting of the first-edition hardback.
05 Tuesday Oct 2021
Posted in Scholarly works
The Finnish journal Research in Arts and Education plans a special issue on ‘Fungi in Contemporary Art and Research’…
articles or visual essays dealing with artistic research, art practice or theoretical and critical viewpoints on contemporary art with plants, lichen, bryophytes, and fungi.
Sadly the deadline has gone, but the issue is set to appear in February 2022. The journal appears to be open access.

A creepy future eco-‘shroom building.
30 Thursday Sep 2021
Posted in Historical context, New books, Scholarly works
S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. The main good news is his new history book which surveys Lovecraft’s 1938-1988 period…
The Recognition of H.P. Lovecraft should appear within a few weeks, enhanced by a fine cover design by Jason Van Hollander.
Google Books suggest the full title is to be The Recognition of H. P. Lovecraft: His Rise from Obscurity to World Renown, but can as yet provide no table-of-contents or cover.
Among other items Joshi notes is the arrival of the new expanded Samuel Loveman collection Out of the Immortal Night (original book was 2004), and the slight delaying of the expected premiere of the new Lovecraft documentary. It has originally been mooted for the Lovecraft Film Festival, but is now to be shown via streaming only and “occurring a week after” the Festival.
29 Wednesday Sep 2021
Posted in Censorship, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
New on Archive.org today, a Morgoth’s Review podcast lecture on “Lovecraft, Nyarlathotep And Our Changing World”. This turns out to be a YouTube podcaster with a slightly-difficult accent and obvious high intelligence, who has discovered Lovecraft’s fiction via the Warhammer game of all things. Here he’s bowled over by Lovecraft’s prose-poem “Nyarlathotep”, and points out the congruence of the short tale with our current times, and many pithy points are made. An entertaining and illuminating view from a Lovecraft newcomer.
But worthy of automatic censorship? He does seem to be from that wing of the Christian-Right which believes in the existence of evil-as-an-active-force (but presumably doesn’t frown on the likes of Warhammer as an abode-of-demons?). But there’s nothing objectionable in his lecture and partial reading that I can hear. Nevertheless spotting it popping up on Archive.org made me aware of the existence of the curious ‘Deemphasized Collections at Internet Archive’ category, to which the lecture has presumably been auto-added by bots rather than the uploader. The category includes “Adult and Mature Comics” and “Vintage Men’s Magazines”, and in general is an amazing collection of weirdness and smut. All of which is presumably suppressed in searches. But which Archive.org then allows you to search all in one go, very conveniently for some.
Here ‘lovecraft’ means something very different, though a search for his name does sometimes give a few results in contexts other than a tawdry scan of a 1970s Busty British Bar-maids Vol. 1 and suchlike. For instance I see that Thomas Ligotti’s acclaimed The Conspiracy Against The Human Race and even Lovecraft’s Collected Works languishes in this suppressed category, nestling against the ‘Ancient Aliens’ Collection and other such high weirdness. Possibly the crap front-cover and the word “Conspiracy” in the title were enough to damn a great writer, but who can fathom the unexplained caprices of censorship these days? A lone copy of a 1920s Weird Tales is even consigned to the category, once deemed suitable fare for juvenile readers and distributed to every city news-stand in America.
29 Wednesday Sep 2021
Posted in New books, REH, Scholarly works
Now available via Amazon, The Dark Man journal for Summer 2021. Including…
* “Building a Universe: An Analysis of the Works, Lives, and Influences of the Lovecraft Circle”.
* “Adapting Lovecraft to Video Games: What is Lost, What is Gained”.
Also Rusty Burke reviewing the new biography, Renegades and Rogues: The Life and Legacy of Robert E. Howard.
28 Tuesday Sep 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Now listed at Hippocampus, Penumbra No. 2 (2021) is the second issue of S.T. Joshi’s new journal. The non-fiction includes…
* Guy de Maupassant: Women, Madness, and the Horla.
* A Matter of Belief: Further Thoughts on Lord Dunsany and Religion.
* [Lovecraft’s 1921] “The Quest of Iranon” and [Dunsany’s 1922] Don Rodriguez: Two Exercises in the Picaresque.
* Icy Portents of Doom: Clark Ashton Smith’s Hyperborean Cycle and the Polar Myth.
* Hodgson, The Night Land, and William Morris.
28 Tuesday Sep 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Lovecraft Annual 2021, now listing on Amazon UK and (for an extra £5) on eBay UK. Sadly not fitted with translucent flexi-cover with washes of faint and unplaceable iridescent colours, as I had rather whimsically expected after seeing the blank slot on the initial Hippocampus listing. More of a ‘hot curry’ colour for the cover, this year. Which I like and I guess will sit well alongside the latest book of Letters… containing as it does a curry recipe.
26 Sunday Sep 2021
Posted in Scholarly works
Volupte : Interdisciplinary Journal Of Decadence Studies, a new open access journal. Literary decadence and its fellow swirlers in the incense-scented fin de siecle. The latest issue considers M. P. Shiel, Arthur Machen, Wilde, Baudelaire, and reviews Decadent Catholicism and the Making of Modernism among others.
25 Saturday Sep 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
The Hungarian Black Aether has a series surveying international H.P. Lovecraft fan communities over in Europe.
In Hungarian, but now we have a Necronomicon incantation for summoning The Giant Mouth of Many Tongues auto-translation. There’s Google Translate of course, but in-browser the best add-on for extended Web snippets is Simple Translate 2.6.1. The Auto Translate for YouTube captions add-on is also useful at times — it forces subtitles ‘on’ and into English, but don’t expect perfection unless the source diction was very clear, the speaker had a good microphone, and was using non-technical / non-slang language. Mumbling Japanese hipsters, talking techie… not good. Though often amusing.
Not everything on the Black Aether site gets the Lovecraft tag, such as the new review of the old comics anthology Lovecraft Antologia #1.