Bradofsky and Others

A new blog post from S. T. Joshi gives the title of… “the next volume in the Lovecraft letters series”. It’s to be Letters to Hyman Bradofsky and Others. The book’s text is evidently still in the process of being assembled and edited, though, at present.

Bradofsky was an amateur journalist active in the NAPA, a collector of amateur journalism, and editor of his accomplished amateur journal The Californian.

After that book of letters should come the two-volumes of Long letters, and then the mega-index.

New drawings by Lovecraft

A Lovecraft letter to Duane W. Rimel, now for sale from L.W. Currey.

10 pages on both sides of 5 sheets, closely written and incorporating 7 pen and ink drawings of old Providence architecture, dated 29th March 1934, signed “Yours most sincerely — H.P. Lovecraft.

The description makes no mention of Letters to F. Lee Baldwin et al. There the text of the letter appears to be published complete, and it matches the Currey description. But the “7 pen and ink drawings” are not shown with the letter in the book. Nor are the drawings found with the letter as partially published in Selected Letters IV.

Three of the pictures can be seen in the above Currey listing picture.

By Daylight Only

A peep at the British anthology By Daylight Only (1929). A new sale listing shows the original dust-jacket, which gives the colour. The paid repro ‘Facsimile Dust-jackets’ version has it as red, but here I’ve digitally recoloured to green…

Presumably a contributor copy would have arrived, circa December 1929, for Lovecraft. A tale by the master had appeared in the third volume, almost certainly issued in time for Halloween, and he received his copy in mid December. So we might imagine the same timing for this fifth book in the series. By Daylight Only featured his “Pickman’s Model”.

Perhaps it was first shipped in bulk to the Weird Tales office for further distribution to the American authors at their latest addresses. Since the British publishers dealt with Weird Tales London agent Charles Lovell, who picked the best published WT stories and passed them in good form to Selwyn & Blount for further selection and arrangement. I imagine he also passed back the contributor copies when ready. Ah, yes… I find that supposition is confirmed. In 1929 Lovecraft also wrote to Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright to thank him… “for the anthology which you forwarded”.

A side view of College St.

A side view of College St. Seen as part of a rare wide view of the Providence Athenaeum building, which offers an evocative side-glimpse of a spot half-way up the College Street Lovecraft knew so well. The perhaps c. 1900 card is here newly rectified, shadow-lifted and re-colourised.

Here we see the spot marked on the 1918 Plat Book map, with Lovecraft’s last home as the other highlighted spot.

A 1958 record-picture made on a glass plate shows much more detail, though is of course more than two decades after Lovecraft’s time and there’s been some overgrowth of the view. Still, one can see the John Hay Library behind the trees. Again, newly colorised.

Lovecraftian Mythos writers might wish to note the mysterious side-tunnel that this large image reveals…

The Athenaeum claims a connection with Poe dating to 1848, when he “is said” to have met many times with Mrs. Whitman in such alcoves and nooks as the library could provide. Lovecraft adds that Poe “wrote his name at the bottom of one of his unsigned poems in a magazine” there. Thus Lovecraft sometimes included it on his whistle-stop tour of Providence for visitors, though I’m uncertain if that would have involved entrance and browsing or just exterior architectural appreciation. I know of nothing to suggest Lovecraft ever had a subscription or ticket to this private library, though some in the circle of his aunts did (e.g. the lady who catalogued Lovecraft’s library at his death). He used the city’s main Public Library all his life, for free, and also had a stacks card there. Though, late in his life, a letter reveals that he went to The Athenaeum to consult some scarce books on the history of the defunct Nantucket whaling industry.

The Twentieth Century British Supernatural Novel (1958)

New on Archive.org to borrow, The Twentieth Century British Supernatural Novel (1958). Includes an early positive appreciation of Tolkien as a supernatural writer. And by someone who had actually read The Lord of the Rings (most critics of the time didn’t, something which is obvious from their reviews and comments). The text also has some discussion of Lovecraft.

Time Machine

Another day, another image-gen AI. MyHeritage’s existing Deep Nostalgia (subtly animates your vintage faces) has been joined by a new AI at MyHeritage. Reportedly based on a blend of Stable Diffusion & Google’s as yet unreleased DreamBooth.

AI Time Machine appears to be available now, and can blend your ancestor picture (or even you) into a historical figure. Thus taking your ‘family snapshots’ even further back in time, albeit with the risk of polluting existing memories.

I’m not a MyHeritage subscriber so can’t try it. But there’s a video demo here. No doubt we’ll soon be seeing Lovecraft as a Roman senator, Nordic warrior or an 18th century London coffee-house patron.