The Emergence of the Fourth Dimension

Released back in April 2018, The Emergence of the Fourth Dimension: Higher Spatial Thinking in the Fin de Siecle. Not just a book of the history of mathematics, but a survey of the cultural influence of the new discoveries at the time when Lovecraft was a youth and young man…

“the volume describes an active interplay between self-fashioning disciplines and a key moment in the popularisation of science. It offers new research into spiritualism and the Theosophical Society and studies a series of curious hybrid texts. Examining works by Joseph Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, H.G. Wells, Henry James, H. P. Lovecraft, and others, the volume explores how new theories of the possibilities of time and space influenced fiction writers of the period, and how literature shaped, and was in turn shaped by, the reconfiguration of imaginative space occasioned by the n-dimensional turn.”

Automata

In Our Time : Automata. BBC Radio 4’s flagship programme… “discusses the history of real and imagined machines that appear to be living, and the questions they raised about life and creation”, with the usual intimate round-table of scholars and scientists. Unlike many BBC programmes, the In Our Time recordings are available to those outside the British Isles — and even have .MP3 files.

Picture: impsandthings: Steampunk Automata (2010). He also has video of it working.

Dune Encyclopedia

I’m pleased to see there was a good encyclopaedia for Dune, back in the 1980s, Dune Encyclopedia. It was written as if ‘in-world’, and as such felt free to elaborate new ideas on the background and character back-stories. Today it can be understood as a possibly-correct history, with errors and misunderstandings made by some of the ‘historians’ involved. This is because Herbert himself later contradicted some of the elements in the Dune Encyclopedia, with his later Dune books.

Note that the new Dune Companion book from McFarland is apparently a stinker, and is to be avoided.

After a little digging and testing I find that the reading order for unabridged audiobook readers is:—

1. Book 1: Dune. The unabridged audiobook reading by George Guidall is the best one to listen to. Also, note that the Scott Brick audiobook version is apparently abridged for some reason.

2. Interlude: “The Road to Dune”. A quite short work by Herbert that sits between the first two novels, to be found in his short-story collection Eye. There appears to be no audiobook of this, so it would need to be read in ebook form. Said to take the form of “a guidebook for pilgrims to the planet Arrakis”. (Update: A Scott Brick / Audio Renaissance audiobook titled “The Road to Dune” was released in 2012 – some say 2005 – but apparently it does not actually contain “The Road to Dune”!).

3. Book 2. Dune Messiah. The unabridged audiobook reading by Scott Brick et al.

4. Book 3. Children of Dune. The unabridged audiobook reading by Scott Brick et al. is the most listen-able.

There is also a Book 4, God Emperor of Dune. It’s by Frank Herbert, rather than some later cash-in writer. But it is widely said to be a rather depressing and dour coda to the original trilogy. It also departs heavily from the style of the core trilogy. As such, you may well be happy with just the original trilogy.

Note that each of the three core books appears to have “Deleted Scenes & Chapters from…” fannish ebook floating around the Internet, which might be looked at after each novel. Some of these are in audio as part of “The Road to Dune” audiobook mentioned above.

“In my youth I was a veritable bicycle centaur” – H.P. Lovecraft.

28th October 2018: “Tour de Tentacle”. 65 Weybosset Street, Providence. Booking now. Eastside Monthly reports…

Billed as ‘a weird bike odyssey in Providence’, this collaboration between the Lovecraft Arts & Sciences Council and Confluence Placemaking begins and ends at dusk at The Arcade [in Providence, Rhode Island] “for a dark cosmic reckoning.” Event organizers promise ‘tentacles and beer’, but note that this is BYOB as in [bring your own] bike.

Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as cosmic horror

“Douglas Adams’s” Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” as a Representative of Cosmic Horror”, a new B.A. undergraduate dissertation, in English from Hungary. Online and public. At first glance it looks short for a final dissertation, but that’s a trick of the formatting — since it does run to 6,000 words. It puts forward an interesting claim that some of this blog’s readers might want to note…

Douglas Adams’s Hitchhiker series is usually labelled as science fiction. [But] Adams abandons the traditional devices of science fiction and because he borrows from cosmic horror, it could be argued that the Hitchhiker series could be considered a representative of cosmic horror.

Listed as relevant factors are:

* “Cosmos as a threatening entity”.
* “Merciful ignorance”.
* “Merciful lack of self-knowledge”.
* “Irony – the effect and technique”.

Howard Days: recording of a panel on the Lovecraft – Howard letters

From 2015, a one-hour panel discussion by scholars of the two-volume A Means to Freedom: The Letters of H. P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard.

Part of Ben Freiberg’s fine and seemingly comprehensive collection of recordings of the ‘Howard Days’ panels and speeches. ‘Howard Days’ look excellent and, as as I’m never likely to get to Texas, a big thanks to Ben for placing clear recordings online.

Tentaclii back at No. 1

I’m pleased to see that Tentaclii is back at No. 1 in the Google Search results, for a simple search for lovecraft blog. Not that you’d know that if you were using Bing or even the DuckDuckGo search-engines. Bing seems to ‘black-hole’ Tentaclii, giving the blog a mere one result and nothing in the ‘last month’ filter. And that’s despite my submitting the blog URL when I re-started posting, just before they announced they were shutting down the Bing URL submission service. I can only assume that Microsoft’s bot runs an algorithm that says “Tentaclii = not a proper word, must be a spam-blog” without actually giving the content a sniff.

The Music of Harold Farnese

Harold S. Farnese didn’t write any stories, poems, or articles for Weird Tales, nor was he a cover artist or illustrator. His eight letters published in “The Eyrie,” the letters column of Weird Tales, failed to land him in the top twenty contributors in that category. [Yet he] may have been the first person to adapt a work by H.P. Lovecraft to a form other than verse or prose.

Harold S. Farnese, Part One.

Harold S. Farnese, Part Two.

Harold S. Farnese, Part Three.

Harold S. Farnese, Part Four.

Harold S. Farnese, Part Five.

Harold S. Farnese, Part Six (final part).

From Tellers of Weird Tales. See also his post on “The Lovecraft-Farnese Correspondence” with a new timeline.

“Robert E. Howard, Bran Mak Morn and The Picts”

A curious thing, but welcome. A 54-minute reading of a scholarly essay, in an audiobook style more suited to reading Conan. The essay is by Rusty Burke and Patrice Louinet, “Robert E. Howard, Bran Mak Morn and The Picts”, and it appears to have been recorded because it was part of the Howard collection Bran Mac Morn: The Last King, Del Rey, 2005. Now on YouTube. Backup: Mirror.

Genuine Pictish or Irish brooch, circa 800 A.D. Note the ‘winged ones’ perched around the edge of the design which circles the amber stones…