Tentaclii for August 2023

A bit late, here’s my quick round-up of Tentaclii activity for August and a bit more.

Late August and early September have at last ushered in a beautiful English summer. The mighty walls of Tentaclii Towers has so far basked in a rare full week of fine weather. Cool-enough early mornings leading to days that are hot but not-too-hot. Nor is everything frazzled to an ugly brown crisp, as happens in the British Isles at the end of some summers. Since paid work still eludes me, these fine mornings have thus been used for a litter-picking of the entire Towers estate and even The Sinister Fringes That Lie Beyond. This mammoth task is now complete, just as the weather now grows increasingly misty and possibly-thundery. Unusual fungi have started to appear, heralding the autumn…

Not much news in books this month, but S.T. Joshi announced the anthology The Weird Cat. Amazon UK has this shipping in mid October and thus in time for Halloween.

In my weekly ‘Picture Postals from Lovecraft’ posts on Tentaclii I looked at: Lower Manhattan from Brooklyn Heights, and came fairly close to a vintage picture illustrating the opening of “He”; I probed the vampiric under-crypts of St. John’s, Providence; I was pleased to find more pictures of Eddy’s bookshop on Weybosset, although not the shop-front or basement interior; and I found and colourised a fine and revealing view of the town end of his long and beloved Angell Street, which revealed another reason for Lovecraft to think fondly of the city’s First Baptist Church steeple.

A patron’s question spurred the long post “Lovecraft and Vermont”, in which I surveyed the likely places there that a Lovecraftian might want to visit today. With pictures.

With the Lovecraft Annual 2023 almost due to ship, I posted a long review of the Lovecraft Annual 2022. Joshi has accepted my 2024 submission for the Annual (calling it “brilliant”, which was pleasing) and I now just have to find the time to whittle all the references and bibliography into the required format. Also in journals news, it seems that the purchasable run of old Crypt of Cthulhu PDFs have gone offline, along with the more recent 2017-2022 run. This means modern scholars have lost access not only to most of Lovecraft Studies, but also to most of Crypt.

Over in Middle-earth I published Tolkien Gleanings issue 6, my free PDF news ‘zine for Tolkien scholars. I finally pushed my big scholarly Tolkien book Tree & Star out in Lulu paperback alongside the earlier ebook edition. I also made Little Delvings in the Marsh, a search tool for Tolkien scholars.

Various choice items turned up on Archive.org or in Creative Commons, and were duly noted here.

In Germany, Lovecrafter and Lovecraft Online called for new staff, and released their annual double-issue Lovecrafter 11 and 12. I produced a quick English summary of what’s in #11 and #12. The Germans also have a new translation of Lovecraft’s Fungi from Yuggoth.

In events, The R.E. Howard ‘Howard Days’ announced 2024 dates. The Providence wing of the Lovecraft Film Festival should be booking soon, if it’s not booking already.

In Lovecraftian arts, not much in August. But more recently I was pleased to find the free Wrath of the Elder Gods pinball table (digital, videogame emulation), and the forthcoming French graphic novel Le dernier jour de Howard Phillips Lovecraft. Both look like quality, each in their own way. Another post on new Lovecraft comics is coming soon.

I’ve also been doing more learning and tinkering with AI, as much as I can using free services (I don’t have the RTX 2080 8Gb graphics card I need to do it locally, nor the price of the resulting electric bill). The key problem in AI image generation is still getting repeatable / pose-able characters, for storytelling purposes. Specifically for hyper-critical graphic-novel readers. Though my long-standing interest in the Poser software (the proper desktop software, not the unrelated mobile app of the same name) makes me think that Poser + AI will be a possible solution. Poser can do real-time comic-book renders from 3D figures and handles Python 3 very easily, so an AI plugin for Poser seems quite feasible. The trick would be make the real-time comic-book renders quickly look “in the style of Gil Kane” or “in the style of Jack Kirby”.

In audio, for Lovecraft’s birthday I offered an enhanced audiobook reading of Lovecraft’s “Vermont, a first impression”, enhanced with music and SFX. Also for this year’s birthday, the French play Lovecraft, mon amour was kindly released in full on YouTube (though with no good English subtitles). In podcasts, ‘Lovecraft & Astronomy’ was the topic of Talking Weird #52. Two of the PulpFest 2023 Lovecraft-relevant presentations appeared online as audio and were also linked.

A very kind benefactor has funded me for £56 worth of ‘thermals’ for the winter (top and leggings), a winter which will again have to be heater-less due to the massive electric bills and inflation that we’re all suffering with. They are the “max” thermals, supposedly good down to minus 15 degrees. The UK is overdue an Arctic winter, and I’m now better prepared if that happens. A £10 per hour job that can pay electric bills would of course be nicer to have, but no-one even wants to interview me… so the thermals and a scarf will have to do for now. As always, donations and new patrons are welcome. PayPal or an Amazon voucher code are two of the easy ways to make one-off donations.

That’s it, onwards into September!

Through the gates

This one seems suitably timed for a ‘back to school’ / ‘back to uni’ Picture Postals post. The postcard shows an especially lively view of the Brown University gates at the top of College street (the ‘Van Wickle gates’). These were a stone’s throw from Lovecraft’s last home behind the John Hay Library, and he would have used them when accessing the campus grounds. He visited for public lecture series, and I recall he sometimes took a walk around the fine architecture and parkland campus with his aunt. Here we also see the John Hay, later to house the Lovecraft Collection.

I’ve colorised the picture.

And here are the gates from the other side, the road side. Showing the hint of white marble Roman columns behind, something Lovecraft would have appreciated.

And here is Lovecraft sitting in a nook in the same gates in the 1930s.

The gates as the basis for the cover of Lovecraft Studies #5, and re-imagined as an entrance to Miskatonic University…

Man Myth Magic

John Coulthart brings a link to “all 3,144 pages” of Man Myth Magic magazine, now on Archive.org. Actually more of a reference encyclopaedia, but issued in the once-popular (and apparently very profitable, when done right) British ‘collect the partwork’ manner. The work had a stellar contributor list which included Katharine Briggs for the folklore articles. Half way through the post we learn that the scans are of a “revised and reprinted” version, though it seems not much was changed.

The 21 volumes weigh in at just under 1Gb in a single PDF file.

Mountain trail

New on Archive.org, a crisp new scan of Astounding v016 n05 [1936-01]. This was the issue in which the Editor trailed “At The Mountains of Madness”, saying…

“It creates one of the finest word pictures I have ever read.”

Some readers did not agree in the letters-pages, in later issues. Several being seemingly simply unable to comprehend it. Although several times one gets the sense that they were also members of the ‘Genre Police’, whose hackles were raised on finding a story that was more ‘weird’ than the usual Astounding science-fiction.

Lovecrafter 11 / 12 (2023)

Details of what’s in the annual German-language double-issue magazine from the German Lovecraftians. Printing soon, and it should be available to buy shortly.

Lovecrafter 11: special issue on Lovecraft’s poetry.

* Following the recent German publication of the volume of poems Fungi by Yuggoth and other poems, an article “will present and discuss the translation and book in as much detail as possible”. [Sounds like a ‘making of’ article?]

* Form fanaticism and nostalgia in Lovecraft’s poems. [Probably about his passion for old metres, poetic forms and subject matter?]

* Lovecraft’s graphology. [His penmanship, or otherwise, and presumably also trying to divine personality from the handwriting?]

* ‘Mushroom Gardens in Bloom’ – a review of H.P. Lovecraft’s Fungi of Yuggoth and Other Poems (German edition).

Lovecrafter 12: special issue on Robert E. Howard.

Parallels between “Howard’s biography and the protagonists of his stories”.

A look at “the origins and relevance of the barbaric in more detail”.

An article which “roves through the sunken temple complexes and black stone structures that leave us so unsettled in the context of cosmic horror”.

“Digital Horror Upgrade 2.0”, in which Dennis Grob examines a number of obscure and often unknown videogame titles.

And various RPG gaming material.

PulpFest 2023 presentations

A useful round-up of the presentations at PulpFest 2023. Including, among others…

* Weird Tales on radio – old-time radio expert Karl Schadow looks at radio adaptations of stories that appeared in Weird Tales.

* Weird editors – a panel celebrating the magazine and anthology editors of the weird. There’s a recording.

* Doc Savage and his offspring – Doc Savage had “several imitators who would follow him to the newsstands”. Who knew Doc had babies? There’s a recording.

Recent and forthcoming comics

Time for a look at comics.

The delayed single-volume Lovecraft: Unknown Kadath collected comics series / graphic-novel should be shipping in about two weeks, just in time for the ‘student grant-money arrival’ season. Also to be available as a Kindle ebook. I see there’s also to be a French single-volume edition of this recent Kadath series of comics, with the French translation due early November 2023.

There’s also a French graphic novel or ‘BD’, Le dernier jour de Howard Phillips Lovecraft (‘The Last Day of Howard Phillips Lovecraft’). No page-count that I can find, but presumably it’ll be the usual ‘BD’ length and large page dimensions.

Set to ship just before Halloween 2023…

Romuald Giulivo and artist Jakub Rebelka bring us the dreamlike story of Lovecraft’s final moments in the form of interior dialogues, [in which he] revisits his imaginary lands, memories, his anger and his grey areas. We follow the last journey of a complex and tortured man [who is] convinced that only a comforting eternal night awaits men at the moment of their death. But isn’t an author inherently immortal thanks to his stories of which we are the custodians? Constructed like a strange Gothic cathedral, Lovecraft’s Last Day is an extraordinary graphic novel turning the end of a man into the beginning of a myth.

Sounds good, though only in French. One would have thought that the French ‘BD’ industry would have installed a streamlined AI-assisted insta-translation system by now. They must be missing out on a large chunk of revenue by not doing so. They have so much quality content and back-catalogue material. For grown-ups, self-contained complete stories, great art. Many English readers would gladly pay $10 for that, in ebook.

Later in the year, we have a new maybe-perhaps shipping date for Gou Tanabe’s mammoth H.P. Lovecraft’s The Shadow Over Innsmouth graphic novel manga adaptation, in the English Dark Horse translation. Like the single-volume Kadath, this has been much delayed. But Amazon is now suggesting possible UK in-your-hands delivery by 7th December 2023.

By the way, I was able to read The Monstrous Dreams of Mr. Providence graphic novel. Hmmm… entertaining in a ‘Neil Gaiman meets Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens’ sort of way. Very beautiful artwork and lettering. But not really about the Lovecraft I recognise.

And it looks like the older graphic novel / comics biography Some Notes on a Nonentity: The Life of H.P. Lovecraft is now firmly out-of-print. Time for a new affordable e-book edition from PS Publishing?

Free cheese

For Halloween the videogame pinball-table emulator Pinball FX will release a Pinball M version. M for “mature”. This will have a free table…

The free table is an updated, ‘unrestricted’ Director’s Cut version of the Lovecraft-inspired Wrath of the Elder Gods table that’s already available in PinballFX.

The model seems to be that the money comes from those seeking additional digital pinball tables, to be played inside Pinball FX. The one-minute YouTube video demo for ‘Wrath of the Elder Gods’ makes it look pleasingly cheesy, as a pinball table should.

The Commonplace Book

New on Archive.org, H.P. Lovecraft – Commonplace Book – Transcribed by R. H. Barlow in a digital fan edition…

I wanted to make the original document available here in the Archive, and so here it is (with a new cover image made by me)

This seems pertinent to the late-summer season of large moths…

There’s also a fan compilation of Hannes Bok’s Science Fiction Illustrations, newly on Archive.org.