A new episode of the Voluminous podcast, A Symphony of Galpin. In which the letters are accompanied by…
Reber Clark [and] his amazing orchestration of Galpin’s “Lament for HPL”
04 Wednesday Aug 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
A new episode of the Voluminous podcast, A Symphony of Galpin. In which the letters are accompanied by…
Reber Clark [and] his amazing orchestration of Galpin’s “Lament for HPL”
03 Tuesday Aug 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Pulp Flakes pops the covers open on a pop-up book inspired by readers of Weird Tales magazine…
More details at maker Hannah Batsel’s page.
Talking of making and magazines and interactivity… some of my readers, those who are writers or in publishing, may be interested to know that the venerable DTP software QuarkXPress is well and truly back. I recently took a look at it and was pleased to find it very mature, with annual updates since 2015. It’s a one-time purchase of about £360 (disguised as an annual subscription, but you get to keep it after a year even if you cancel). In fact, it’s better than that… the latest QuarkXPress 2021 is now 50% off for August. Which means if you’re quick you can get top-class professional DTP and ebook software for £181.
Its key feature is now absolute reproduction of a DTP print layout in Web browser-friendly HTML5. Plus support within that for animated elements (slide-ins, slow zooms into pictures) and looping animated GIFs and now SVGs. HTML5 is something no key competitors have natively, with the cheap-but-capable Affinity Publisher and Microsoft Publisher having no HTML5 export at all, and Adobe InDesign (subscription) requiring a third-party plugin (subscription) to export HTML5 layouts. As such the QuarkXPress 2021 free-trial is one to look at if you want to make a device-responsive online magazine with print-like layout plus full interactivity, with full control over content and no subscription-shackle or reliance on a cloud-service that could go ‘pop’ or cancel you at any moment. Of course, you can also export the usual .PDF file too, along with new-fangled tablet and ebook reader formats and suchlike.
I have no connection with the makers, it’s just sheer co-incidence that I very recently took a deep-dive into the ‘state of DTP’. I wanted to discover what’s currently possible with embedding creative animation in the magazine format. I came away from the research very lukewarm about the open-source offerings (LibreOffice Draw, Sigil, Scribus). The paid QuarkXPress came out the obvious winner for perfectly exporting fixed layouts to Web browsers in HTML5 and for having a one-time purchase.
02 Monday Aug 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
The Lone Animator has a ‘making of’ post for his recent stop-motion/live-action short based on Derleth’s “The Dweller In the Hills”.
01 Sunday Aug 2021
Posted in Odd scratchings
The Great British Summer lasted all of a week here, as usual, with temperatures nicely nudging above 80 degrees each day — while our increasingly ridiculous Met Office sternly warned daily of ‘extreme’ weather. Perfectly normal summer temperatures are not extreme. It’s all vanished now, of course. The mighty walls of Tentaclii Towers are once again bathed in cool rains.
Thanks to my loyal Patreons, who this month helped me restore the Lovecraft Panther paperbacks I had as a lad. These were almost my first encounter with Lovecraft but were lost in 1990s. I’ve now bagged the three key books for a pittance, and yet they are also in excellent condition. It was ‘now or never’, given their increasing scarcity and silly prices. Drool-worthy macro photos are coming soon, possibly for my Patreons only.
Not many new Lovecraft discoveries on Tentaclii this month, but I did find a picture of The Bijou on Westminster St., Providence, which seems to me the most likely candidate for Lovecraft’s cinema ticket-selling job. A new Arthur Leeds article was also found, on movie special effects, along with others newly arrived on Archive.org. Lovecraft’s friend Leeds had been a studio executive before the movie industry moved from New York City to California, a move which left him and McNeil, Dench and Houtain all high-and-dry.
Talking of movies, The Green Knight is a long and fairly faithful adaptation of the supernatural classic. The movie is now widely available in the USA and is being well reviewed. If you’re curious about the background to it, then you want my book Strange Country: Sir Gawain in the moorlands of North Staffordshire. Sadly the movie has been pulled from cinemas here in the UK, where it was due to screen on 6th August.
S.T. Joshi’s blog brought the titles for the forthcoming final books containing Lovecraft’s letters, and also the welcome news that Mark Griffin is making a combined index to all the published letters. In new Lovecraft-related books, I noted the greatly expanded new edition of Out of the Immortal Night: Selected Works of Samuel Loveman, and Born under Saturn: The Letters of Samuel Loveman and Clark Ashton Smith, both of which appear to be set to ship relatively soon — September. Also noted was the hardback for Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1, shipping now.
Tentaclii did not feature a great deal of my research on Lovecraft this month, as I’m taking a bit of a break from that. But my “Notes on Letters to Family, Vol. II – part two” did appeared, and part three may be posted in a week or two. I also mused briefly on Lovecraft’s interest in glands.
Several useful scholarly sources for movies were noted, including the movie-history search tool Lantern and a full searchable run of Variety 1905-2017. I also found the open journal Victorian Popular Fictions. The Tolkien journal Mallorn is also now open, though with a two-year paywall for members. These and others have been added to my JURN search-engine for open-access arts & humanities journals (and now much more). JURN has also had its usual midsummer overhaul and update on the back-end.
Newly arrived on Archive.org I spotted Frank Gruber’s collectable pulp industry memoir The Pulp Jungle, and a readable copy of the Lovecraft-inspired The Werewolf of Ponkert. Also the uploading of a run of microfilmed Popular Mechanics 1902-2016, among which I found an interesting item on infra-red photography — perhaps a partial inspiration for “The Colour Out of Space”. Other new arrivals there were more scans of Derleth’s Arkham Sampler, Popular Astronomy for 1893-1951, and Midwest Folklore 1951-1964 which may interest R.E. Howard scholars. I was pleased to see more issues of Famous Monsters of Filmland arrive there too, and it looks like Archive.org must now be nearing a complete set. Wilum Pugmire, who was once forced by his parents to burn his precious collection of Famous Monsters, must be smiling somewhere.
Not much in podcasts and audio this month, and I imagine several people are holding items back and waiting for Lovecraft’s birthday in August. But I did link to “Howard Days 2021 – all audio recordings”.
In art, I made not one but two surveys of new and Lovecraft-y art on DeviantArt. By chance I found some nice old creepy woodcuts of Newport, a favourite haunt for Lovecraft. I showed these here and rectified/upscaled one of them. I was also pleased to see several new stop-motion Lovecraftian animations, including “The Other Gods”. A ComicCraft sale was noted, and the horror fonts pointed out.
Also in comics, this month I produced a bumper edition of VisNews with a long Kristian Donaldson (The Dark, Supermarket) interview, as well as a bumper “Oceans” issue of the free Digital Art Live magazine. Lovecraft did not make it to the final cut of the DAL Gallery, but he’ll be in the Halloween issue. The “Oceans” issue of DAL should be out in a few days, as I’m not the one who gets to press the ‘publish’ button on it.
I’m pleased to say I’ve now effectively completed the rescue of my old failed PC and have worked through nearly all of the required software wrangling. I had been running the ancient Linkbot Pro link-checking software and the FeedDemon RSS reader software, but I find that SEO Spider and QuietRSS are fine replacements. The new SSD drive is proving very enjoyable in terms of speed, as is my XP-PEN Artist 22 (2021 2nd Gen, a magazine review-unit) draw-on-the-screen monitor. Thanks again to my Patreons for helping out at a difficult time and helping to fund this vital SSD purchase.
If you can spare a few dollars a month via Patreon, please, it really does help me out. Many thanks.
31 Saturday Jul 2021
Posted in Scholarly works
A useful new search tool, Lantern. Search quickly across large archives of movie magazines, with visual page previews and snippets. Most sources are from the 1910s-1950s, and the scans are good and large. Free and public, requires no registration. Useful for quickly getting an idea about a movie that Lovecraft saw, without having to get a lecture from Wikipedia or wrestle with Archive.org.
31 Saturday Jul 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
A 1976 reprint of Munn’s The Werewolf of Ponkert, now free on Archive.org in public PDF. The tale (1925) went into the public domain last year. Other than the original Weird Tales appearance, one scan which is not ideal for reading, this is the only other version on Archive.org.
30 Friday Jul 2021
Posted in Historical context, Picture postals
Added to my 2013 H.P. Lovecraft, ticket-seller post, a picture of my best-guess at the cinema where Lovecraft might have briefly been the ticket-seller. The Bijou on Westminster St.
29 Thursday Jul 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
“Dagon” presented as a small VR game/visual-novel from Bit Golem. It’s set to release on Lovecraft’s birthday next month. If you add it to your Wishlist on Steam now, apparently you then get it free on the release-day.
28 Wednesday Jul 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
ComicCraft has 50% sale across all their quality (if rather expensive) commercial-use comic-books fonts, until 31st July. There are a dozen or so horror-comics fonts there, as well as some pulpy retro styles and some suited to adventure-hero comics.
The Blambot store is your rather more affordable alternative, and their sale is usually 30% off from ‘Cyber Monday’. You can also hire Blambot to create a custom comic-book font.
28 Wednesday Jul 2021
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Now listed at Hippocampus, the revised and augmented book Out of the Immortal Night: Selected Works of Samuel Loveman. The word “augmented” seems a bit of an understatement, as this second edition of the book has grown from 244 to 514 pages. Also new is Born under Saturn: The Letters of Samuel Loveman and Clark Ashton Smith…
The correspondence begins in 1913 [then extends] sporadically all the way down to 1941.
27 Tuesday Jul 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
New and Lovecraft-y on DeviantArt. Mostly toony at present…
The Gate by npantic. Dreamlands art.
Not new, but it popped up in a search. ‘Out of the South it would glide …’ by rod-roesler. “The White Ship”.
The Void by davidmichaelKurth.
Yog Sothoth by NestorAvalosOfficial.
The Great Race of Yith by NaestvedDK. Possibly a draft for a tattoo design.
If Disney did Lovecraft. A super-villain Elder Thing by ProdigyDuck.
26 Monday Jul 2021
Posted in Historical context
A run of Popular Mechanics magazine, 1902-2016 is being uploaded to Archive.org from microfilm, with 500 now uploaded (some still processing and just showing the cover). Including Lovecraft era titles. Such as this one from January 1926, just over a year before “The Colour Out of Space”…