" It is new, indeed for I made it last night in a dream of strange cities: and dreams are older than brooding Tyre, or the
contemplative Sphinx, or garden-girdled Babylon" The Call of Cthulhu

Saturday, October 5, 2019

New Eldritch Tomes

I have been waiting for this collection of Caitlin R. Kiernan's mythos tales from Subterranean Press for quite some time. As I noted in an earlier post, she provides a lovely reminiscence concerning her first experience with the works of H.P. Lovecraft in the introduction.

Lovecraft and I
Oh, where to start. 
"I’ll begin here, with the day I first encountered H. P. Lovecraft. Oddly,  I found him in Trussville, Alabama on a yellow school bus. I was seventeen years old."



I have to admit I have always been iffy on Lee Brown Coye's cover for the (1965) Arkham House edition of Dagon & Other Macabre Tales until now. Now after reading Kiernan's introduction, I treasure it. And I will be reading "Dagon" again with new eyes as well.




And how could I resist. The contents are listed at the following link.



Sunday, September 15, 2019

Ride the Star Wind edited by Caroline Dombrowski and Scott Gable.





































Tor's Great Lovecraft Reread is a valuable resource. I don't necessarily always agree with their conclusions, that's life. But given the vast amount of mythos material published, it is handy to have someone identify the most noteworthy collections and anthologies. I often track down the stories they feature, both old and new. 

It was there I found the wonderful anthology Ride the Star Wind: Cthulhu, Space Opera, and the Cosmic Weird edited by Caroline Dombrowski and Scott Gable. It sports a lovely cover by Nick Gucker. The title is based on the quote below which appears in the book

"Madness rides the star-wind . . . claws and teeth sharpened on centuries of corpses . . . dripping death astride a Bacchanale of bats from night-black ruins of buried temples of Belial . . . —HP Lovecraft, “The Hound”
 


One thing I am finding interesting is the different threads that have emerged from Lovecraft work and that of the other writers of weird tales/new weird style stories. We still see many faithful pastiches with writers revisiting many of the iconic locations, both real and fictional, including Providence, Innsmouth, Arkham etc. There are also occult detectives with elements from Sherlock Holmes, Blackwood's John Silence, William Hope Hodgson's Carnacki, and Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe etc. However we are also seeing a more inclusive literature which features more women and minorities both as writers and characters. One trend I am especially interested in is the increasing use of science fiction elements in these stories. Two of Lovecraft's last works "The Mountains of Madness" and "The Shadow Out of Time" and "The Color Out of Space" considered by many his greatest story all owe more to science fiction than the supernatural. I have read three stories from this anthology so far and enjoyed all of them 


Lucy Snyder's “Blossoms Blackened Like Dead Stars” was covered by the reread
at the link below. Since they have provided a great synopsis my comments will be brief.

https://www.tor.com/2019/05/29/kudzu-from-beyond-lucy-snyders-blossoms-blackened-like-dead-stars/


Beatrice Munoz is a Special Space Operations recruit aboard the warship Apocalypse Treader. Beatrice was a botanist following in the footsteps of her father Giacomo Rappaccini Munoza, She was working on the International Lunar Research Station studying plant alkaloids when the spawn of Azathoth attacked both the Moon and Earth. The only other recruit we are introduced to is Joe Jorgensen a huge white supremacist whose family was killed in the attack on San Angelo, Texas. Joe has since has realized that all humans must stand together regardless of race. Joe and Beatrice will be part of a force intended to attack the spawn using captured technology and some innate abilities that their training is designed to bring out. Snyder's story openly includes elements from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Rappaccini’s Daughter”. Whether this makes it a pastiche, a tribute, a nod to I am not sure. I do not think it matters, since we are firmly in pastiche territory with the reread, this site and the anthology itself. What it is is effective. I loved it, I agree with Ruthanna's comment that it is important that the story remains that of Beatrice. Joe is an interesting addition, and plays a useful role in providing background and later, collaboration for Beatric'e experiences, but Beatrice is the star. I have not read Hawthorne's story, I have read about it, and on a trip to Gallegos Islands a young girl told my wife and I her version, which I recognized from my background reading. (She was sharing the Pringles we had bought to use the containers to transport my poster of Darwin's finches.) I have always remembered that. I really enjoyed this story, Snyder has merged the works of two classic weird author's into a compelling story. She has also provided a science fiction twist I loved and a female protagonist I really enjoyed. 

Hawthorne's story was covered by the reread here.

https://www.tor.com/2016/09/07/juggling-allegories-nathaniel-hawthornes-rappaccinis-daughter/





Illustration by Yves Tourigny

I found this Hawthrone collection the other day so I will be reading his story shortly. The cover is unattributed. 


The Children of Leng  by  Remy Nakamura

"My children are on their way to the surface of Leng. I send them only because the risk of staying is greater than the risk of venturing forth. You cast us adrift in a deadly universe against such terrible odds. If you receive this, I strongly advise against future missions, speaking as one parent to another."


Illustration by Mike Dubisch


This story is told from the point of view of nine year old Mirai one of a lineage of clones aboard the generation starship Amankawa. The ship was launched from Earth many years ago three ships were launched but contact with the other two has ceased. There are two other living clones of her lineage, Yukiko who is part of the advance party to the moon Leng, a mars analog where they hope to settle, and Grandma who is 80 years old. Another clone referred to as Auntie Kiyomi has died of burns and is currently held in a cylinder in the Ancestral Grove before being recycled into the habitat. The living clones indulgent in a form of ancestor worship and visit the grove to pray and provide offering. The Amakawa is divided into three habitats each with a controlling AI. Mirai lives in Hab Three which is run by Momma Calliope. The clones in the other habits maintained by the AI's Thalia and Urania are all dead or brain damaged so the clones of Hab 1 are all that are left and Leng appears to be their only chance. More diverse voices writing within the somewhat flimsy boundaries of the mythos means more diverse stories. Here we have a engrossing story of space travel with an Asian or Oriental flavour very different from the conventional tropes New England of Lovecraft's preferred landscape. Nakamura's story is also interesting in that the society is a matriarchy. He has blended the many elements together seamlessly. And it feels very much like a mythos despite the many tropes of science fiction that inform it. I was also interested in the fact that there were three ships and three habitants perhaps a nod to Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama? I was reminded of the works of writers like like Aliette de Bodard and Yoon Ha Lee who are offering us a very different view of mankind's exploration of outer space and the far future.



Sense of Wonder by Richard Lee Byers



Illustration by Michael Bukowski

The protagonist of Byers story Pablo Valdez is basically the engine of a ship exploring the universe for habitual planets that can be used by Earth colonists. But there is no FTL here instead Valdez has a patron. This patron enables Valdez to transport the ship to a number of preselected destinations. And it all is perfectly safe as he explains while discussing his abilities with another crew member,

“But not how the physics work, or what Yog . . . the consciousness truly is, or even why it’s willing to help us. You’re the one who communes with it. Do you have any idea?” I shrug. “It’s everywhere and everywhen. So vast and powerful that obliging us is no more difficult than not obliging us. It grants our petitions in the same sense that you grant permission to the bacteria in your intestines to go on doing what they do.”

Another great story. I really enjoyed how Byers enlivened the staid space exploration story with a little Yog-Sothoth gate action, wouldn't Wilbur Whateley be jealous. But despite the fact Yog-Sothoth is a mechanism and not the baddie the universe is a scary place.

As quick look at three stories I really enjoyed in one of my favourite anthologies. I am a bit rushed today so I apologize for any typos, omissions or oversights etc. Sorry about the spacing Yog-Sothoth did it.

Sunday, September 1, 2019

New Eldritch Tomes / Matt Cardin


  I have not posted in quite a while. Since my wife and I have a trip planned in a couple of weeks, I wanted to sneak in a couple of posts.

First some new arrivals. I have long been a fan of Donald Wandrei so when I saw this post on Ralph E. Vaughan's Book Scribbles I was intrigued. I have several of Wandrei's books, but the items from Necronomicon Press looked very interesting. I found a vendor that had both books at a reasonable price and ordered them. (Thanks Ralph) Sadly he could not find the poetry volume. I have been on a bit of a Bradbury kick lately, so I ordered this edition of The October Country at the same time. I loved the cover illustration. The artist was not credited in the ISFDB database. 


This summer I read some well-written mythos tales and some that were quite disappointing. I will not identify them. I have decided in all my blogs to focus on the positive unless I am extremely offended. Some time ago, I added Matt Cardin's blog, The Teeming Brain to the list of blogs I follow. When I returned from the cabin, I checked to see if I had any of his work on hand. I had read half of his short story "Teeth" in the anthology The Children of Cthulhu when I decided to order his collection of short stories To Rouse Leviathan. While I was waiting for the book to arrive, I looked around to see what else was on my shelves. I realized I had read and liked his short story "The New Pauline Corpus" in one of my favourite mythos anthologies Cthulhu's Reign edited by Darrell Schweitzer.



In "Teeth" Jason, a lecturer at Terence University, meets up with his friend Marco while visiting the library. Marco, a brilliant visiting student from Guatemala, is triple majoring in physics, philosophy, and history. Marco is usually quite friendly, but today he seems to be obsessed with something he is writing. Marco invites Jason back to his room and presents him with a spiral notebook. He instructs Jason to look at page 46. While he flips through the book, Jason notices it consists mostly of quotations. Page 46 contains an elaborate and beautifully executed mandala. The illustration begins to move, and Jason realizes he is "staring into a nightmare of abyss of endless teeth." Jason passes out. Marco wakes Jason up, gives him a couple of pills to relax him and begins to tell Jason of his research. It seems that Marco has been attempting to understand the true nature of reality. He then asks if people want to know the truth about their lives, "To know why we are here, why we live and die, why it thunders and rains? Most of all, to know who and what we are." Marco has concluded that most people cannot handle the truth preferring illusion instead. At this point, he gives Jason the notebook to read telling him they will talk later. He also tells him to avoid looking at the mandala a second time. 

 I will leave my discussion of the plot here focusing instead on why I liked this story so much. I find Cardin's writing conveys the moods or impressions of his characters quite concisely. Jason's feeling of despair and oppression upon reading the notebook are presented effectively in two or three lines. Jason's anxiety seemed to be a natural outgrowth of reading the journal. We are spared the neat summary of the pantheon of mythos deities that you so often get at this point in a pastiche. instead Lovecraft's cosmicism is subtly represented, and the reactions of both Marco and Jason fall within the Lovecraftian tradition.

Also part of the joy of mythos inspired stories for me lies in recognizing echos of Lovecraft's work. I enjoy reading something new and imaginative, but with a flavour of Lovecraft, not just Wilbur Whateley renamed. 

Mild spoilers follow, in "Teeth" I see faint echos of so many stories, "Dagon", "Nyarlathotep", "The Dreams in a Witch-House", "The Rats in the Walls", "The Call of Cthulhu" that I could not help but enjoy it. 



Cardin's "The New Pauline Corpus" begins with an unidentified narrator reading a letter or letters from a renegade Protestant theologian (Paul) to his Catholic friend Francis. The letters contain his theological musings interspersed with visions of a horrific new reality of wrecked cities, flames, night gaunts and a strangely altered humanity. 

" I turn my eyes skyward and see the gargoylish figures still commanding the open air between the coiling columns of smoke. Rubbery black demonid shapes with smooth black faces and leathery wings swoop and careen like flakes of ash on a hot wind." 

A voice speaking from behind him, and addressing the narrator as "My Son" urges him to reread the letters. There is some information or nuance that is escaping him. The voice also reminds him, "but remember that we are waited upon". Indeed even as he reads, the narrator is aware of "the ocean roar of voices" from outside.

For Cthulhu has risen, not at least initially, as the raving monster seen only by the crew of certain ill-fated merchant ships. Rather images of Cthulhu and R'lyeh have appeared to humanity as a form of beatific vision that heralds a "New Awakening."  


In my mind, this was a great read. I was only sorry I did not know enough theology to understand many of the references and their significance. It is interesting to read a mythos tale which deals with the issues of Christianity when faced with the revelations of Lovecraft's cosmicism, something Lovecraft ignored.

"The philosophy of cosmicism states "that there is no recognizable divine presence, such as a god, in the universe, and that humans are particularly insignificant in the larger scheme of intergalactic existence."(4)

"Lovecraft's cosmicism was a result of his complete disdain for all things religious"

"As such, Lovecraft's cosmicism is not religious at all, but rather a version of his mechanistic materialism."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmicism

Lovecraft's narrators often share his mechanistic materialism. In his stories Lovecraft does not deal in detail with what the reality of what the mythos means for conventional religion because religion did not interest him. Also since the calamity is normally avoided within the story the bulk of humanity are spared the knowledge of their actual place in the universe.

Indeed, in stories like "The Dreams in a Witch-House" the narrator exhibits nothing but disdain for the superstitious  (conventionally religious) immigrants. This despite the fact that in the end the immigrants prove to be correct, their children are being menaced by a witch.

Cardin on the other hand really embraces this topic. His story contains not only biblical quotes, but quotes from religious thinkers like Luther. Nothing should be taken at face value. As the story progresses, it raises more and more questions, the nature and timing of the letters, the identity of the various characters, the nature of reality. After my first reading I noted the story was good with an interesting religious theological focus. After my second reading, my copy was a mass of underlining and marginal. Cardin's writing style in this story fits the subject matter.  It is beautifully in character with the proposed setting and mood of the story as demonstrated by the quote that follows.

 "that instead of pointing directly toward spiritual and metaphysical truths, the great concepts, words and icons of our tradition were in fact mere signals, hints, clues, that gestured awkwardly toward reality whose true character was and is far different from and perhaps even opposite to the surface meanings?" 

He understands Lovecraft work but explores the different issues that it raises. Since this anthology collects stories about what happens after Cthulhu rises there is ample scope for Cardin to address the wider ramifications. This scope and Cardin's obvious interest in religion are what distinguish this story from the bulk of the mythos writing. And his use of night gaunts, rare in a non-Dunsany style tale is brilliant.

Cover credits

To Rouse Leviathan: Cover Art Michael Hutter, design Daniel V. Sauer

Studies in Weird Fiction: Robert H. Knox

The October Country: unattributed

The Children of Cthulhu: Dave McKean

Cthulhu's Reign: unattributed



Wednesday, July 24, 2019

New Eldritch Tomes - Robert Bloch - Ray Bradbury,


Any one who has watched me fritter away my patromony (actually, it is my pension) here on HPL: Beyond the Wall of Sleep, will know I have a fondness for 1960's horror paperbacks, but only if the stars align and the covers are just right. Nicey done, not too garish or bloody. Since I covered a story by Bloch in my last post I looked around to see what I could find. Sadly none of these covers are attributed. 

I really loved the graphics on Yours, Truly Jack the Ripper, the same vender had a neat joint Bloch, Bradbury anthology. The Small Assasin, is designated on ISFDB as Ace UK, but the book listed The New English Library Limited on the title page, lovely isn't it.  I was also taken with how Bloch and Bradbury's most well known works Psycho and The Illustrated Man are trumpeted on the covers. I am always on the look out for Digit Digest science fiction, and there was Search the Sky, a Kornbluth, Pohl collaboration which Doug and I often discuss during our weekly lunches.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Robert Bloch; The Man Who Collected Poe and some links. July 19 one addition.



Weird Tales, October 1936, illustration by Virgil Finlay.

Last post I mentioned Robert Bloch's story "The Man Who Collected Poe" and the similarities between it and Lovecraft's story "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward". Before I move on to that story I thought it would be fun to look at the the posts of some other bloggers whose sites I enjoy and who also share a certain affection for the the works of H.P. Lovecraft as well as a few writers. If you know of any others I would love to expand this with another post. A great resource to find out what some of his friends and contemporaries felt about him is the Arkham House book Lovecraft Remembered.

http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?20871

Or… The Trials Of A Sort of Mythos Author. 

The jobbing writer knows no fear; accepts no shame. Literary purity is not for the likes of us, beggin’ yer pardon, guv’nor. Run off a young adult horror story? Index a quick textbook? Draft a missing cat advert? Write a Lovecraft Mythos story? Well, why not, given that you’re trying to earn a living? Was it not St Catherine of Alexandria who said “Better a sold Nyarlathotep story and a new gas cooker, than snobbery and half a box of matches.”? No, it wasn’t, but still…

http://greydogtales.com/blog/lovecraft-on-my-mind/







My obsession with the great Mr Howard Phillips Lovecraft
A few weeks ago I wrote an article in which I boldly stated that “I rarely buy the same book twice because a better cover comes along” and briefly mentioned my ‘vanity’ collection of H.P. Lovecraft titles. It’s true, I will buy anything bearing his name if it doesn’t already reside on my shelves, despite the fact that I may have several copies of the same volume under different covers. I just can’t help it, I don’t know exactly what spurs me on to indulge in this largely pointless endeavour apart from imagining myself as a custodian of sorts who seeks to amass and preserve these browning sheaves of paper from the ravages of time.

I bought my first set of Lovecraft anthologies back in 1985. They were published by Granada/Grafton and each of the four thick volumes bore the most garish cover imaginable which I have since traced back to an artist called Tim White. I was nineteen years old or thereabouts at the time and absolutely devoured their contents in a matter of weeks. I almost became one of Lovecraft’s impossibly driven characters poring over antiquarian manuscripts in a bid to find the arcane formula and sigils required to summon a foul, eldritch creature from its millennial slumber. I still have those books to this day – my ‘reading copies’ and they show surprisingly little in the way of ageing which is quite odd.

Teece’s Bit… A Shadow Over Rotherham


A few months ago, I suggested to my fellow vintage paperback collector and music aficionado Teece that he might pen a few articles for me to use on my blog. I’m very pleased to say that he accepted my invitation and so here is his first guest spot;
Harpers bookshop in the shadow of the imposing soot-encrusted church in Rotherham town centre was where I first got my unholy fix of science fiction and cosmic horror. The shop provided the haven of otherness which I craved as a teenager in the grim years of the early 1970s. Heading for those shelves bulging with creeping terrors and lurid futures, I felt I was transgressing… crossing a line that my parents, teachers and peers remained firmly the other side of. Just the sight of those weird and wonderful names on the book spines was enough to set my imagination racing – Philip K Dick, Cordwainer Smith, A. E. van Vogt, H. P. Lovecraft, Roger Zelazny, William Hope Hodgson, C. M. Kornbluth and the rest. It felt good to align myself with these literary misfits and malcontents in the shunned yet darkly fertile ghetto of ‘genre’ fiction. An escape from reality? Well no, this was the start of a journey into the deeper recesses of the human mind. These writers hold up a mirror – albeit twisted, warped and troubling! – to that strange and shifting place we call the real world.
As I neared the end of a story about a man foolish enough to venture upon the mist-laden moor alone I felt a dark presence looming over me. My heart froze and my gaze darted frantically to my left. Yes, Mr Vigil, my homeroom teacher, was standing next to me. He asked me what I was doing, I admitted my deed in a barely audible voice, and he asked if he could read it. I have often wondered what my life, or at least my writing life, would have been like if I had bucked authority (as was the fashion in the 60s) and said, "No way, man!" But I didn't, and he did read it, and I sat all sullen-eyed and brooded about the unfair vicissitudes of my life, and interfering teachers; toward the end of class, he handed back "The Moor" and said, surprisingly: "It was really good, and I'd like to read it when it's finished." And then he asked the question: "Have you ever read HP Lovecraft?" As it happened, I had not, but all that was about to change and my writing life take a big left turn.

In the introduction to her upcoming collection from Subterranean Press  Caitlin R. Kiernan provides a lovely reminiscence concerning her first experience with the works of H.P. Lovecraft
Lovecraft and I
Oh, where to start. 
"I’ll begin here, with the day I first encountered H. P. Lovecraft. Oddly,  I found him in Trussville, Alabama on a yellow school bus. I was seventeen years old."
Robert Bloch's experience was of course different, as Lovecraft was still alive at the time Bloch began reading his work.

"So, I wrote to Weird Tales and I wrote to Lovecraft in care of them to ask whether or not he knew where I could get some of these stories that I'd read about. He told me that he'd be glad to lend me any copies of any of his stories. So, we got into correspondence."


Cover by Don Punchatz

“The essential Saltes of Animals may be so prepared and preserved, that an ingenious Man may have the whole Ark of Noah in his own Studie, and raise the fine Shape of an Animal out of its Ashes at his Pleasure; and by the lyke Method from the essential Saltes of humane Dust, a Philosopher may, without any criminal Necromancy, call up the Shape of any dead Ancestour from the Dust whereinto his Bodie has been incinerated.” 

BORELLUS

As quoted in “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”.

As I mentioned in my last post, Bloch’s "The Man Who Collected Poe" and Lovecraft’s "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward" both appeared in the Derleth anthology Night’s Yawning Peal

"The Man Who Collected Poe" begins;

“During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country; and at length found myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within view of the melancholy House of Usher. 

I know not how it was — but, with the first glimpse of the building, a sense of insufferable gloom pervaded my spirit. I say insufferable; for the feeling was unrelieved by any of that half-pleasurable, because poetic, sentiment, with which the mind usually receives even the sternest natural images of the desolate or terrible. I looked upon the scene before me — upon the mere house, and the simple landscape features of the domain — upon the bleak walls — upon the vacant eye-like windows — upon a few rank sedges — and upon a few white trunks of decayed trees — with an utter depression of soul.” 

Oh wait, that’s the beginning of Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher”  Bloch begins thusly;

“During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, by automobile, through a singularly dreary tract of country; and at length found myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within view of my destination.

I looked upon the scene before me — upon the mere house, and the simple landscape features of the domain — upon the bleak walls — upon the vacant eye-like windows — upon a few rank sedges — and upon a few white trunks of decayed trees — with a feeling of utter confusion commingled with dismay. For it seemed to me as though I had visited this scene once before, or read about it, perhaps, in some frequently rescanned tale.” (66)

So we already know that while there might be some small nod to his friend Howard, Bloch is firmly in Poe territory here. 

The narrator has driven to the estate of Lancelot Canning to see his collection of material relating to the life and works of Edgar Allen Poe. The unnamed narrator met Canning at a recent bibliophilic meeting, and while his interest in Poe is mild at best, he has intrigued by Canning, who struck him as someone who might have stepped directly from one of Poe’s tales. As the valet guides him through the house, he is not disappointed the interior could also be lifted from Poe, and when he finally meets Canning he is reclining on a sofa in the library.
          As the tour begins Canning admits that the collection was begun by his grandfather, who collected first editions of Poe’s work and also was one of the group who had Poe reinterred to a more suitable spot. He also built the house, including a secret room with an iron door. Canning’s father expanded the collection. He specialized in the accumulation and study of Poe’s correspondence and also collected mementoes related to Poe and his family. While the two men talk they also seem to drink a great deal of wine and Canning opens up about the genesis of the collection, his own role in continuing to add to it, was well as some more intimate details concerning the special mania of the three generations of Canning men, when it came to Edgar Allen Poe. As far as the story goes I will leave you now.

But there are two connections to H.P. Lovecraft and his story “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”. The narrator notes that the Canning collection contains De Vermis Mysteries a tome that Bloch himself added to the mythos bibliography in his short story "The Shambler from the Stars" , and the Liber Eibon which was added by Clark Ashton Smith and mentioned in his short story  "Ubbo-Sathla". (75) The term essential salts also appears. (77)

As excellent resource for figuring out which forbidden books appear in which mythos stories can be found at;

As part of this exercise I reread “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”, and I wanted to make a few general comments. Ward’s love of his city, Providence and the New England setting, really reminded me in a passage in "The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath" and Randolph Carter’s love for Boston and New England. 

from "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward".

“His home was a great Georgian mansion atop the well-nigh precipitous hill that rises just east of the river; and from the rear windows of its rambling wings he could look dizzily out over all the clustered spires, domes, roofs, and skyscraper summits of the lower town to the purple hills of the countryside beyond. Here he was born, and from the lovely classic porch of the double-bayed brick facade his nurse had first wheeled him in his carriage; past the little white farmhouse of two hundred years before that the town had long ago overtaken, and on toward the stately colleges along the shady, sumptuous street, whose old square brick mansions and smaller wooden houses with narrow, heavy-columned Doric porches dreamed solid and exclusive amidst their generous yards and gardens. He had been wheeled, too, along sleepy Congdon Street, one tier lower down on the steep hill, and with all its eastern homes on high terraces. The small wooden houses averaged a greater age here, for it was up this hill that the growing town had climbed; and in these rides he had imbibed something of the colour of a quaint colonial village. The nurse used to stop and sit on the benches of Prospect Terrace to chat with policemen; and one of the child’s first memories was of the great westward sea of hazy roofs and domes and steeples and far hills which he saw one winter afternoon from that great railed embankment, all violet and mystic against a fevered, apocalyptic sunset of reds and golds and purples and curious greens. The vast marble dome of the State House stood out in massive silhouette, its crowning statue haloed fantastically by a break in one of the tinted stratus clouds that barred the flaming sky."

from "The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath"

“For know you, that your gold and marble city of wonder is only the sum of what you have seen and loved in youth. It is the glory of Boston’s hillside roofs and western windows aflame with sunset; of the flower-fragrant Common and the great dome on the hill and the tangle of gables and chimneys in the violet valley where the many-bridged Charles flows drowsily. These things you saw, Randolph Carter, when your nurse first wheeled you out in the springtime, and they will be the last things you will ever see with eyes of memory and of love. And there is antique Salem with its brooding years, and spectral Marblehead scaling its rocky precipices into past centuries, and the glory of Salem’s towers and spires seen afar from Marblehead’s pastures across the harbour against the setting sun. “There is Providence, quaint and lordly on its seven hills over the blue harbour, with terraces of green leading up to steeples and citadels of living antiquity, and Newport climbing wraith-like from its dreaming breakwater. Arkham is there, with its moss-grown gambrel roofs and the rocky rolling meadows behind it; and antediluvian Kingsport hoary with stacked chimneys and deserted quays and overhanging gables, and the marvel of high cliffs and the milky-misted ocean with tolling buoys beyond. “Cool vales in Concord, cobbled lanes in Portsmouth, twilight bends of rustic New-Hampshire roads where giant elms half hide white farmhouse walls and creaking well-sweeps. Gloucester’s salt wharves and Truro’s windy willows. Vistas of distant steepled towns and hills beyond hills along the North Shore, hushed stony slopes and low ivied cottages in the lee of huge boulders in Rhode-Island’s back country. Scent of the sea and fragrance of the fields; spell of the dark woods and joy of the orchards and gardens at dawn. These, Randolph Carter, are your city; for they are yourself. New-England bore you, and into your soul she poured a liquid loveliness which cannot die. This loveliness, moulded, crystallised, and polished by years of memory and dreaming, is your terraced wonder of elusive sunsets; and to find that marble parapet with curious urns and carven rail, and descend at last those endless balustraded steps to the city of broad squares and prismatic fountains, you need only to turn back to the thoughts and visions of your wistful boyhood."

Lovecraft returned to Providence from his years in New York in 1926 and his return coincided with the production of his most significant works. “The Color out of Space” (1927), “The Call of of Cthulhu (1928), “The Dunwich Horror” (1929). The Whisperer in Darkness (1931) etc. “The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath" was begun in 1926 and completed in 1927 and “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward” in 1927. From the passages I quoted it is I think possible to see them as including, despite the horror in “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward”, a loving invocation to Lovecraft’s own childhood and his ongoing admiration for the landscape of New England. Among the longest works Lovecraft had produced up until this time, and unpublished during his lifetime, it is interesting to speculate how a positive reception for one or both works might have changed Lovecraft’s subsequent career. 

Thursday, July 11, 2019

New Arrivals


It is funny how I now tend to create the same environment around me wherever I spend much time. Now at least these few shelves at the cabin look very much like my shelves at home crammed with science fiction and mythos related items with the covers of the more striking paperbacks and chapbooks displayed so I can enjoy them at a glance.

As I have mentioned previously on this website, my collecting, as opposed to just accumulating books to read began with H.P. Lovecraft's books and other Arkham House publications. While I did not aspire to first edition copies of The Outsider and Others or Beyond the Walls of Sleep, I did get a lovely The House on the Borderlands by William Hope Hodgson (with a Hannes Bok dust jacket) and a copy of Derleth’s Lurker on the Threshold with Oswald Train’s (an early science fiction publisher) bookplate. One thing I now regret is I traded in a number of my original Lovecraft paperbacks as I got hardcovers. Eventually, I collected more widely, expanding to small press science fiction and magazines. But now having a lot of books I find I enjoy collecting paperbacks, a less pricey and bulky segment of the publishing industry. And while I had been looking at some UK science fiction editions, my latest purchases as often happens, brought me back to Howard yet again.



A couple of years ago I had the chance to spend $300 on the Arkham House edition of The Mask of Cthulhu with a beautiful dust jacket by Richard Taylor. I passed and now I love my Consul edition (1961) with a sadly unattributed cover.



I really enjoy Darrell Schweitzer’s mythos tales as well as his essays and the anthologies he puts together. I could not resist this Starmount Press book Discovering H.P. Lovecraft (1987) with a cover depicting Randolph Carter as the wizard Zkauba of the planet Yaddith, (Through the Gates of the Silver Key). Cover by Richard Huber. Also appeared as Essays Lovecraftian.


Brian Lumley seems to get some criticism in the Mythos community, I suspect because much of his work is seen as more closely related to August Derleth’s additions to the mythos than the Lovecraft canon. While I think his Titus Crow adventures continued too long and morphed into more action-adventure stories than mythos tales, he has contributed a lot of solid work. I hope to look at his stories more closely in the future. Cover by Les Edwards, New English Library, 1995.



I cannot resist a Derleth anthology with a cover featuring wolves with coral snakes for tongues, thanks to Don Punchatz. This collection includes “The Man Who Collected Poe” by Robert Bloch, a story I had not read before and “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward” by H.P. Lovecraft. I had not realized there was a connection between these tales before but I  hope to provide more detail regarding this in my next post. 



And my shelves always have room for another Bradbury, cover and interior illustrations by the incomparable Joseph Mugnaini.

Full wraparound cover.

http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?226697