Lovecraft Annual No. 15, 2021

Announced for Lovecraft’s birthday, the scholarly Lovecraft Annual No. 15, 2021. 270 pages including, among others, at least four topographical pieces…

* The Acolyte of the Abyss: or, In the Long Shadow of the House at 454 Angell Street.

* Following The Ancient Track.

* The Promise of Cosmic Revelations: How the Landscape of Vermont Transforms “The Whisperer in Darkness”.

* The Church That Inspired “The Horror at Red Hook” and the Fall of the House of Suydam.

On Lovecraft’s 131st birthday – an index for his poetry

On H.P Lovecraft’s 131st birthday, I’m pleased to present my offering to the Master. An Index for the book The Ancient Track: The Complete Poetical Works of H.P. Lovecraft (second revised edition). I had often felt the lack of a ‘topic, imagery, place and name’ index for this 600-page volume, so I made one.

Download (PDF). Version 1.1, August 2021.

It’s 3,000 words as a 32-page PDF file, and as such it should be feasible to print as a little imposition-software booklet and slip between card covers. Or upload it to a POD booklet printer. Note that it’s not under Creative Commons and is not for re-sale, please.

I suspect that the Guild of Indexers will not be sending me a gilt-edged invitation card to their annual Christmas Ball, on seeing this. I did it my way, without poring over weighty manuals on indexing, but it should be perfectly serviceable for Lovecraftian look-ups. There are no line-numbers though, as that would have added far too much extra work. Thus you will need to skim down the page to find the item being searched for.

Weird Tales, March 1939

Posted slightly ahead Lovecraft’s birthday, an edition of Weird Tales which appears to have been unavailable on Archive.org until now, nicely scanned and uploaded. Weird Tales for March 1939, containing the first news-stand appearance of Lovecraft’s “The Quest of Iranon” (1921).

“Wright [the 1920s editor of Weird Tales, has] just rejected The Quest of Iranon with high disdain…” (H.P. Lovecraft, December 1927).

There are of course other maintained sources online for Weird Tales, dependent on goodwill and ongoing hosting fees, but it’s good to see another being uploaded in perpetuity to Archive.org.

Lovecraft for beginners, updated

I’ve updated my “Lovecraft for beginners” guide/FAQ page, ready for Lovecraft’s birthday tomorrow. Newly added, among others…

i. “On the searchability/indexing of the letters) “A unified index to the collected volumes of Letters is underway, but may not appear for a while yet.”

ii. (on finding a poetry index). “a full index to the second edition of The Ancient Track is forthcoming and is set to be released for Lovecraft’s Birthday on 20th August 2021.”

iii. (New section for ‘Philosophy’ added). “Introductory studies of Lovecraft’s philosophy and thought, which is considerable, can be found in the books H.P. Lovecraft: The Decline of the West; The Philosophy of H.P. Lovecraft (New Studies in Aesthetics series); and Ideology and Scientific Thought in H.P. Lovecraft.”

iv. (Commenting on the nature of the encyclopedias available). “Note that these encyclopaedias do not cover Lovecraft’s intellectual ideas and his engagement with the ideas/science of his time, and a hypothetical title such as An Intellectual Encyclopaedia for H.P. Lovecraft is a book that remains to be written.”


I see that Bobby Derie also has what appears to be a new-this-week FAQ page answering common questions posed about Lovecraft.

“… gold and ivory and strange crystals sent as tribute”

At the HPLHS Store and new to me, a line of Lovecraftian Netsuke

Also said to be set for the store (seemingly coming soon, perhaps for the Birthday on the 20th?) a toothsome faux carved whale-tooth from Innsmouth…


Lovecraft on carving…

“That [new] theory of rock carvings 150,000 years old is certainly fascinating in the extreme – even though it presupposes the evolution of man to have begun at a period somewhat earlier than is normally assumed.”

“The prevalence and depth of the mediaeval horror-spirit in Europe, intensified by the dark despair which waves of pestilence brought, may be fairly gauged by the grotesque carvings slyly introduced into much of the finest later Gothic ecclesiastical work of the time”.

“I am truly of an opinion, that [eighteenth century] carvings are just as genuine poesy as anything ever writ in lines and rhymes.”

New documentary: ‘Exegesis: Lovecraft’

S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. He notes the release of the new paperback edition of…

Ramsey Campbell’s second essay collection, Ramsey Campbell, Certainly [has] a substantial section of essays on Lovecraft, including a fairly recent piece, “Lovecraft Analysed” (2013), that is one of the most perspicacious pieces on Lovecraft written of late.

He also anticipates seeing the new two-hour Lovecraft documentary Exegesis: Lovecraft at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival (the one set for Portland at the start of October 2021).

Further down Willoughby Street

In the second volume of his Letters to Family, H.P. Lovecraft reveals more about the location of his favourite cafe haunt “John’s” in Brooklyn in the mid 1920s. Readers of Tentaclii will recall I took a look for this location in my April 2021 post “Lunch in New York: Spaghetti in Breuckelen”. After that post I had a blog comment from ‘SJM’ pointing out a John’s in the Brooklyn tax-photos at…

185 Willoughby Street, corner Navy Street

… but I left the comment unapproved as I was fairly sure it was not the John’s. 185 Willoughby was a cafe and small corner-store relatively far up Willoughby Street and not especially close to Fulton. There are two photos of 185, one obviously showing changes after a few years.

The latter is from 1940s.nyc and feels like it’s perhaps a few years on after remodelling and gentrification associated with the new high-rise that has gone up in the background.

But a problem arises in this apparent identification… because on page 937 of Letters to Family Lovecraft states…

All three now set out for dinner — at the old Bristol Dining Room in Willoughby Street near Fulton, next door to the now defunct John’s, which was my Brooklyn headquarters for spaghetti in the old days. (July 1931)

Next door.

“Bristol” was the long-established Bristol’s Dining Room, with Mr. J. E. Bristol proprietor. He had a small chain of eight such in New York City by 1920. Can it be found? Well, there is this postcard picture, which appears in a book dedicated to such from the 1905-07 period in Brooklyn…

Here is the old Bristol’s Dining Room seen in all its oyster-purveying glory. As one can see, there is no architectural or street-furniture comparison to be found between the suggested site at 185 Willoughby and the postcard of Bristol’s Dining Room. If, as Lovecraft states, his old John’s was next to the Bristol’s Dining Room then it would either have been in the next-door barbers’ shop (barbering pole, outside) seen up steps on the right of the postcard, or is off to the immediate left and out of range of the camera.

Nor is there, on the 185 Willoughby or its adjacent 1940s.nyc pictures, any glimpse of a possible Bristol’s Dining Room next door. The clincher is that in summer 1931 Lovecraft talks of the “defunct John’s”. Therefore it would not be seen on a late 1930s / early 1940s tax picture. Most likely another nearby cafe took the name in the 1930s, perhaps hoping to profit a little on the name-recognition.

What then was the exact address of the Bristol’s Dining Room in Brooklyn in the mid 1920s? Could it have moved since 1900? Was there more than one in Brooklyn by that time? Those are possibilities. But regrettably the address cannot be discovered on the Web in public records or books, though those with access to pay-walled genealogy records might find it. Nor is there any 1920s branch advertising-map or suchlike to be found.

Can the architecture seen on the card be found on a virtual trot down Willoughby Street? Not on 1940s.nyc, so far as I can see.

So, it’s still a mystery.

Montague Street branch of the Brooklyn Public Library

Urban Archive has a new pictorial map of “Amusements, Movies, and the Great Outdoors: Summertime Fun with H.P. Lovecraft” in New York City. Including a picture of the Montague Street branch of the Brooklyn Public Library.

I went looking for more of this library branch, and found an evocative picture of the entrance. The exterior book and magazine stand, seen outside, was probably not selling the library’s discards. Since a memoir of a Brooklyn boyhood states that the library rigorously removed all dust-jackets and other attractive elements — placing its books into a severe uniform binding.

From the 1925 telegraphic diary, 2nd February…

[With] CME & GK to Taormina [restaurant] and Montague St. — meet SL in subway — Idol