Clockwork Empires (PC game)

I have fond memories of a few of the best of the isometric-view strategy videogames, and once greatly enjoyed Sid Meier’s Civilisation II and later his Railroads and others. Also Titan Quest [review], although that was more Diablo-like. So the new PC Gamer magazine’s pre-release coverage of the moddable PC game Clockwork Empires sounds very interesting. Especially as it’s apparently a…

“Lovecraft-laden steampunk city-builder” [in which the player is a Civilisation-style] colony-builder amid the grand idealism of Victorian discovery [but] with horrors, madness, wild species, and volatile science.”

Sounds awesome, but sadly it’s all very much “under development”. It looks like we’ll have to wait until around Sept/Oct 2013 before we can play it.

Further Lovecraftian places that really exist

Further Lovecraftian places that really exist:


Eye of Africa (the Richat Structure), Mauritania.


‘Sentinels of the Arctic’ (wind/snow formations, Finnish Lapland) — picture by Niccola Bonfadini.


Entrance to the Borgund Stave Church, Norway — picture by Lightbender.


Catholic convent catacombs, Lima in Peru.


Basalt cave entrance, Akun Island — picture by Steve Hillebrand, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.


Stephen Whitney crypt entrance, Greenwood Cemetery (Lovecraft visited this cemetery while in New York).

More Open Lovecraft

Added to the Open Lovecraft page:

* Marek Wilczynski (2008), “Secret passage through Poe: the transatlantic affinities of H.P. Lovecraft and Stefan Grabinski”, Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, 44, 2008.

* David Farnell (2007), “In a mirror, darkly”: finding ourselves reflected in the aliens of Melville, Lovecraft, Dick, and Butler”, Fukuoka University Review of Literature & Humanities, Vol.39, 1, 2007, pp.105-127.

* Malotcsy Kalman (2004), “The Innsmouth “Thing”: Monstrous Androgyny in H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Thing on the Doorstep”, Gender Studies, Vol.1, No.3, 2004.

Lovecraft and his Puritans

An M.A. thesis from a religious university, currently only available via Google “Quick View”…

Geoffrey Reiter (2005), “A Dark Poem”: Lovecraft and his Puritans.

“This work examines the fiction and letters of H.P. Lovecraft […] and seeks to explore the way in which he incorporated Puritanism into his works and artistic philosophy, despite the fact that his materialistic worldview would not permit him to accept Puritan doctrinal tenets.”

It can be found with a Google “Quick View” link, via the following Google Search query:

   lovecraft “Puritanism and Christianity” filetype:pdf

The Age of Lovecraft: Cosmic Horror, Posthumanism, and Popular Culture

Call for Proposals for academic book chapters: “The Age of Lovecraft: Cosmic Horror, Posthumanism, and Popular Culture”.

Editors: Carl Sederholm at csederholm@byu.edu / Jeffrey Weinstock at Jeffrey.Weinstock@cmich.edu

250-word proposals are sought for chapters for an edited scholarly collection on H.P. Lovecraft and his place in 21st century literature, film, media, and popular culture. This collection will consider the late 20th and early 21st century as “The Age of Lovecraft”, as he achieves unprecedented levels of cultural saturation. In short, we will be asking ‘why Lovecraft, why now’?

Deadline for proposals: 31st October 31st 2012. Chapters of approximately 6,000 words due one year later.

Conversations with the Weird Tales Circle

A glimpse of Wilum Pugmire’s bookshelves led me to a new doorstopper book, one I don’t remember hearing of before: Conversations with the Weird Tales Circle (2011). This is a limited edition book (200 copies) of over 750 pages…

“contain letters and essays by the writers, with many interviews and memoirs about the writers, often by other writers from the Circle. With dozens of color and black & white photographs, and many of the articles never before reprinted (several coming from 1930s and 1940s fanzines that are now very difficult to find), this is an important and illuminating look at a group of people that defined an era.”

Seemingly still available at Centipede for $225 plus shipping.