Lovecraft’s birthday was celebrated with a reading evening in Mexico…
Down Mexico way
22 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
22 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Lovecraft’s birthday was celebrated with a reading evening in Mexico…
22 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, NecronomiCon 2013, Podcasts etc.
Late HPL birthday present…
In honor of H.P. Lovecraft’s birthday this week, we’ll put up this NecronomiCon 2013 formerly exclusive episode [of the Six Foot Plus horror music podcast] for one week only.”
Track list:
01. Zombeast, “Cthulhu”
02. Rudimentary Peni, “The Horrors of the Museum”
03. The 3-D Invisibles, “Dreams of Poe”
04. Sebadoh, “Calling Yog Soggoth”
05. White Flag, “Cthulhu Calling”
06. Dayglo Abortions, “The Spawn of Yog Soggoth”
07. Gwar, “Horror of Yig”
08. The Red Hook Horrors, “The 5-Point Plan of the Pentagram”
09. The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets, “Going Down to Dunwich”
10. Moon Ra, “At The Mountains of Madness”
11. The Dagons, “You Kill The Dream”
12. Lustmord, “Dreams of Dead Names”
13. The Difference Engine, “The Floods of Vermont”
14. Alex K. Redfearn and the Eyesores, “The Way of All Flesh”
15. Hellbilly Club, “The Village of Insmouth”
22 Friday Aug 2014
Posted in 3D, Lovecraftian arts
“Geologic Time”, an eight-minute animation by Julius Horsthuis.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6lZJvEDQI4?rel=0&w=560&h=315]
If you want to explore the software behind this, Mandelbulb is free.
“As a mining engineer, I have some knowledge of geology, and can tell you that these blocks are so ancient they frighten me.” — H.P. Lovecraft, “The Shadow out of Time”.
21 Thursday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context, New books
A bizzare rider to the history of Henry Kuttner…
Kuttner met his wife, the writer C.L. Moore, through a mutual correspondence with H.P. Lovecraft; when he died, she became his literary executor, then married a non-writer who ordered her to stop writing, and insisted that she suppress future publication of Kuttner’s work”
Sad to say that there appears to have been a similar fate in store for a few of the other writers in the Lovecraft circle, Munn for instance. But in the case of Kuttner, it’s now the case of ‘ebooks to the rescue!’. Gateway (Gollancz, they of the famous yellow dustjackets) re-published The Best of Henry Kuttner in May 2014, along with a number of Kuttner books they still have the rights to. And now Diversion has just re-published 14 further Kuttner titles as Kindle ebooks, including The Book of Iod: Ten Cthulhu Stories
.
21 Thursday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
The latest issue of The Fossil is out now July 2014, #360. Including a detailed round-up of snippets of news on the status of various collections of amateur journalism items from the Lovecraft period, which are very slowly starting to get some basic indexing work done on them…
Joseph Ditta, Reference Librarian at The New York Historical Society’s Patricia D. Klingenstein Library, replied to an inquiry about their collections. “Our collection of amateur periodicals is fairly sizable, filling 28 boxes on 12 shelves. It is not cataloged, unfortunately, but in 2010 an intern went through most of the collection and created a spreadsheet listing the titles found in each box. Her list does not include holdings information, or dates, and she stopped at the second box of ‘S’ titles. Still, this partial list includes over 1,500 titles, which gives some sense of the extent of the collection.”
Library of Congress’s [amateur journalism] collection … After viewing Excel spreadsheets that Ivan Snyder and Tom Parson are in the process of creating to track their collections, I created one that lists the 6,804 publications held by the LoC. Although it is preliminary, I would be glad to share a copy upon request”
It seems the LoC’s ‘X Collection’ PDFs (on archive.org) were created simply as an initial index to their boxed collections of pamphlets and emphemera, to aid physical retrieval for scanning when an item is requested by a scholar. Presumably as individual items are scanned on request, the scans will then start to pop up on Archive.org. Inklings is perhaps one of the journals runs it would be most interesting to have in full.
Also included in The Fossil issue #360 is “A Visit to Haverhill” by David Goudsward, which covers almost the same ground as Goudsward’s recent book. And David M. Tribby on the “United APA: Gone But Not Forgotten”, the United Amateur Press Association being Lovecraft’s amateur alma mater.
20 Wednesday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
Dakota Rodeo visits the Arthur H. Goodenough house with her sister and friend, to celebrate H.P. Lovecraft’s birthday, and makes interior photos. She has a selection from the letters, too. What a fine site it would make for a Lovecraft study centre and residential summer school.
20 Wednesday Aug 2014
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
Lovecraft has inadvertently become rather fortunate, posthumously, in the timing of his birthday. The rush to Halloween now comes so early that, at least in terms of new commercial products and their ever-bubbling pot of publicity, it now seems to start around 1st Sept — a full two months before the actual date. So one wonders if we’re moving toward a situation where the 20th of August will effectively serve as the “starting gun” for Halloween?
But here we are for 2014. Happy 124th birthday HPL, wherever your dark shade lurketh in Providence. What free presents or cool tributes have pitched up on ye Great Interwebs, so far today?
* Pete von Sholly has painted a very handsome new triptych portrait in oils…

* A big Lovecraft Readathon at the Providence Public Library. Also a big slide-show ‘sitting tour’ of Providence which is… “a joint production of Hamilton House, The H.P. Lovecraft Archive, and The Lovecraft Arts and Sciences Council”.
* The city of Phoenix, Arizona stages a big arty Lovecraft party. Play ‘Pin the tentacle on the shoggoth’, anyone?
* 2014 Second Life H.P. Lovecraft Festival, in the online world of Second Life.
* Queen City Gallery, Buffalo, USA, has a Lovecraft themed art show to celebrate the 124th birthday.
* A free tabletop role-playing game adventure for HPL’s birthday, ‘The Serpent Ring’ for the Unbelievably Simple Roleplaying (USR) game system.
* Geoff Gillan’s “The Machine King” is a free “Chaosium Dreamlands book”, launched for the birthday under Creative Commons, that has not seen the light of day until now. It’s for the Cthulhu by Gaslight role-playing game…
* The Voice Before the Void has completed an audio reading of “Bothon” by Henry S. Whitehead with H.P. Lovecraft (published Amazing Stories, 1946).
* Very possibly a fake, but a nice birthday fake if that’s the case…

Update:
* Dakota Rodeo visits the Arthur H. Goodenough house with her sister and friend, for H.P. Lovecraft’s birthday, and makes interior photos.
Update:
Jason S. Voss of Arizona made a new portrait for the birthday, “Lovecraft: Explorer of Strange Worlds”, which seems to me to capture the flinty side of HPL’s character.
Update:
NecronomiCon 2015 announced with guest details and more for this major Lovecraft convention of scholars and fans.
20 Wednesday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
An interesting and carefully crafted new undergraduate dissertation, “A Density of Meaning”: Literary Representations of the British Museum, 1818-1929, which may interest some readers and Mythos writers seeking background research…
Since its establishment in 1753, The British Museum has become one of the iconic museums of the world. It is the home of countless treasures of the ancient world, including the Elgin Marbles, the Rosetta Stone, and the Assyrian Lamassu. Due to the large shadow it casts, the British Museum appears in unexpected places, including literature. Various authors and poets have interacted with the British Museum in their writing, both upholding and reworking its different meanings and processes.”
Sadly the author didn’t unearth that Lovecraft placed a copy of The Necronomicon in the British Museum Library (later known as the British Library). Lovecraft implies its presence there in “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”…
Letters soon told of his safe arrival, and of his securing good quarters in Great Russell Street, London; where he proposed to stay, shunning all family friends, till he had exhausted the resources of the British Museum in a certain direction. [then followed] his departure for Paris, to which he had before made one or two flying trips for material in the Bibliotheque Nationale.” (“The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”, 1927)
In his “The History of the Necronomicon” he was privately more explicit…
Of the Latin texts [of The Necronomicon] now existing one (15th cent.) is known to be in the British Museum under lock and key” (“The History of the Necronomicon”, 1927)
Then he was more publicly explicit in “The Dunwich Horror”…
Correspondence with the Widener Library at Harvard, the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, the British Museum, the University of Buenos Ayres, and the Library of Miskatonic University at Arkham had failed to get him the loan of a book he desperately wanted” (“The Dunwich Horror”, 1928)
Lovecraft never had the funds to visit London for himself, but he heard from others as they passed through. Galpin, for instance…
The card from antique Londinium duly came, & filled me with envy at your opportunity to behold civilisation’s capital, if only for a single full day. If I were in Europe, I would devote not less than 2 or 3 weeks to London — & might not get outside of Britain at all. The British Museum card surely reveals one of my (or Klarkash-Ton’s or Sonny Belknap’s) extra-human monsters in disguise — indeed, I am positive that this entity reached Java as a relique of sunken Mu, or of the still more monstrous & fabulous R’lyeh! Thanks!” (Lovecraft, on receiving a postcard from the British Museum, 1932. Letter to Alfred Galpin, 28th August 1932)
Above: Javanese shadow puppet at the British Museum, possibly the sort of art Lovecraft was referring to.
19 Tuesday Aug 2014
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Full contents list for S.T. Joshi’s forthcoming book of collected essays on Lovecraft, Lovecraft and a World in Transition.
Contents
Introduction
I. Biographical Studies
Lovecraft and Weird Tales
Further Notes on Lovecraft and Music
Lovecraft’s Library
Lovecraft’s Revisions: How Much of Them Did He Write?
Lovecraft and His Wife
Lovecraft and the Films of His Day
The Rationale of Lovecraft’s Pseudonyms
Lovecraft and the Munsey Magazines
Barbarism vs. Civilization: Robert E. Howard and H. P. Lovecraft in Their Correspondence
II. Philosophical Studies
The Political and Economic Thought of H. P. Lovecraft
“Reality” and Knowledge: Some Notes on Lovecraft’s Aesthetic
In Defence of Dagon and Lovecraft’s Philosophy
Lovecraft’s Alien Civilisations: A Political Interpretation
Lovecraft and a World in Transition
Lovecraft and the “Big Issue”
H. P. Lovecraft: The Fiction of Materialism
Lovecraft and Religion
Time, Space, and Natural Law: Science and Pseudo-Science in Lovecraft
III. Thematic and Textual Studies
Autobiography in Lovecraft
Lovecraft’s Other Planets
Textual Problems in Lovecraft
The Structure of Lovecraft’s Longer Narratives
The Dream World and the Real World in Lovecraft
Topical References in Lovecraft
Humour and Satire in Lovecraft
A Guide to the Lovecraft Fiction Manuscripts at the John Hay Library
IV. Studies of Individual Works
Who Wrote “The Mound”?
On “The Book”
On “Polaris”
On “The Tree on the Hill”
Lovecraft and the Regnum Congo
The Sources for “From Beyond”
On “The Descendant”
What Happens in “Arthur Jermyn”
“The Tree” and Ancient History
Lovecraft and Dunsany’s Chronicles of Rodriguez
Some Sources for “The Mound” and At the Mountains of Madness
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
Excised Passages from “The Thing on the Doorstep”
V. On Lovecraft’s Essays, Poetry, and Letters
“History of the Necronomicon”
“Supernatural Horror in Literature”
Two Spurious Lovecraft Poems
A Look at Lovecraft’s Letters
Lovecraft’s Fantastic Poetry
Lovecraft, Regner Lodbrog, and Olaus Wormius
Lovecraft’s Essays
VI. On Lovecraft’s Legacy and Influence
The Development of Lovecraftian Studies: 1971–1982
R. H. Barlow and the Recognition of H. P. Lovecraft
A Literary Tutelage: Robert Bloch and H. P. Lovecraft
Passing the Torch: H. P. Lovecraft and Fritz Leiber
Lovecraft at Last
The Cthulhu Mythos
The Recognition of H. P. Lovecraft, 1937–2013
Sources
Index
18 Monday Aug 2014
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Lovecraft Annual No. 8 (2014) is now listed on the Hippocampus Press website.
Editorial
H.P. Lovecraft, Letters to Farnsworth Wright.
R.H. Barlow, “The Night Ocean”.
Dustin Geeraert, “Sanity, Subjectivity, and the Supernatural: Dreams of the Devil in Existentialism and the Weird Tale”.
James O. Butler, “Terror and Terrain: The Environmental Semantics of Lovecraft County”.
Phillip A. Ellis, “Two Poets and Beauty: H.P. Lovecraft and James Elroy Flecker“.
Kenneth W. Faig, Jr., “Lovecraft’s Third Meeting with David V. Bush”.
J.D. Worthington, “Echoes of a Warrior Poet: The Influence of Alan Seeger on Lovecraft”.
Reviews
Briefly Noted
Note that when the store says “SHIPS FREE WORLDWIDE WITH ANY OTHER PURCHASE” it seems to mean anything other than another Lovecraft Annual, since they all have that same rider. I checked, and found the checkout adding $17 extra shipping for two different Lovecraft Annual copies.
One wonders if the “Letters to Farnsworth Wright” include previously unpublished missives?
18 Monday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts
This is what Home Brew looked like. Lovecraft wrote the serial ‘shockers’ “The Lurking Fear” and “Herbert West – Reanimator” for the magazine, at the request of the editor who was also a fellow ‘amateur journalist’. It was a short-lived attempt to break out of amateur journalism and make a ‘free speech’ magazine that had some income and ‘crowd appeal’.
17 Sunday Aug 2014
Posted in Historical context
Lovecraft’s three key recommendations for vital encyclopaedias of the classical world, given by him in Fritz Leiber and H.P. Lovecraft: Writers of the Dark (2004). All now online…
* Harper’s Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities. Probably had by Lovecraft in the Second Edition, 1897. Owned by Lovecraft, but its whopping 1,700 pages explains why he was unwilling to mail it to Leiber as a loan. Lovecraft also called it… “a volume without which I could not exist”, suggesting another reason for not parting with it on loan. It is obviously an extremely comprehensive work, so much so that one has to wonder why Hypnos has only the most cursory four-word entry: “The god of sleep.”.
* Manual of Classical Literature : from the German of J.J. Eschenburg. Owned by Lovecraft in his grandfather’s 1846 edition.
* Baird’s The Classical Manual. Owned by Lovecraft. A sort of student equivalent of the above manual.