Lovecraft and The Raven

In a late September 1919 letter H.P. Lovecraft singled out “Henry B. Walthall” as a silent cinema star he held to be “above the rest”, the only other being the young Japanese star Sessue Hayakawa.

Walthall possess tragic potentialities all too seldom utilised on the screen. His part in the “Birth of a Nation”, though a leading one, failed to do him justice. He could create a sensation if some of Poe’s tales were dramatised — I can imagine him as Roderick Usher or the central character in “Berenice”. No one else in filmland can duplicate his delineation of stark, hideous terror or fiendish malignancy. — Lovecraft.

What movies would Lovecraft likely have seen Walthall in? The annotations in the volume of Galpin letters suggests only… “Judith of Betthulia [1914, Biblical melodrama], Avenging Conscience [1914, horror-drama, Poe], and Birth of a Nation [1915, family drama, war-epic].”

Avenging Conscience was based on Edgar Allan Poe stories, and featured Walthall playing Poe himself.

But a quick look at Walthall’s filmography suggests that Lovecraft might also have been thinking of “The Raven” (1915, Essanay), a remake of a lost 1912 D.W. Griffith short. The expanded 1915 version was a major ‘melodramatic bio-pic’ movie of Edgar Allan Poe, and Walthall again played Poe.

Lovecraft may have been impressed by what were reported (in the 1915 movie press) to be uncanny double-exposure FX scenes such as Poe fighting a duel with himself, dream-levitating, and by the general visual inventiveness of the sets. Also with the fact that it been filmed in an exact life-sized reproduction of the interior of Poe’s home in Fordham, built on a stage-set after Essanay sent an architect to take the exact measurements. Lovecraft would likely have been less impressed by what is said to be a curt re-write of Poe’s life history, including giving him a thirty-five year old Virginia.

Apparently the movie was immensely popular, and Lovecraft would almost certainly have seen it despite its biographical shortcomings. Perhaps it was too popular, as movie buffs note that there was no screen representation of Poe for many decades afterwards. Originally running as much as 80 minutes (six reels, lost), there’s an approx. 40 minute survival which appears to have been crudely butchered for length and which is now on a 2007 DVD. It’s not currently on Archive.org or YouTube.

Fleeing Flickr

AppleInsider reports that Flickr is set to bring its free users down to a quota of 1,000 pictures, forcibly, from 8th January 2019…

“Flickr just says the deletion will begin “from oldest to newest date uploaded” until you’re down to the 1,000 limit.”

This will be a bit of a disaster for free users with lots of pictures. Many archival collections of pulp covers, ‘Lovecraft locations’, etc are going to be forcibly truncated. Many users are no longer around to save their collections, either having died or been locked out due to Yahoo/Flickr getting so badly hacked a while ago.

Escapees from the Yahoo/Flickr disaster-zone will need Bulkr Pro for bulk downloading. A year ago I backed up 2,100 full-res Flickr pictures into themed folders with relative ease. Account access is not needed, just publicly available photos. I then switched to the 500px service, which is relatively stylish and is about the best bulk ‘photo galleries’ option.

500px has some limitations, but cosmetic matters can be fixed with things like the “500px Download button and enable right-click” UserScript. One thing that can’t be so easily bypassed is that 500px are partnered with evil stock-photography megacorp Getty, which means they don’t allow Creative Commons tagging or CC downloads.

The best option for Flickr escapees is thus, in my experience…

* Bulkr Pro and a 500px account.
* a free WordPress blog with a good free gallery theme (Dyad 2) for your Creative Commons pictures.

Though the 500px browser-based bulk uploader is not ideal, and not everyone will love the new WordPress back-end user interface. Neither has dedicated Creative Commons tagging other than manually via the internal tag system.

If anyone can point me to a Flickr-hosted Lovecraft / R.E. Howard / Sci-fi / Pulp collection not likely to be saved from the January purge, then I can use my Bulkr Pro software to go get them in full-size.

New Lovecraft books inc. ‘the aunt letters’ in 1200 pages

S. T. Joshi’s blog has updated….

“Our edition of Lovecraft memoirs, Ave atque Vale, is now available for pre-order from Necronomicon Press.”

$30 paperback and a 100-copy limited edition hardback for the collectors. Ave atque Vale: Reminiscences of H. P. Lovecraft is billed as… “each essay [annotated] thoroughly to explain obscure references and to correct errors” and thus the volume is a shelf companion to slip in beside the elegant 1998 hardback Lovecraft Remembered.

Ave atque Vale sports a fine cover photo, though the typography laid on top is excruciating. For such an important book I would have been happy to spend an hour fixing the yellow colour-cast, lightly colorising the photograph, and doing something more elegant with better type.

S.T. also mentions that he has been at work adding the Index to a forthcoming Letters with Donald and Howard Wandrei and to Emil Petaja volume, and that…

“we have the [Lovecraft] Letters to Family and Family Friends (1200 pp.!) ready to go”.

Wow… that’ll be ‘the aunts’ letters in print in full, at last! Great news. However, S.T. remarks that “ready to go” = “early 2019”, rather than publication before Christmas.

Gou Tanabe’s Lovecraft manga on Kindle

New on Comixology as an ebook for Halloween, but not yet showing up on the Amazon Kindle store, is Gou Tanabe’s manga H. P. Lovecraft’s The Hound and Other Stories (2017). 163 pages in English translation. Noted manga artist Tanabe adapts three Lovecraft stories, “The Temple”, “The Hound”, and “The Nameless City”. There are done as faithful adaptations with strong historical research on how costumes and objects looked. ‘Faithful’, in the case of “The Nameless City”, will probably be interpreted by action-avid comics readers as ‘very slow and dull’. But for others it may be just the ticket.

“The Temple” is here shifted forward in time to the Second World War, and may be especially interesting to readers of the British Commando comics who are feeling starved of the supernatural in this long-running war comics series (Castle of Fear and A Soldier’s Luck being about as supernatural as we’ve had it, so far).

Update: the UK Amazon now has a page for it but suggests the Kindle release has been put back a month, until December. Perhaps Comixology has an exclusive period on it?

Pastoral science fiction – beyond Simak

“I am convinced that I am by nature a simple rustic, whose genuine aesthetic sympathies are excited only by rural virtues and scenery, and to whom the pastoral is therefore the only authentic medium of expression.” — H.P. Lovecraft, letter to the Gallomo, 31st August 1921.


While trying to get a working handle on the more serious side of Simak’s output, and along the way work out why such a major author dropped off the radar so rapidly and totally between about 1986 and 1996, I noted a small range of authors being described as writing similarly “pastoral SF”.

For what it’s worth, here’s the prospective author list I jotted down for the sort of American sci-fi small-town/pastoral sub-genre which drifts in location between the farm and the suburb on the edge of the farmlands and woods. These are writers who seem to fit with Simak’s wistful vision of small semi-rural communities on a fruitfully-settled American frontier, rather than being a wider grab-bag of general ‘living planet / terraforming saga / farm-hand to space-pilot’ eco-writers. It’s in rough chronological order…

* Ray Bradbury (for the ‘small-town’ tales and novels, and the settling-of-Mars The Martian Chronicles in its 1997 version with “Usher II” skipped).

* [Clifford D. Simak].

* Tom Reamy (Blind Voices, and San Diego Lightfoot Sue and Other Stories).

* Some of Ardath Mayhar.

* R.A. Lafferty.

* Andy Duncan.

* Steve Erikson (Apparently he does American pastorals that are akin to Simak, as well as his generic-looking ‘epic fantasy’ series? I could only find his “Fishin’ with Grandma Matchie”, though).

* Christopher Rowe (The new Telling the Map).

* Fenton Wood (The new Pirates of the Electromagnetic Waves).

* John Carter (The new Land/locked bodies) (poetry).

Anyone wanting to write in this retrocultural sub-genre would also likely need to read William Least-heat Moon’s Prairyerth a couple of times. Probably also Guy Davenport’s Eclogues. H.P. Lovecraft’s many letters detailing his 1920s and 30s summer travels could even be of use, and see also his Collected Essays, Volume 4: Travel (but skip Quebec).

Screen touchstones might be series 2-5 of Northern Exposure, Woody Allen’s A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy, and probably others I’ve forgotten or not seen yet (I vaguely recall a sub-sub genre which involves farmers standing in corn-fields waiting for the aliens). If writing for children one would also want to look at the more sci-fi -ish end of the raft of small-town screen adventures, from Explorers (1985) through the animated The Iron Giant (1999), to the more recent first series of Stranger Things and both series of Gravity Falls. Probably also the various Spielberg movies that riff on the theme, if not already seen, and Spielberg-a-like graphic novels such as Paper Girls. (There also seem to be many fantasy works in that sort of setting, from the classic The Giant Under the Snow to Spiderwick, and doubtless a great many more by now).

There is of course another gloomier and grimmer post-apocalyptic rural science fiction sub-genre, in which an authoritarian regime and/or dark religion has come to dominate the surviving pastoral people. In some cases it is a smothering ennui, rather than a brutal authoritarianism, that has overtaken the nature-reclaimed future-Earth — from Wells’s The Time Machine to Walter Trevis’s Mockingbird. Sometimes the people are no longer present and have all mysteriously and suddenly vanished, as in Everyone’s Gone to the Rapture, and the world is observed by a lone walker or computer while Not Much Happens in an eerier and eerier manner. The latter two forms swing back toward Simak a little, re: his Cemetery World and “The Street That Wasn’t There”.

Early pre-production concepts for “The Nameless City”

New costume designs and monster silhouettes for an adaptation of Lovecraft’s “The Nameless City”.

Similar-looking work seems to be ongoing at Zoetrope Interactive, though I’ve no idea if the two projects are connected or not. Possibly Zoetrope is thinking more of an Antarctica-set adventure, but the concepts seem to suit the desert setting of “The Nameless City” better.

Rediscovering Clifford D. Simak

In the 178-page photobook The Faces of Science Fiction (St. Martin’s Press, 1984), now on Archive.org, I was pleased to see Clifford D. Simak. This Patti Perret portrait is exactly how I would have expected Simak to look, sans blue denim overalls and Casey Jones railroader cap, and is so much better than than the usual grimacing Wikipedia image…

When photographed he was likely working on his late dark fantasy novel Where Evil Dwells (1982), in which the Roman Empire “never quite fell” but humanity got side-swiped instead by the arrival of Lovecraft’s Elder Gods. The Elder Gods being only slightly disguised, to avoid The Wrath of Derleth. One suspects he’d got the general idea for that while reading the 1976 paperback of Lovecraft: A Biography. At this point Simak had about 125 sci-fi stories and 26 sci-fi and fantasy novels, not to mention a whole sack-full of awards (and that was back when an award still meant something).

I’m pleased to see that Simak’s short stories have become available since 2015 as a series of Kindle ebooks, the Complete Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak series, from Open Road. Amazon UK lists 12 volumes, with the most recent three released in summer 2017.

False Ducks runs a completist website which documents the stories and where they’ve been published, and I note that many stories are still not listed there as collected by the Open Road series, even though the site is up-to-date. This makes me think that the original announcement by Open Road of 14 books for the series may have been correct, and that we may yet have two (or more) to come sometime in 2018/19. Note that False Ducks complains that Open Road’s Complete Short Fiction series is “wildly jumbled up” as regards publication date and themes. Their #12 includes his first published story from 1931 and a couple of the 1940s westerns, which appears to bear out such comments. Still, it’s nice they’re now so easily and cheaply available.

As a result of the “jumble” the purchaser of the Open Road 12-volume set may think they want to try reading through in publication date order. But doing that would mean that one would first have to plod through the very mediocre 1930s sci-fi, then some western and war stories in the 1940s, then early sci-fi potboilers such as Cosmic Engineers (1939, 1950 in book form). That doesn’t seem like a good way to start on Simak.

A better initial introduction to Simak’s stories is probably the audiobook for Over the River & Through the Woods: The Best Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak, and then the audiobook of the fix-up stories-novel City. Then ‘fill in’ by dipping into the 12 volumes of ebooks of the stories, guided firstly by the contents-lists of his other four or five ‘best stories of…’ collections such as Skirmish. Then finally go looking for remaining rarities among the pulp scans and anthologies, with the help of the lists on False Ducks. One good thing about Simak is that he’s so unfashionable that you can currently pick up many of his print volumes for pennies, so filling in the gaps should be fairly painless — so long as you’ve willing and able to read from cramped 1970s paperback type (there wuz a world paper shortage, don’cha-know…) or buy an automated sheet-feed scanner and slice the spines off the books.

Most of Simak’s novels were published in ebook, between about 2011 and 2014, under the ‘Gollancz yellow-covers’ of the Gateway ebook imprint. I count about 20 such budget-priced ebooks on Amazon UK, of his output of around 27 novels, including the famous Way Station. (Note that the Gateway ebooks I’ve tried — not by Simak, admittedly, as I already have him in other forms — usually have their share of uncorrected OCR errors, having seemingly been scanned from the print books and not proofread). Three of the novels are currently available as unabridged recently-recorded audiobooks on Audible, including the fix-up City, but older crackly cassette-tape versions of many novels can also be had on YouTube. It’s probably important for new readers of Simak to know that after about 1967 (The Goblin Reservation) he started to veer strongly toward writing more whacky / humourous science-fiction novels and, while these obviously appealed to and entertained the surrealism-inclined hippies of the late 1960s and early 1970s, they are not well regarded today.

Due to his immense popularity, from about 1960s until the mid 1980s, there are also vast numbers of foreign translations of his work, and non-English readers should find translations fairly easily.

So far as I can tell there was never a Starmont Reader’s Guide for Simak, with chapters briskly and comprehensively surveying his various themes, settings and ideas. But we do have something very similar and more up-to-date, the book-length survey and bibliography When the Fires Burn High and The Wind is From the North: The Pastoral Science Fiction of Clifford D. Simak (2006, Borgo Press). Talking of plot summaries, beware the writers of Simak’s introductions, back-cover blurbs and short reviews — all of which appear to delight in giving the reader plot-spoilers. One needs to be very very careful in deciding which Simak to read, as it’s made incredibly easy to get a plot-spoiler.

See also the discussion of his crude stereotyping as a rustic-conservative and his consequent neglect by sniffy academics in recent decades, in: “The Pastoral Complexities of Clifford Simak: The Land Ethic and Pulp Lyricism in Time and Again“, in the journal Extrapolation in 2014. A similar point about his deliberately misrepresented reputation was made by Robert Silverberg’s short appreciation of City in “Rereading Simak”, Asimov’s magazine, August 2013. Thomas Clareson’s 1976 essay collection Voices for the Future also had a sensitive essay on City, specifically on what changed from the stories to the fix-up novel. A year earlier in 1975 there was an interview. [BEWARE: there are huge plot spoilers in all these!]

His best work could be a natural follow-on for readers of this blog who enjoy the summer travel sections of H. P. Lovecraft’s Letters. And who sometimes wonder what rustic science-fiction could have been home-grown from those hard-working back-road towns — “if only…”. Perhaps if a well-fed HPL had settled down with Mrs. Miniter, who might have then inherited from Mrs. Beebe and so started a rural writers’ colony with HPL, including the loving couple formed of the regionalist Derleth and the ethnographic Barlow. Then, in the 1950s, they might have succeeded in nurturing a regionalist science-fiction from the rural grassroots. A whimsical idea, of course, but the results might have looked something like Simak’s work and also the small-town work of Bradbury. In Simak’s concerns about land, ecological balance and science-fiction set in the context of organic communities, I would hazard a guess that he may — in future decades — come to appeal to both ends of the political spectrum from neo-hippie solarpunkers to conservative localists.


Further reading:

Plot-spoilers abound in these! In date order.

* Sam Moskowitz, “The Saintly Heresy of Clifford D. Simak”, Amazing Stories, June 1962. An excellent long biographical profile by the leading SF historian of the time. This also discusses his work to 1952 — Simak had only started writing really impressive SF stories from circa 1942/43. Reprinted in Moskowitz’s Seekers of Tomorrow: Masters of Modern Science Fiction (1967).

* “An Interview with Clifford D. Simak”, Tangent No. 2, May 1975.

* Thomas Clareson’s 1976 essay collection Voices for the Future had a sensitive essay on the famous City, specifically on what changed from the original stories to the fix-up novel.

* Speaking of Science Fiction (1978). Contains 31 interviews of the 1970s published in Luna Monthly. The Simak interview is reprinted from a 1972 issue.

* Muriel Becker, Clifford D. Simak, a primary and secondary bibliography (Masters of science fiction and fantasy series), 1980. 149 pages. Well regarded, though now mostly superseded as a reader’s guide by later efforts. The 1980 review in Extrapolation states that it was only annotated in terms of the reviews and similar works it listed. It has an interview with Simak and a short life chronology, and listed his adaptations for radio. The more substantial and thoughtful reviews of his books are listed to circa 1979. (Update: now at Archive.org)

* Darrell Schweitzer, “An Interview with Clifford D. Simak”, Amazing Stories Vol. 27, No. 6, February 1980.

* Thomas P. Linkfield, “Aliens invade the Midwest”, Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature Newsletter, 1981. Surveys some of the then-recent fiction by the likes of Bradbury, Simak and Tom Reamy. Reamy was obviously going to be a match for both Simak and Bradbury in the field of ‘small town SF’, in time — but he died before his great promise could be fulfilled, leaving only a novel and a short-story collection. The article talks about back-road midwest towns in a rather negative and stereotyping manner.

* The expensive essay anthology Space and Beyond: The Frontier Theme in Science Fiction (2000) had a 10-page essay by Michael Cassutt. His “Way Station – the Motion Picture: a possibly premature progress report”… “laments studio reluctance to do an authentic film of Clifford Simak’s Way Station (1963).”

* M.J. DeMarr, “Clifford D. Simak’s Use of the Midwest in Science Fiction”, MidAmerica, 1995. Substantial but appears to have been unknown to Ewald (2006).

* Robert J. Ewald, When the Fires Burn High and The Wind is From the North: The Pastoral Science Fiction of Clifford D. Simak, 2006, Borgo Press. Excellent book-length survey which lists many more secondary sources than I can here.

* Hardy Kettlitz, Clifford D. Simak: pastorale Harmonien, Shayol Verlag, 2012. A German bibliography in 148 pages, part of the SF Personality series.

* Robert Silverberg, “Rereading Simak”, Asimov’s magazine, August 2013.

* “The Pastoral Complexities of Clifford Simak: The Land Ethic and Pulp Lyricism in Time and Again“, Extrapolation, 2014.

* Meine and Keeley, The Driftless Reader, University of Wisconsin Press, 2018. A wide-ranging anthology of the region in which Simak set many of his tales, a bio-region “spanning parts of southwestern Wisconsin, southeastern Minnesota, northeastern Iowa and northwestern Illinois.” Includes some Simak excerpts.

*~*

There has been some recent interest in Simak re: the post-human, mostly from Europe following initial forays from Americans.

* J. Gordon, “Talking (for, with) Dogs: Science Fiction Breaks a Species Barrier”, Science Fiction Studies, 2010.

* G. Canavan, “After Humanity: Science Fiction after Extinction in Kurt Vonnegut and Clifford D. Simak”, Paradoxa, 2016.

* Juliette Feyel, “Present retrospectif et detour post-humain chez Clifford Simak et Michel Houellebecq”, Res.Futurae, No. 7, 2016. (Trans: ‘The post-human detour in Simak and Houellebecq’. Finds Simak more interesting than Houellebecq, re: ideas on the post-human).

* Francesco Nieddu, L’apertura all’alieno e la difficile palingenesi umana in Way Station di Clifford D. Simak, Medea, Vol. 4, No. 1, Summer 2018. (Under Creative Commons Attribution, if anyone wants to translate it. Title roughly translates as “Openess to the alien and the difficulties of the post-human in Clifford D. Simak’s Way station“).


Possible links with Lovecraft:

My first pass at noting down some strands that may be worth exploring, without as yet a full re-reading of Simak…

Simak has at least one direct Lovecraft pastiche story, some macabre horror stories, and the late novel Where Evil Dwells which has strong Lovecraft elements.

Concern with the quiet American pastoral landscapes and vistas which Lovecraft so loved and often visited re: his visits to the homes of various Amateurs, and his summer travels.

Simak’s work preserves the emotional and life-world textures of the rural back-roads America that Lovecraft and the Amateurs knew in the mid 1920s, and does so in an imaginative form palatable to those who enjoy reading Lovecraft’s Letters.

Is concerned with the psychic resonance of regionalist landscapes, their invasion by the alien other, and the post-human on cosmic time-scales.

Concerned with civilisation-scale loss and preservation. Like Lovecraft, similarly despised and slighted by leftists for his conservatism.

The Faces of Science Fiction

Frank Belknap Long, from the 178-page photobook The Faces of Science Fiction (St. Martin’s Press, 1984), now on Archive.org. The same photographer did a sequel similarly full of high-quality photographic portraits, The Faces of Fantasy, in 1996.

As well as Long, The Faces of Science Fiction book also has photos of others linked to H.P. Lovecraft and/or Robert E. Howard — Robert Bloch, Donald A. Wollheim, L. Sprague de Camp, Fritz Leiber.

An Indian in Europe

Five lessons Shweta Taneja learned at Europe’s biggest sci-fi and fantasy convention, a fascinating write-up by an Indian science fiction author encountering the bare-bones DIY approach…

“Authors at Indian festivals are mollycoddled. At one of the first festivals I attended, the Chandigarh Literary Festival, the kind organisers sent an SUV with a teacher and two children and bouquets to the Chandigarh airport. From that moment, everything was managed by an army of literary festival organisers. Not so in Europe.”

I imagine he might have had a somewhat different experience with a more genteel upmarket literary festival, outside the urban areas, of the sort with nominally-paid interns and hospitality budgets. But even then, it would probably be a bit more stripped back than in India.

I wonder what Lovecraft would have been like at an urban mega-vention? I mean, he was used to the demure micro-meetups of amateur journalists and then various later convivial cafe meetings of ‘the circle’. But an enormous fan-o-rama of thousands? I’d suspect he would have been the uber-notorious one in the dark glasses and pompadour hair, being smuggled by a security detail through subterranean access tunnels, to pop up through a trap door beneath the main stage. The big keynote speech given, he’d press the button to auto-sign everyone’s ebook, and then be whisked off to the waiting helicopter. Either that, or he just wouldn’t have gone to such things.