Celebrating H.P. Lovecraft’s keen interest in cats.
One of the best science-fiction stories of 1955/56… “The Game of Rat and Dragon”, from Galaxy for September 1955.
09 Tuesday Jun 2020
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Celebrating H.P. Lovecraft’s keen interest in cats.
One of the best science-fiction stories of 1955/56… “The Game of Rat and Dragon”, from Galaxy for September 1955.
08 Monday Jun 2020
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Graham Plowman has released a new soundtrack to an “unmade film” adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness.
Available now as free samples and as an $8 download.
07 Sunday Jun 2020
Posted in Podcasts etc.
The slick and focussed Stuff To Blow Your Mind podcast returns with the new “Subterrenes: Like Submarines but Underground”. The episode examines…
The notion of a subterrene, or underground drilling vehicle, is well established within the realm of science fiction, but what are the real-world possibilities for vehicles that drill or melt their way through the subterranean world.
Start at 9:20 minutes to skip the intros.
One might at first think ‘steampunk, Jules Verne, Mole Man from Fantastic Four‘, but these days we have to start thinking ‘nuclear-powered Boring Company mega-driller with Elon Musk at the controls’.
“To the Core” by Binoched
Lovecraftians may also be interested in the March 2020 Stuff To Blow Your Mind “The Invention of the Book”, a two-parter on the early history of book technologies.
07 Sunday Jun 2020
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Just released, an interesting labour-of-love videogame from a former BioWare developer. Old Gods Rising is a single-player Windows game…
Old Gods Rising is a first-person adventure mystery. Duvall describes it as “what would have happened if H.P. Lovecraft had been running the Firewatch team.
In which you wander around an eerily deserted university campus and grounds. As you do, these days. I’ve no idea what Firewatch is but Old Gods sounds like it’s in the mould of the British game of a few years ago called Everyone’s Gone to the Rapture, but here with a scholarly and Lovecraftian layer. Old Gods is said to take about four hours for hardened three-games-a-week puzzler gamers, or perhaps three evenings for those who only play three games a year.
As with all large new PC games, it may be advisable to wait for a few bugfix patches before playing.
06 Saturday Jun 2020
Posted in Odd scratchings
Hurrah, I found out how to centre text in the old ‘original flavor’ blog post editor on a free WordPress blog. Yes, I know that’s easy to do on the fancy new one, but I still use the old one. And the old HTML center tag has never been supported, because it messes up template themes.
What you do is you get a snippet paster for your browser (try ‘Paste email’ for Chrome browsers, or ‘Paste Email Plus’ for Pale Moon) and set it to paste…
No need to add the end p tag. Here there are also Italics tags. I’m assuming you want a centred picture-title, in italics to clearly distinguish it from the body text.
Demo:
Cats in space!
06 Saturday Jun 2020
I’ve found another early appearance of ‘Lovecraft as character’. It was mentioned in the Bloch letters, and takes the form of a three-page spoof story/sketch. Robert Bloch’s humorous “The Ultimate Ultimatum” appeared in Fantasy Magazine for August 1935. This purported to be an account, over three pages, of a very large convention of writers and fans. Supposedly having taken place recently in a large crypt, the ‘event’ clearly anticipated the form of ‘the large science-fiction convention’ as it later emerged — none had actually happened at that point, though regional ‘conventions’ were a thing in amateur journalism.
The relevant issue of Fantasy Magazine is not online, and nor is the item itself, but here is a taster dug out of a later magazine article on Bloch…
It was a big convention. Lovecraft was there. So was Clark Ashton Smith, August Derleth, and Otto Binder. Ray Palmer was present, and Stanley Weinbaum. Also there was I, thrilled and proud at attending this gathering of masterminds.
In his letter to Bloch, Lovecraft commented on Bloch’s “The Shambler from the Stars” story in which he had also featured as a character. He added… “the spoof also is extremely clever — I can recognise myself except for the pipe”.
An endnote for the letter adds a little more text from “The Ultimate Ultimatum”…
Howard Cthulhu Lovecraft … sat in the corner, puffing furiously at a skull-shaped pipe.
So far as I can tell the spoof has never been collected, and the Fantasy Magazine for August 1935 has its only appearance. It’s unknown if there were illustrations, but probably there weren’t. It might make for an interesting 1960s Mad magazine -style comics adaptation, today, by a good caricaturist.
05 Friday Jun 2020
Posted in Podcasts etc.
There’s a a new episode of The Lovecraft Geek podcast from Robert M. Price.
He fronts the podcast with news of his Emergency Relief Request fundraiser at Go Fund Me, to raise $15,000 for vital repair work to his broken kitchen and hot water supply — before the winter arrives.
Nearly half of the needed $15k amount has already been raised. If you can help push it along a bit, then I’m sure we’d all be all be happier knowing that Price will be snug-and-sound as the cold nights return in the Fall/Autumn.
He also mentions that his long-awaited possibly-Chaosium books The Exham Cycle (aka The Exham Priory Cycle) and The Yig Cycle, may well now be self-published under his own Exham Priory imprint. He also moots the possibility that he may take the next issue of The Crypt of Cthulhu journal back under his direct control, in order to see it published in a timely manner. Hopefully these and other projects can hastened by the good news that he has the funds to get a functioning kitchen and hot water again.
05 Friday Jun 2020
Posted in Historical context, Picture postals
“Early in June [1934] I visited a most impressive spot — Silver Springs, some 60 miles from De Land [Florida, home of Robert Barlow. Presumably Barlow was with him.] Here is found a series of placid lagoons … whose floor is riddled with vast pits 30 to 60 feet deep, & covered with curious marine vegetation. In many places divers have encountered the huge bones of prehistoric animals … I saw these varied wonders from a glass-bottomed boat.
Out of the lagoons flows the Silver River, as typical a tropic stream as the Congo or Amazon, with tall palms, trailing vines & moss, & bending cypresses along the swampy banks. Alligators, turtles, & snakes abound, & on either side the jungle stretches away uninterruptedly for miles. … I took a 10 mile launch trip on the river, & could easily have imagined myself in the heart of Africa.” — Lovecraft in Selected Letters IV, page 414.
The leaflet adds the important point that the glass-bottom boats were electric, and therefore relatively silent and thus did not scare the fish away. He also visited New York some months later, to find his friend Belknap Long obsessed by his new hobby of tropical fish-keeping, thus giving another opportunity for close observation of the finny ones.
Evidently there were two types of trip, the “glass-bottom” boat trip and the speedboat “launch” trip of ten miles. Lovecraft talks as if he did both.
One wonders if this trip influenced his decision to set “The Shadow out of Time”, written nine months later, in the prehistoric era?
The ground and swamps were constantly alive with snakes, lizards, and crocodiles, while insects buzzed incessantly amidst the lush vegetation. And far out at sea unspied and unknown monsters spouted mountainous columns of foam into the vaporous sky. Once I was taken under the ocean in a gigantic submarine vessel with searchlights, and glimpsed some living horrors of awesome magnitude. I saw also the ruins of incredible sunken cities, and the wealth of crinoid, brachiopod, coral, and ichthyic life which everywhere abounded.” from — “The Shadow out of Time”.
Bloch, and possibly others, had also sent him pictures of the life-sized dinosaurs from the Chicago World’s Fair of 1933-34.
Dinosaurs as we know them today were then in their first flush of popularity, and Lovecraft also saw lit dioramas of them as models when he visited the Natural History Museum at New Haven, and he came away greatly impressed.
Lovecraft had a second opportunity for a jungle-like river exploration in June 1935, this time more primitive — but also free of things like the bored tour-guides and perpetually gossiping fellow-tourists who can ruin such trips. The second trip happened toward the end of his long final stay in Florida with young Barlow. The building of Barlow’s printing-house hut on his ‘island across the lake’ was finally completed around June 1935. He and Barlow rowed across to the island each day, and his comment that the “trip” made for “good exercise” suggests it was a fair distance. Lovecraft was quite familiar with rowing-boats, having at Barlow’s age made many solo trips up and down his native Seekonk. I’ve also established elsewhere that the Seekonk of the 1900s was a difficult river, thus Lovecraft would have had no fear of pulling across a mere lake (I presume Barlow’s military family had shot out all the alligators). As Lovecraft tells Bloch, he machete-hacked a track through the undergrowth to a road (presumably un-paved) that lay on the far side of the hut’s boat-landing. Possibly that was how the heavy and the noisy printing equipment was moved in, via his new track and perhaps a short raft journey. He and Barlow went on a celebratory expedition…
Bob’s cabin across the lake is now finished … we row across each day … [also] we explored a marvellous tropical river — with leaning palms, sunken logs, twister cypress roots and the water’s edge — etc etc etc — much like the river at Silver Springs which I described to you last year. This aught to make good descriptive material for some tale, some time … jungle stuff, to use as a background for pre-human ruins, & and all that.
Was this river accessible via an outlet from the lake, or perhaps by carrying the lake-boat along Lovecraft’s newly-hewn jungle track and over the road? The area is reported to have become far more well-drained and drier than it was in the mid 1930s, but the current satellite imagery still suggests a possible small winding river across the road, which looks as though it would be accessible with a small boat taken along the new-cut track…
Wherever the rather more rough-hewn river trip was, it was made after the final completion of “The Shadow out of Time”. Thus he never had the chance to use that particular ‘jungle’ experience in fiction. But finding the above quote further confirms my earlier hunch that, had he lived, some of his fiction would have gone in a ‘Solomon Kane in Africa’-like direction, probably set on the liminal frontier where Ancient Rome met the fringes of the African interior. Such a move could have followed on from his several non-cosmic stories that have a wide international spread in their plotting and back-stories, but here projected back in time in such a way that Lovecraft’s full knowledge of the diasporic Ancient Roman world and pagan rites and superstitions could have been brought to bear. Imagine “Rats” re-written for such a setting, for instance. He would also have been able to explore ideas of the decadence and decline of Empires, and degeneration in the face of certain types of environment.
Further reading:
Stephen J. Jordan, “H.P. Lovecraft in Florida”, Lovecraft Studies 42-43 (Summer/Autumn 2001). Now effectively inaccessible — something really should be done about getting the Lovecraft Studies journal online and searchable.
04 Thursday Jun 2020
Posted in New books
Ensayos Literarios is a new book containing Lovecraft’s selected essays on literature, in Spanish translation. Published February 2020 by Paginas de Espuma — a strange name (‘Foaming Pages’) that’s new to me but they seem to be a long-established publisher in Madrid. The new book is in hardcover and Kindle.
03 Wednesday Jun 2020
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated and he has news of another new book, his The Advance of the Weird Tale. This being his “miscellaneous essays on weird fiction”, and available now in Kindle. It anticipates another collection, as yet unpublished, to be titled The Progression of the Weird Tale.
He also notes another new survey book, his Varieties of Crime Fiction (April 2020), which his blog states he spent “a good three years writing”. It’s also available now on Kindle via Amazon.
03 Wednesday Jun 2020
Posted in Historical context, New books
This week Bobby Derie notes Kthulhu Reich (2019) by Asamatsu Ken. It’s a translated Cthulhu Mythos novel from Japan, fixed up from seven short-stories….
Asamatsu Ken was a bit ahead of the curve when he first published these stories in Japan in 1994-1999. Some of the stories are eerily prescient as far as capturing the essential dynamic of the post-2000 Mythos WWII craze.
Which is something I’ve thankfully missed out on, and was only very marginally aware of. Give me a good Commando comic, any day, with my ginger beer. But I have of course noticed many other ‘Nazi occult’ instances over the last few decades, in more mainstream movies and graphic novels from Indiana Jones onward. In his article Derie also touches on how… “World War II has become fertile ground writers of weird and fantasy fiction” and gives a few examples. I’d imagine that McFarland’s vast Popular Culture book-list already has a couple of surveys of the relevant movies and games.
Derie’s comment on Lovecraft “approving as he did of Nazi Germany’s ultranationalism” could be be misunderstood, though. Firstly one has to know that “ultranationalism” has a specific political-historical meaning: ‘the arrogant belief in the complete superiority of one’s nation over others, and the placing of its interests above all other nations at all times’. In the cases of Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia etc this was accompanied by variations on the ‘cult-of-the-Emperor’. Ultranationalism has also spawned an equally perverse leftist flipside, which despises any pride in the nation and seeks to constantly denigrate it at every opportunity.
One can then make the distinction between ultranationalism as expressed in foreign-policy and as expressed in the nation’s internal culture, and Lovecraft did so in regard to Germany in early 1934. He mildly approved of one, but derided the other. The evidence is in Lovecraft’s letters to Robert Bloch, which I’m currently reading. For about six pages and over several letters, Lovecraft tried to think through such distinctions. He coruscated the new Hitlerlism as it then stood, but as he understood it… i) the ailing Germany’s only choice was between fascism and communism, and… ii) the nation had some legitimate grievances about how harshly it had been subjugated after the First World War. Like many commentators of the time, he grasped these key wider imperatives of the new German ultranationalism: the Versailles treaty and communism. Lovecraft did however differ from many observers. He was painfully illiterate on even basic economics, as he himself admitted, and his grasp of fascist economics was simplistic — effectively nationalise key industries by constraining them with socialistic controls and price-fixing/profit-sharing regimes, and pay a small stipend to indigent writers such as himself. Probably he had not noticed that the programmes of job-creation for civilians had been quietly dropped from the ‘priority list’ of Germany’s key policies in December 1933.
Such Versailles→communism understandings of Germany were very common in early 1934, and Lovecraft’s epistolary “approval” of the new leader also followed the sentiment of the herd. In that he had an abstract and slightly grudging admiration of Hitler for ‘standing up’ to other nations, some two years before Germany actually marched into the Rhineland, while also stating that he was a “clown” given to buffoonish strutting. Lovecraft did not go on to express a concrete approval of an itemised tick-list of Nazi doctrines, so far as I’m aware. Beyond what he read in the English press (he had no German, having been put off it for life at school), the ambivalence of the “approval” of Germany’s new leader may have been underpinned by two factors: i) his ongoing correspondence with his friend Galpin, who sympathised with Mussolini’s nationalism in Italy and was thus highly critical of the German variety of fascism and its bizarre focus on anti-Semitism; and ii) by Lovecraft’s deep understanding of the Ancient Roman roots of the fascist worldview. In other words, Lovecraft knew something about how ersatz and crude Nazism was. It would be some years before his downstairs neighbour, a German teacher newly back from Germany, would also tearfully tell him of what Nazism was like on the streets and in the classrooms.
So, to return to the claim of “approving as he did of Nazi Germany’s ultranationalism”. In the Bloch letters of early 1934 Lovecraft appears to distinguish between: i) Germany’s outward-facing ultranationalist stance; and ii) the internal imposition of a new national socialist culture, which had then been underway for about a year following the infamous Reichstag fire (which allowed the Nazis to break with coalition government and take total power). Even before the ‘Night of the Long Knives’ purges (Hitler takes total control of the Party) in late June 1934, Lovecraft could see that national socialist culture was not going to be a sensible and timely adaptation of an old conservative culture to the new forces of modernity. Instead it was a rupture, a censorious book-burning flight into an ersatz and juvenile culture warped by ideology…
He has borrowed the Soviets’ [Russian communists] idea of a narrowly artificial culture or ‘ideology’ separate from Western Europe — & if this concept (with its foundation in definitely false science and rather infantile emotion) lasts long enough to colour a whole new generation, the ultimate result will be highly unfortunate.” — Lovecraft, Letters to Robert Bloch, page 98.
As de Camp wrote in the first substantial Lovecraft biography… “From the end of 1933 on, Lovecraft’s criticism of Hitler and fascism grew ever more severe.” (Lovecraft: A Biography). What is missing here is perhaps a “his”, as in “criticism of Hitler and his fascism”, i.e. Nazism. Lovecraft remained more ambivalent about the other forms of fascism.
02 Tuesday Jun 2020
Posted in Kittee Tuesday