Metropolis LORA

Some recent and new style-guidance plugins (‘LORAs’) for Stable Diffusion AI image generator, of possible interest to Tentaclii readers. Both free…

Metropolis Movie Style. Stylish b&w ‘retro-future’.

Something Strange: dark fairy, warm and weird. Could possibly be pushed in the direction of cute weird Lovecraftiana. Has a Japanese file-name that you probably want to rename into English before you install.

Tanabe’s “Call” dated

There’s a date for Gou Tanabe’s chunky graphic novel adaptation of Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu” in English. Set for the end of July 2024, in a Dark Horse paperback of 288 pages.

Also of possible interest, Monster Cats at the end of May, an anthology of “comic strips about fantastic felines”. Not to be confused with a Mutant Cats graphic novel due at the end of April. In which a ‘green’ energy project gets botched, which unleashes mutant cats from another dimension. Sounds kitty-tastic!

Tentaclii in January

Well, that’s January done with. How fast it goes each year. But let’s recap what it held here at Tentaclii

I posted a long and fairly comprehensive overview of Lovecraft related activity in 2023 in various fields.

In my regular ‘Picture Postals’ posts I took a look across the city of Providence in 1896; shivered in the New York weather of January 1925; poked into Lovecraft’s letter-box; and even gazed into Lovecraft’s Eyes (purely in the interest of scientific research). I also found what must be the exact location for “Martin’s Beach”, along with a picture postcard.

In scholarship the only big book news this month was the discovery that the substantial book L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy had slipped out just before Christmas 2023. Two journals also appeared, the new Dead Reckonings: A Review of Horror and the Weird in the Arts, and The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies (13.2). In individual scholarly articles, I dug up a number of new items in languages other than English.

In comics the publisher Dark Horse announced a ‘Deluxe Edition’ of Gou Tanabe’s adaptation of “At The Mountains Of Madness”. I found a peep inside the new graphic novel Le Dernier Jour d’Howard Philip Lovecraft.

Not much in audio but I was pleased to belatedly spot a multi-voice unabridged The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, available for free.

In events the passes and tickets for NecronomiCon Providence went on sale in mid January 2024. The London Lovecraft Festival (stage theatre) also started booking.

I noted and linked several artbooks, such as Called by Cthulhu: The Eldritch Art of Dave Carson; the forthcoming illustrated Annals of the Jinns (Barlow), some forthcoming Chaosium product (RPG sourcebooks, but they kind of count as artbooks), plus Francois Baranger’s Innsmouth (due 2025). I also noted several small end-of-career art exhibitions which might otherwise have been overlooked.

The craft and technology of AI image making continues to hurtle forward at full speed, and I brought readers some of the best and most interesting LORAs for AI powered image generation. Including a new Solomon Kane character LORA, for R.E. Howard’s Kane. I imagine your AI would also obligingly clothe Lovecraft in the same vintage Puritan togs, if prompted. I also perfected a ‘Moebius emulating’ Stable Diffusion 1.5 workflow, or as close as you can get to ‘perfected’ with the wayward SD. Elsewhere I continued to update my directory of worthy AI LORAs for artists and makers of comics.

My Tolkien Gleanings #8 is underway, a round-up and ‘zine for Tolkien scholars. Expect it in a few weeks.

I’m pleased to report that I’ll soon have a bit more money to buy Lovecraft and Tolkien books, since I have a part-time job at last. I clean and clean toilets early each morning, which is all I could get after a year of no professional interviews, but it’s regular and it pays. Many thanks to all those who have donated or helped via Patreon over the last 18 months. The new job does mean I’ll have less time and energy, and as a result certain time-sinks will have to go. But Tentaclii won’t be one of them. On the plus side, the job means I can restore the flow of ginger beer to the taps of Tentaclii Towers, at last. I’ve even discovered that the little ‘Caribbean food’ nook in my supermarket holds an “extra fiery” version of the regular ginger beer can. This rare type is not on the usual shelf and I didn’t know it even existed.

Lovecraft Lore, dated

The German Lovecraftians have a “new newsletter format” for members under the title Lovecraft Lore… “In which we send daily emails about events in H.P. Lovecraft’s stories.”

That sounds interesting. I guess one could now have an AI extract any ‘date like strings’ from within the Lovecraft fiction corpus, covert them to a consistent date format and then sort them into a per-month year list. And alongside each, the story title and a snippet of the original context. The Python-based open source datefinder looks like it’s half way towards that.

The booklet The Chronology Out of Time (1986) made a first try at a simple megalist of dates in Lovecraft’s fiction. But it is now well out-of-print, and not on Archive.org. Perhaps time for a new AI-assisted expanded edition?

Mansions of Madness

When in Providence Lovecraft greatly enjoyed visiting nearby Newport, although the trip involved a long and sometimes chilly boat trip. One of the attractions of the place was its antiquities and perhaps its many grand mansions. Including a monstrous castle which could have come straight from one of Lovecraft’s tales…

The vast structure was however wryly called a “Cottage” by the inhabitants of this isolated shoreline castle. It was demolished in 1924, but Joshi has Lovecraft visiting Newport as early as 1915. He also went to Newport with Sonia just prior to the New York years, which gave rise to the joint tale “The Horror at Martin’s Beach”. The above mansion was still there at that time. In the tale such structures offer a key setting…

It was in the twilight, when grey sea-birds hovered low near the shore and a rising moon began to make a glittering path across the waters. The scene is important to remember, for every impression counts. On the beach were several strollers and a few late bathers; stragglers from the distant cottage colony that rose modestly on a green hill to the north, or from the adjacent cliff-perched [Wavecrest] Inn whose imposing towers proclaimed its allegiance to wealth and grandeur.

Now, Lovecraft’s “Inn” is hardly rustic, since it is described as having an ornate balcony and a “sumptuous ballroom” inside. It operates as a very upmarket “hotel”. The setting is then similar to that of the mansion on the postcard. More so when one knows that this real-world monstrous “Cottage” castle was apparently adjacent across the water to a far more alluring “cottage colony” of writers, as in the story. The name is also similar, the mansion being dubbed ‘Breakwater’ in reality, and ‘Wavecrest’ in the tale. All this suggests that the postcard shows the setting of a Lovecraft tale, albeit a joint tale.

There are two illustrated books on the topic, free on Archive.org, A Guidebook to Newport Mansions and Newport mansions: the Gilded Age, each giving views inside such structures as survived into the 1980s.

Lovecraft: Knowledge and terror

Italian philosopher and SF story writer Eric Marschall takes a look at Lovecraft: Knowledge and terror in a new ebook. Marschall looks at… “the fear of knowing and the love of knowledge that are both present in Lovecraft’s stories”. Amazon will send you a free 10% sample. In which one finds that the book starts from general philosophical ideas about such matters and then tries to map these onto aspects of Lovecraft’s fiction.

Also new in philosophy, the book Fragmentos filosoficos de horror. 25 essays in Portuguese, and it seems the well-regarded author has an interest in Lovecraft. Though I can find no table-of-contents for the book, which might reveal any specific essays on Lovecraft or his circle.

New sourcebooks for Lovecraft Country

A new series of Lovecraft Country sourcebooks from the makers of the Call of Cthulhu RPG, under the series title “Arkham Unveiled” and with the first book possibly titled “Call of Cthulhu: Arkham”. Supposedly the series is to start publishing in February 2024 [update: Amazon now says March 15th] and will then grow to cover Kingsport and Innsmouth etc. Which has been done before by Chaosium, often several times, though possibly not in such a “thick n’ slick” format as in this rather sumptuous and expensive-looking new series.

New Miskatonic University and Dreamlands sourcebooks are also said to be pencilled in. It might be nice to see some inter-twingling between those two, perhaps with several of the professors having investigated first-hand accounts of the Dreamlands and there also being some way to access the Dreamlands via some “Beyond the Wall of Sleep”-like secret device at the University. You’ll recall that in the early “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” (1919) the protagonist sees into ‘cosmic dreamscapes’ via a self-invented device.

Baranger’s Innsmouth – due 2025

Artist Francois Baranger has announced his next lavishly illustrated book project. Lovecraft’s “The Shadow over Innsmouth” is currently underway in his studio, for a possible 2025 release. I think this will be his fourth in his illustrated books of H.P. Lovecraft’s tale. Innsmouth will be in the same artistic style as the others.

Looks to me like he may want some photo reference for the bus. His is too 1940s French. I found this a while back, the Newbury area bus from the correct time-period…

Annals of the Jinns

Pegana Press blogs that the limited edition Annals of the Jinns is now test-binding and that…

I will share more news and photos of this lovely Limited Edition of Annals of the Jinns by R.H. Barlow soon

These tales appeared in print as a Fantasy Fan series in 1933-35 and thus would have been read by Lovecraft, around the time of the penning of The Shadow Out of Time and the experiments that led up to it. They can be found on Project Gutenberg and in good form in the Barlow collection Eyes of the God.

Barlow’s overall title comes from Vathek

Thither [to the lovely flowered island] Ganigul often retired in the daytime to read in quiet the marvellous annals of the Jinns, the chronicles of ancient worlds, and the prophecies relating to the worlds that are yet to be born.

I had often, while in Shadukan, read the annals of the Jinns, and, as soon as you spoke of the fatal cupboard, I knew what it contained.