Cadabra news

From the latest Decibel magazine

Legendary horror film composer Fabio Frizzi talks about helping to bring H.P. Lovecraft’s poetry to life on I Notturni Di Yuggoth.

Decibel also has an exclusive preview-track online. This new Cadabra album starts pre-orders today. Exclusively in heavy vinyl, with “a new liner essay by S. T. Joshi” plus sleeve art and fold-out poster insert.

For those without a vinyl record-player, note also the forthcoming Karamazid Art Portfolio from Cadabra Records. This is the art for the Cadabra albums to date, done as a set of sumptuous prints. 50 copies only, 14 still available as of today.

Tolkien’s Library

On YouTube, leading Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey giving a ten minute talk in August 2019 on the new book Tolkien’s Library. Tolkien scholars now have the equivalent of Joshi’s useful book Lovecraft’s Library, listing exactly what was known to be in the master’s library or ‘known to have been read’. It’s a hefty 466 pages and fully annotated.

Other interestingly bookish talks at the big Birmingham Tolkien event in 2019, now online: Wayne G. Hammond on “Tolkien and his Publishers” and the “Illustrating Tolkien” Panel from leading illustrators of Middle-earth.

Ann Radcliffe Academic Conference 2020

StokerCon 2020 (mid April 2020) is in the UK and has an academic off-shoot, the Ann Radcliffe Academic Conference. The abstract submission deadline is 31st October 2019, and “registration to StokerCon 2019 is required for to be accepted and to present”. No special theme other than “horror studies” in any media, but they expect papers to take an “interdisciplinary approach” and offer a list of academic disciplines to get inter- with. It sounds like it’s more for grad students rather than independent scholars, but I thought I’d mention it here anyway.

Added to Open Lovecraft

* J. Newell, “The daemonology of unplumbed space: weird fiction, disgust, and the aesthetics of the unthinkable”, PhD thesis for The University of British Columbia, 2017. (The fourth and final section is on Lovecraft, following surveys of the uses of disgust in the fiction of Poe, Machen and Blackwood).

* A. Peedumae, “A corpus-based study of names in Lovecraft’s fiction”, 2019. (Undergraduate dissertation for the University of Tartu, “an analysis of character names with the use of collocations, etymology and semantic prosodies” in Lovecraft).

* M. Sulmicki, Studies In Madness: Reality and Subjectivity in Alan Moore’s Providence, Ambrose Bierce’s “An Inhabitant of Carcosa” and Robert W. Chambers’ “The Repairer of Reputations”, Zeszyty Naukowe Uczelni Vistula / Vistula University Working Papers, Vol.65, No.2, 2019. (In English).

The “first comprehensive checklist of Arkham House ephemera”

Don Herron has news that Derleth scholar John D. Haefele has…

the first comprehensive checklist of Arkham House ephemera, Modern Era, ever published [in the] September/October 2019 issue of Firsts: The Book Collectors Magazine.

Ah, but this is only the prelude. “Now You’ll Need Two Issues” added Don a few days later. September/October carries the introductory essay, with the actual list in the following issue.

Pulpster #28 / Art of Commando Comics

The journal The Pulpster #28 is now available, following its debut at a highly successful Pulpfest 2019 (a big jump in attendance, and lots of new younger faces) for which Pulpster is the event’s annual journal. Issue #28 should be available quite soon for non-attendees to order by mail.

A taster of some of the contents:

* Will Murray and Anthony Tollin on… “how the creators of Batman lifted elements from The Shadow“. (There’s a matching article by Murray on Batman prototypes in Alter Ego #152, 2019)

* Will Murray on Johnston McCulley… “whom he calls the grandfather of the superhero”.

* D. Kepler surveys Zorro… “on screens around the world”.

* Scott Tracy Griffin on how… “Tarzan begat generations of jungle men, women, and children in popular culture.”

* Aaron H. Oliver on… “the 1960s western/spy TV series The Wild Wild West“.

* Tony Davis on… “Bertrand Sinclair and his nearly 50-year career in the pulps”.

The 2020 Pulpfest will apparently lead with a focus on Ray Bradbury for his 101st birthday.


Here in the UK I’m also pleased to see that the high-quality Illustrators magazine has a chunky Art of Commando Comics book due at the end of November, covering interior layouts and art as well as the well-known covers from the nation’s favourite war tales comic.

Commando is a somewhat curious format for the UK and is the closest thing we have to the ‘BD album’ format of France and Belgium. Being four x 64-page complete-story comics each month.

New Ray Bradbury sculpture/statue unveiled in his home town

The new Ray Bradbury sculpture/statue is now in place and dedicated in his home town of Waukegan, Illinois, a lakeside town about 30 miles north of Chicago. Designed by Zachary Oxman and made by E & E Metal Fab. near Harrisburg, the ‘Fantastical Traveler’ memorial was unveiled for Bradbury’s 100th birthday in August 2019. It’s only had local media coverage, so far.

Locally funded by $125,000 in donations, the memorial heralds a planned 3,500-sq.ft. Ray Bradbury Museum in the town’s disused Carnegie Library. In the meantime the town hosts an annual Ray Bradbury ‘Dandelion Wine’ Fine Arts Festival.

The work was inspired by Ray Bradbury’s 1971 celebratory poem for NASA’s Mariner 9 mission…


If only we had taller been

The fence we walked between the years

Did balance us serene

It was a place half in the sky where

In the green of leaf and promising of peach

We’d reach our hands to touch and almost touch the sky

If we could reach and touch, we said,

‘Twould teach us, not to, never to, be dead

We ached and almost touched that stuff;

Our reach was never quite enough.

If only we had taller been

And touched God’s cuff, His hem,

We would not have to go with them

Who’ve gone before,

Who, short as us, stood tall as they could stand

And hoped by stretching tall that they might keep their land

Their home, their hearth, their flesh and soul.

But they, like us, were standing in a hole

O, Thomas, will a Race one day stand really tall

Across the Void, across the Universe and all?

And, measured out with rocket fire,

At last put Adam’s finger forth

As on the Sistine Ceiling,

And God’s hand come down the other way

To measure man and find him Good

And Gift him with Forever’s Day?

I work for that

Short man, Large dream

I send my rockets forth between my ears

Hoping an inch of Good is worth a pound of years

Aching to hear a voice cry back along the universal mall:

We’ve reached Alpha Centauri!

We’re tall, O God, we’re tall!


“with his chariots like a whirlwind…”

S.T. Joshi has undertaken a whirlwind tour of Lovecraft’s places, in the company of a documentary film crew, ranging from Quebec to New York City to Providence. His most recent blog post has an account of the trip.

At the conclusion…

In Providence I was happy to hand over to an official at Brown University a check for $10,000, constituting the initial sum raised by the sale of the library of W. H. Pugmire.

…in a week or two we expect to have still more books [of the Pugmire library] posted on the website, including some very choice items indeed. So keep a sharp eye peeled!

Further on with Grill/Binkin

“Further on the Grill/Binkin Lovecraft Collection”. It appears that a chunk of this major Lovecraft collection ended up in the hands of collector/dealer John McLaughlin, and then wasn’t then sold on until 1985 when…

through the auction of McLaughlin’s collections, much of what had been the Grill/Binkin collection of Lovecraftiana re-entered the market, and was apparently completely dispersed.