RSID Library
02 Monday Dec 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
02 Monday Dec 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings
02 Monday Dec 2019
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Dead Reckonings No. 26, now shipping. Includes, among others…
““The Most Poignant Sensations of My Existence”: Visiting the Ladd Observatory at NecronomiCon Providence” by Karen Joan Kohoutek.
“Ars Necronomica 2019: What Drives the Dark Dreams of That Divine City?” by Michelle Souliere. (Presumably a review of the art show at last summer’s convention).
02 Monday Dec 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
T.R. Knight at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana. He is teaching a class called the Tabletop Game Writing Lab. Its specific focus is teaching the art of designing a tabletop roleplaying game, more specifically, Call of Cthulhu.
In other news from the gamer-verse, Open Cthulhu is now online. An old-school RPG, it seems to be aiming to be properly Lovecraftian rather than ‘machine-guns vs. Cthulhu’. And more importantly, to be free of trademark entanglements. See the background discussion on the project and the legal elements.
01 Sunday Dec 2019
Posted in Housekeeping
Frost furrs the ground around Tentaclii Towers, crows flap calmly through brisk blue skies, and the floods freeze into wide icy pools. Feral London media pundits hunt in packs across the wastelands, as Stoke-on-Trent is purportedly ground-zero in the coming General Election. Daily posting has continued here, but for the time being the following features are in abeyance: the ‘Picture Postals from Lovecraft’ posts, ‘Kittee Tuesday’ posts; and posts resulting from my many hours spent on deep research into Lovecraft’s life and places.
Thanks to my Patreon patrons it’s been a purchasing month, though not a reading month.
I finally bagged O Fortunate Floridian: H. P. Lovecraft’s Letters to R. H. Barlow at $30 inc. transatlantic shipping. It was sold by Amazon and turned out to be a slightly imperfect Amazon Warehouse-type deal, with a printing-machine burr lightly scratched across a quarter of the back cover. Probably a print-on-demand reject or a collector’s return, but otherwise perfectly fine.
I also bagged the first hardback volume of the Selected Letters from eBay for just $29 inc. shipping. This then took a bit of wresting away from the seller, who became reluctant once I’d purchased and paid. I had to pay a bit more in the end, which took some of the shine off getting such a bargain. But it finally arrived yesterday and is fine. It has slight hinge glue-marks on the first inner page, where a removed Library lending control-sheet had once been held in at some cloistered and rarefied library. But otherwise it’s fresh, un-dusty, tight, un-scribbled in by yahoos, and the dustjacket is fine in mylar.
So these two books will help to ease me back into Lovecraft in the springtime, along with two Lovecraft Annual copies that also need to be read. Please help me add to ‘the springtime pile’ by becoming my Patron on Patreon. This month the Patreon again remains stubbornly stuck at $58 a month.
Spoken-word audio fared well on the blog this month, with The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society posting selected Lovecraft letters as audio readings. Their new public “Voluminous” podcast is weekly, so I’m not going to try to note every single episode here. That would become tiresome both for them and for me. If you’re interested, subscribe to the “Voluminous” feeds. I spotted that Librivox are nearing completion on free recordings of “Lovecraft’s Influences and Favorites”. I also updated and fixed the dead links on my old posting on free Conan audiobook readings.
Lovecraft items included the Falvey Memorial Library at Villanova University putting scans of Lovecraft’s astronomical notebooks online; an Italian blog showing photos from inside 10 Barnes Street as it is today; and the free ebook Challenging Moskowitz which usefully adds to the easily-available source material on the proto-fandom of the 1930s. I also looked briefly into Bloch’s 1937 story “A Visit with H. P. Lovecraft”, re: its publication history and where one might find it today. It’s another item to add to the eventual “Encyclopedia of Lovecraft as a Character”.
Much Lovecraft activity in Europe was noted here, from conferences to journal special issues and more. My Open Lovecraft listing of free online scholarship had several updates. I noted several relevant scholarly ‘calls’ including one for The Pulpster, and another on archaeology and popular culture. Also the new possibly-a-journal Pulpourri.
That’s it for November, onward to Christmas and New Year!
01 Sunday Dec 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
The metal band The Great Old Ones have a new Cosmicism album out, and it seems to be going down well in metal music circles. Metal Storm has a short review that’s accessible to clueless newbs like myself…
Soaring, entrancing black metal with a pleasant variation in tempo dominates, interspersed with various dreamlike melodic breaks that serve to reinforce a more ethereal vibe, all topped off by front man Benjamin Guerry howling tales of colors out of space, horrors at Dunwich, and crawling chaoses.
30 Saturday Nov 2019
Posted in Scholarly works
Creatio Fantastica, a Polish scholarly journal in public open-access. Also appears to be completely under Creative Commons Attribution.
A 2016 issue was a Lovecraft special with a Joshi translation as the lead article. A 2017 issue was on Tolkien, with a Thomas Honegger lead article.
Usefully available in .EPUB and .MOBI ebook formats, as well as .PDF files. The Creative Commons status presumably means that translations and digest summaries can be freely made.
29 Friday Nov 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Blambot will be having a 30%-off sale, starting Monday 2nd December. They specialise in digital comic-book lettering fonts, production quality but at a much lower cost than the $80-ers over at ComicCraft. Probably about a dozen are well-suited to the summoning of eldritch comics.
Those looking for digital comics production software for the desktop may also be interested to know that Poser Pro 11 is down to a bargain $164 this weekend, and that Clip Studio Paint EX (Manga Studio) is 50% off at $109.
However, at Black Friday prices, getting Poser + Comic Life 3 would be the alternative and about $70 cheaper. Thus enabling you to spend the saved $70 on two or three workhorse lettering fonts from Blambot. Comic Life is the way to go if you want panel/page layout, lettering and balloons to be as simple as possible, but still have nice slick output. Could be augmented with the free Krita, for additional over-inking work. Krita’s brushes have improved enormously with the latest 4.x version.
All the above use perpetual licences, so there’s none of that ‘subscription/rental’ malarkey.
29 Friday Nov 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
“One Squid to Rule Them All”, Journal of Geek Studies Vol. 5 No. 1, 2018. A biology-heavy survey of the tentacular ones in Tolkien.
28 Thursday Nov 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings
The Alchemist, a 1941 fanzine, new on Archive.org. It opens with a sweet Gestetner-duplicated ad from Derleth for Lovecraft…
Also Forrest J. Ackerman on Weird Tales cover artist Margaret Bundage, and a humourous squit from Ray Bradbury on why he’s not Robert Bloch. On the back is a Hannes Bok design, which would probably make someone a fine tattoo these days.
27 Wednesday Nov 2019
Posted in Odd scratchings, Podcasts etc., REH
I’ve updated the links on my 2014 post on R.E. Howard audio books. That post put Robert E. Howard’s Conan stories in story-world chronological order, and linked to free audio which had reasonably good narrators.
Currently missing:
“Black Colossus”.
“The Pool Of The Black One”.
“The Black Stranger”, aka “Treasure of Tranicos” after de Camp’s reworking.
27 Wednesday Nov 2019
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Another scholarly book title that’s new to me, Pulpourri…
a miscellaneous collection of well-written, impeccably researched essays on pulp fiction and how it influenced American popular culture of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
I’m not sure if it’s going to be in series like a journal or is a one-off.
26 Tuesday Nov 2019
Posted in Scholarly works
* C. de Souza and R. Giroldo, “Um chamado que ecoa? A representacao dos mitos no jogo Call of Cthulhu, Revell, Revista de Estudos Litererios da UEMS, Vol. 2, No. 22, 2019. (In Portuguese. Analysis of the 2018 videogame Call of Cthulhu, based on the Chaosium RPGs).
* C. de Souza and R. Giroldo, “O intruso”, de H. P. Lovecraft: o unheimlich no espelho., Abusoes, No. 10, 2019. (In Portuguese. Reads “The Outsider” figure via the unheimlich, as filtered through later critics. Also explores how Lovecraft’s atmosphere interacts with this effect. Part of a special issue on the idea of the unheimlich).