New book: Lovecraftian Proceedings #3 (2019)

Newly listed at Hippocampus, Lovecraftian Proceedings No. 3 (June 2019). This is the book of some of the many papers given at the Armitage Symposium at NecromiCon 2017.

Looking interesting to me, after filtering the table-of-contents past the 2017 abstracts book, are…

* Ian Fetters, “Lovecraft’s Dark Continent: At the Mountains of Madness and Antarctic Literature”.

* Heather Poirier, “H. P. Lovecraft and the Dynamics of Detective Fiction”.

* Nathaniel R. Wallace, “The Cosmic Drone of Azathoth: Adapting Literature into Sound”.

The Borough Clothiers on Fulton St.

Two new discoveries.

1) A photograph exists of the interior of the shop where Lovecraft culminated his epic hunt through New York, seeking a new affordable suit after his clothes were stolen. The date of the photograph is likely perfect, too.

A trade journal named The Clothier and Furnisher, seemingly in its 1925 volume, which has a long profile article on The Borough Clothiers store in Fulton Street, which was Lovecraft finally bagged his $25 suit. Hathi has a scan of three 1925/26 volumes, but these are on copyright lockdown for another few years and can’t be had even with a VPN.

Finally he seemed to come across just what he wanted—except that the coat only had two buttons. This was at the Borough Clothiers in Fulton Street in Brooklyn. Lovecraft was shrewd in dealing with the salesman: he said that he really wanted only a provisional suit until he could get a better one, therefore implying that he might buy another suit from the place later (not mentioning that it might be more than a year before he did so); the salesman, accordingly, consulted with a superior and showed him a more expensive suit but priced it at only $25. Lovecraft, putting the thing on, found that it “vastly delighted me,” but the absence of the third button gave him pause. He told the salesman to hold the suit while he checked more shops. The salesman told Lovecraft that it was unlikely he could get a better deal anywhere else, and after examinations of several more stores Lovecraft found that this was the case; he went back to Borough Clothiers and bought the suit for $25. (S.T. Joshi, I am Providence).

Perhaps someone with access to the archives of the New York libraries might be able to get a copy of the picture from the paper archives?

2) With some keyboard twiddling I managed to get the actual address from the Google Books copy, in a snippet:

the store operated under the name of The Borough Clothiers, at 463 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, is …

So far as I’m aware, this is the first time that scholars of Lovecraft’s life have known the actual address. A small point, yet it may lead to the emergence of a 1920s photo of the exterior as well as the interior.

Call for papers: Monsters and the Monstrous

Call for Papers for the Inaugural Session of the Monsters and the Monstrous Area at the 2019 Conference of the Northeast Popular & American Culture Association (November 2019). Proposals due by: 15th June 2019.

“the Monsters and the Monstrous Area is also especially interested in celebrating both the New England Gothic tradition and the life, works, and legacy of H. P. Lovecraft, a leading proponent of Weird Fiction and an immense influence on contemporary popular culture.”

Joshi’s Liberation newspaper interview

S.T. Joshi’s Liberation newspaper interview, in French: “Lovecraft admettait lui-meme que les relations humaines ne l’interessaient pas”. Now online and public, and with no paywall that I can see, but it may be one of those “the first view is free” newspapers.

Via Google Translate:

Q: Could you have written more with more [source] material, and are you planning a new version?

A: The biography is largely based on Lovecraft’s letters, an incredible source that often represents an almost daily chronicle of his life. This raw material does not interest everyone, and it needs to be interpreted to make it fit a coherent narrative frame. I could add more details to my biography, but it would not serve much purpose. Although in the last ten years we have learned new facts, and facts about Lovecraft. But I think I have already said a lot.

Cat Book contents

The H. P. Lovecraft Cat Book now has a page on hplovecraft.com with a full contents list, including precise details re: the number of letters…

The Cats of New York (excerpts from 21 letters)
Old Man (longer excerpt from one letter)
The Kappa Alpha Tau (excerpts from 34 letters including “[Anthem of the Kappa Alpha Tau]”)
Musings of an Ailurophile (excerpts from four letters to Marian F. Bonner)
Extracts from Letters (excerpts from 50 letters)

So that’s 110 letters, a good haul. No Amazon listings for it, yet. Let’s hope there will be an ebook at some point, too.

Arthur Machen Essay Competition

Wormwoodiana has news of an Arthur Machen Essay Competition, with Cash Prizes. Deadline “by early September”.

The Friends of Arthur Machen have announced a competition for essays on Machen … £200 prize for the best essay, and two runner-up prizes of £100 each. … 4,000 words [or more] … open to non-members”.

Worth having. Unfortunately I don’t know what hasn’t yet been discovered about Machen, or I’d unleash the Tentaclii Towers truffle-pigs on the online archives.

New journal: Dead Reckonings #25

The review journal Dead Reckonings #25 has been published in paper. The issue’s Web page says “Spring 2018”, but the cover says “Spring 2019” and the journal’s catalogue page has an eta for arrival of “June”. So I’m guessing the Web page should read “June 2019”.

Of Lovecraftian interest, among the contents:

* “A Look Behind “The Challenge from Beyond””, by Michael D. Miller.

* “Weird Fiction and Decadence”, the S. T. Joshi review of the important new mainstream academic book Weird Fiction in Britain 1880–1939.

* “Sesqua Valley’s Weirdest Inhabitant, Wilum Pugmire”, by David Barker.

* “Weird Fiction in the 21st Century: A Conversation with S. T. Joshi”, by Alex Houstoun.

* “Some Notes on Call of Cthulhu and Other Lovecraftian Video Games” by Geza A. G. Reilly.

Possibly the journal is also on Amazon. But they annoyingly mix books titled “Dead Reckoning” into results for a specific search for “Dead Reckonings”. Meaning that I’m not inclined to trawl through the resulting stew of dross to discover if the journal is listed there.

Index To The Verse In Weird Tales

Thomas G.L. Cockcroft’s Index To The Verse In Weird Tales (1960), free on Archive.org. Also related magazine titles edited by Farnsworth Wright, such as Oriental Stories and The Magic Carpet.

Many good scans of Weird Tales can now be had free on Archive.org, but this Index should help speed up the finding of ‘on the original page’ verse by your favourite authors. Since it’s also effectively a keyword index to likely header illustrations, it might also be used as an index for finding illustrations by theme.

Also, I wonder if it might be possible for an ambitious student typographer, seeking a project, to get in touch with the heirs of Thomas G.L. Cockcroft (1926-2013) and request permission to do a new properly typogrified, designed and printed version of this old stencil-duplicated Index To The Verse In Weird Tales. Perhaps the new edition might integrate the best of the poem illustrations in the public domain, and for each poem add a line of colour-coded keywords indicating theme and symbolism/setting?