Lairs of Cthulhu Lecture by James Holloway Online

Saturday, October 31, 2009


Audiophile Lovecraftians at Yog-Sothoth.com have given us a Halloween treat in this recording of James Holloway's lecture at Treadwell's bookstore in London. "The Lairs of Cthulhu" focuses on the relationship between achaeology and its use by Lovecraft and his descendents in all sorts of Lovecraftian fiction and other media. The podcast is roughly an hour and a half in length, and can be streamed or downloaded for easy listening. This is an intelligent lecture, perfect for getting into the Halloween spirit before other festivities later tonight, or for recovering from said festivities.

-Grim Blogger


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Edgar Allan Poe: Original Balloon Boy?

Thursday, October 29, 2009


With the recent (and rather mindless) media carnival over the balloon hoax family, the Cabinet of Wonders blog published an excellent entry on previous farces far more shocking than the so-called balloon boy. Surprisingly, one of these contains an intimate link to weird fiction and balloons. As Cabinet of Wonders reports, it happened in 1844, when a major newspaper picked up an account written by Edgar Allan Poe that falsely described a successful flyover of the Atlantic in a hot air balloon. This article from Britain's "The Guardian" contains a full account of Poe's hoax, but the crux of the story is this:

On 13 April 1844, the New York Sun published a breathless account of a great step for mankind: "The air, as well as the earth and the ocean, has been subdued by science, and will become a common and convenient highway for mankind . . . The Atlantic has been actually crossed in a balloon . . . and in the inconceivably brief period of 75 hours from shore to shore!"

In a precursor of the reality shows to which the Heenes apparently aspired, the Sun ran excerpts from the faked diary of the Victoria's navigators, which ended just after their "sighting" off the coast of South Carolina. (In reality, the Atlantic would not be crossed by a balloon until 75 years later, when the rather less romantically named British dirigible R-34 landed in New York City after an 108-hour flight.)

The account was cooked up by Edgar Allan Poe, a hoax-lover in an age of hoax-lovers; he perpetrated five others. Poe seems to have rather enjoyed the fuss: "On the morning (Saturday) of its announcement," he later wrote in the Columbia Spy, "the whole square surrounding the Sun building was literally besieged, blocked up from a period soon after sunrise until about two o'clock PM . . . I never witnessed more intense excitement to get possession of a newspaper. . . I tried, in vain, during the whole day, to get possession of a copy."

But the excitement was not allowed to get out of hand. Two days later, the Sun printed a retraction: "BALLOON – The mails from the South last Saturday night not having brought a confirmation of the arrival of the Balloon from England . . . we are inclined to believe that the intelligence is erroneous." And so the first great media balloon hoax was punctured.

If history is doomed to repetitive cycles, then at least we can thank weird fiction writers for helping along this natural process.

-Grim Blogger


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Matt Cardin on Lovecraft's North Shore

Wednesday, October 28, 2009


Weird fiction scholar and writer Matt Cardin has written an interesting piece for the North Shore Art Throb entitled "Lovecraft's Longong: A Look at Lovecraft's North Shore." In this article, Cardin guides us away from the cosmic monstrosities famously inscribed by HPL, and into his emotional inner world of vast appreciation for antiquities--particularly the colonial sort found in the old towns of New England. This isn't a new topic in the field of Lovecraft studies, but it is one that rarely attracts the attention it deserves.

More importantly, Cardin's handling of Lovecraft's perceptions, Joshi's scholarly contributions, and his own impressions of New England's "north shore" meld into an insightful article that both Lovecraft fans and general readers can enjoy. A second part is also forthcoming.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraft Reading in Mongolia

Tuesday, October 27, 2009


Radigan Neuhalfen has organized what may be the first public reading of H.P. Lovecraft's work in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. This is the type of strange, far off place with a strong air of history and horror that Lovecraft himself would've surely appreciated. Though I doubt many of my readers will be able to attend this remarkable event, it should at least be chronicled here as one of the oddest and most far-flung venues ever for a Lovecraftian celebration. The Lovecraft reading will happen on October 28, 2009, at 8:00 PM in the city's Amsterdam Cafe. See the link to Neuhalfen's site for full details.

-Grim Blogger


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The Epitome of Cutethulhu

Monday, October 26, 2009

"The Adventures of Lil' Cthulhu" is a short, humorous cartoon that features appearances by almost all of H.P. Lovecraft's prime monstrosities. It is also the best animated summary I've ever seen of the Cutethulhu phenomena. It seems the transformation of Lovecraftian monsters into comedians is addictive, producing a domino effect of humor. Not only is great Cthulhu changed into a powder puff, but the other outer gods, the Migo, and the King in Yellow experience the same treatment with relative ease.



-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Hadron Collider Sabotaging Itself?

Sunday, October 25, 2009


Though this seems a bit closer to science fiction than purely weird literature, it's still a strange enough real world theory to qualify. Moreover, there's something about the Large Hadron Collider and the "God particle" it's after that echoes the cosmic awe of H.P. Lovecraft's world view. What could be stranger--and perhaps more terrifying--than nature sabotaging our best efforts to pierce her guarded secrets? The theory below also nearly implies a conscious intelligence within nature that might as well be named after a Lovecraftian god.

Incidentally, D.F. Lewis is covering this phenomena in a manner that strikes a definite chord with the weird. A series of entries at his Nemonymous site explores the extraordinary claim that the Cern Zoo anthology published last summer might have post-predicated the sabotage of the LHC. He has gone through each of the tales in his collection--many of them with a taint of traditional and not-so-traditional weirdness--posting conjectures on this freak of science and its connection with the players of each tale. I hope my own unrevealed contribution to the collection did its part to throw sand in the eyes of the universe, before it heaved vengeful mountains back at all of us.


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The Devil Reef Tiki Bar

Saturday, October 24, 2009


The Devil Reef Tiki Bar is a hot new venue for late night boozing that recently opened its doors to Innsmouth clientèle. Besides serving up unspeakable beverages in creepy mugs, the bar is a newer web creation that effectively blurs the line between weird fiction and bizarre reality. The alcohol depot is, of course, named after H.P. Lovecraft's Devil Reef in "The Shadow Over Innsmouth," a loathsome meeting place situated off the coast of Innsmouth. Though fictional, the Devil Reef bar features just enough props and Lovecraftian art--with a thoroughly tropical twist--to seem plausible.

Make that very plausible. If it doesn't already exist, it surely could. Fantasy themed bars have been known to hold their ground and even thrive given the right circumstances. Historically, the pseudo-Lovecraftian H.R. Giger bars developed a small franchise. This Devil Reef idea is one that might really work if it's opened in Massachusetts or Rhode Island. There are probably enough Lovecraft pilgrims (or native admirers) around New England to comprise a customer base.

Then again, the grim economy likely prohibits any would-be investors from gambling on a Lovecraftian business of any kind until the winds of fortune are stronger. Still, it's an intriguing concept, and the Devil Reef Tiki Bar blog is already a booming success in cyberspace as a real time example of Cthulhu Mythos fiction.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraftian Anime Announced: Moe Lovecraft

Friday, October 23, 2009


The announcement of an explicitly Lovecraftian anime, which features Nyarlathotep as a silver haired schoolgirl, is perhaps one of the oddest destinations yet for HPL's international influence. The Moe Lovecraft anime is reportedly slated for production in the near future. The website AnimeNation has the full details:

Publisher Softbank Creative has announced that Flash animation production studio DLE (Eagle Talon) will produce a Flash Haiyoru! Nyaru-Ani anime adaptation of author Manta Aisora’s “high-tension, chaotic comedy” light novel series Haiyore! Nyaruko-san. The novels star high school boy Mahiro Yasaka who encounters the Cthulhu mythos god Nyarlathotep, who inexplicably chooses to appear as a cute silver-haired girl. Aisora’s H.P. Lovecraft & moé inspired light novel series premiered this past April. The third book hits Japanese shelves this month, along with a new drama CD.

The “Cthulhu mythos” created by American writer H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937) has been quite influential in anime. References to the mythology Lovecraft created have appeared in anime including Iczer-One, Armitage the III, Digimon, Dirty Pair, Demonbane, and Soul Eater.

It's difficult to say how this project will turn out. In my own limited observations of Lovecraft's place in Japanese animation, his creations have enjoyed both serious and humorous treatment. However, a series that stars Nyarlathotep as a young girl strongly suggests it will tend toward the "Cutethulhu" model that's nearly as prominent in Japan as it is in the West. English viewers may have to wait some time to see what direction the artists and writers take, since no mention has been made of either subtitles or bringing this project to an English audience yet.

-Grim Blogger


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R.B. Russell's Bloody Baudelaire Reviewed

Wednesday, October 21, 2009


R.B. Russell's Bloody Baudelaire is one of the latest books from the upstart publisher Ex Occidente. This novella is a bold new effort by Russell, whose short stories have haunted journals of supernatural literature for years, amid his work as chief operator of Tartarus Press. His previous short story collection by Ex Occidente, Putting the Pieces in Place, sold out rapidly and was well received by readers of weird fiction.

Unlike other books that seek out catchy titles in a bid for attention, Russell's Bloody Baudelaire lives up to its name in every way imaginable. The 71 page book is a quick, but fulfilling tromp through a heavy atmosphere of decadence and multifaceted tension. A fog of uncertainty clouds the strange happenings of this story just enough to give it an aura of unease, without any openly supernatural horrors coming onto stage. Readers are introduced to the young and ignorant Lucian, who is a guest at the Cliffe House, an almost Gothic construct haunted by the preternatural presence of the alluring Miranda and the Baudelaire-quoting miscreant Gerald.

The friend and girlfriend Lucian arrives with soon slip away from the narrative after a disastrous night of gambling, leaving him and Miranda sealed in the tomb like house with the ambiguous visitations of Gerald hanging over their heads. For a thin volume, Bloody Baudelaire is stuffed with all manner of thoughtful, heady dialogue among slabs of colorful description. Miranda and Lucian discuss art, life, love, and everything in between as they are assaulted by a battery of internal and external anxieties infesting the Cliffe House.

Russell boasts a definite talent for portraying troubled characters in a nominally modern setting. His figures are as talkative as they are reflective and philosophical--recalling an entertaining trait of 19th century literature (particularly French and Russian)--in a refreshing departure from most mainstream novels today. The conversations between Lucian and Miranda blossom into observations about existence. Thoughtful readers will enjoy pondering these from both their own perspective and those of the novella's odd characters. However, far from sounding like one of Plato's dialogues, Russell's story flows with an almost theatrical quality, leaving ultimate conclusions up to readers instead of handing down concrete truths.

The author also taps his considerable experience with weird literature to cast a spell of mysterious unease behind the actors' exchanges. The youthful Lucian is confronted with the disturbing mental and physical manifestations of Miranda's inner torture. Meanwhile, the evasive Gerald plays the part of specter until the potent mystery is uncovered at the novella's close. A painting of Miranda mysteriously changes throughout the story, leaving readers to speculate on the true identity of the artist as well as any Dorian Gray allusions. Russell might have exhibited this chief artifact of brooding strangeness a bit more in the novella, but the descriptions that are there enliven Bloody Baudelaire with an added layer of eeriness that should satisfy lovers of the weird and the decadent alike.

Like many effective stories, Russell's book defies genre labels. A solid case could probably be made for Bloody Baudelaire as a wide legged performer straddling the gap between weird fiction, neo-decadent literature, and modern mysteries. But why bother? The novella is what it is: a jittery, intelligent conundrum that leaves the shadowy questions raised by Cliffe House and its inhabitants with readers well after the book has been placed back on the shelf. On a strictly literal level, one could plow through its pages in the space of a couple hours or less. Fortunately, the weird and the decadent have never been one dimensional, and Bloody Baudelaire is proof that Russell understands this. The book should be read slowly for maximum effect, until the emotion-charged shadows of Cliffe House beam out through the ink and into one's mind, where the private hells of Miranda and Lucian can become strange neighbors to one's own.

-Grim Blogger


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2009 H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival Video Redux

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival has been finished for a couple weeks, but a trickle of captured images and video from the event continues to taint the internet with its eldritch stain. The first video is a concise news summary about the event, courtesy of the Things from Another World Blog. Their correspondent shows us around the Hollywood Theater, decked out in full Lovecraftian glory, in a snippet that sufficiently illustrates what the festival's layout looks like.

A longer clip by "Rev. Danno" records some of the festival's opening ceremonies, including speeches by Andrew Migliore and Robert M. Price. It later exhibits brief snapshots of the gatherings and entertainment centered around specific movies there. Viewers also see more of the theater in its weird garb, and closeups of some eye-catching art.





Finally, Things From Another World catalogs a full part of the Cthulhu Con: the Dark Horse panel on the history of horror comics. This is an engaging and authentic example of the sorts of presentations that go on every year in Portland. The first segment is below. The full panel is in four parts, with the rest available from the embedded video after it finishes, or from TFAW's Youtube account.



-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraft Unbound Reading in New York

Sunday, October 18, 2009


Hellnotes.com tips us off to an event in New York scheduled for late October that will feature several authors from the new Lovecraft Unbound anthology reading their works. It coincides with the grand opening of the Soho Gallery for Digital Art, which should make the evening doubly memorable. Hellnotes has the full details about the event:

It’s all happening on Tuesday, October 27th. Doors open at 6:30 — event begins at 7. Admission is by a $5 donation. The SoHo Gallery for Digital Art, 138 Sullivan Street, New York.


This reading features Michael Cisco, Elizabeth Bear, Caitlin R. Kiernan, and Richard Bowes. It's hosted by the the New York Review of Science Fiction Readings. Check it out if you're in the area, as it should be quite a nice run up to Halloween with four authors reading their work, all from a major anthology celebrating H.P. Lovecraft's influence.

-Grim Blogger


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Poe Gets a Proper Burial

Saturday, October 17, 2009


2009 has been the time for respectful commemorations of Edgar Allan Poe's dreary life. What better way to see the year out, then, by commemorating his death? By a quirk of time (or fate), this year is not just the bicentennial of Poe's birth, but the 160th anniversary of his death on October 7, 1849. Earlier this month, Poe historians and admirers gave him a second funeral, one much more appropriate than the nearly unnoticed affair attended by a handful of friends and relatives after he died.

Poe's second funeral featured some interesting hosts--including the actor John Astin from The Addams Family--and was well attended by thousands who sought to catch a sight of the funeral procession, or just mill about in the graveyard. But the star of the event had to be a replica of the weird writer himself, laying as pale and inert as he did over a century ago, with a black-ribboned wreath perched upon his casket (or was it a raven)?

The sorry state of Poe's original burial and the burst of attention he's gotten lately is well deserved, and far better than what many other weird fiction writers have received. Poe has gotten his due in large part because he is the one American writer of strangeness who "made it big"--or at least bigger than the others--becoming a posthumous imprint in the historical consciousness of early US literature. Still, one wonders how long it will be before a similarly devoted group attempts to stage the same sort of ritual for H.P. Lovecraft and other macabre wordsmiths?

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: A Terribly Quiescent Exorcism

Thursday, October 15, 2009


There are times when the exorcism and even the demonic possession it's allegedly targeting seem to be terribly quiescent. The screaming, the gibbering in tongues, the holy water, and the contortions are all but absent from this modern day exorcism at Georgia's Berry College. One wonders if the marked decline in demonology the past couple centuries is leading certain religious groups down the path to a new type of witch hunt...


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King in Yellow in Japanese Fantasy?

Wednesday, October 14, 2009


A number of vague online mentions are claiming that Japanese writer Miyuki Miyabe's new book The Book of Heroes contains a villain from classic weird fiction. Namely, Robert W. Chambers' creation, the King in Yellow, is said to haunt the pages of this fantasy novel. How this weird icon is put to use in Miyabe's story is anyone's guess, but this description from the publisher's site suggests it may be a path not regularly seen in traditional weird fiction:

When her brother Hiroki disappears after a violent altercation with school bullies, the young Yuriko finds a magical book in his room. The book leads her to another world where she learns that Hiroki has been possessed by a spirit from the Book of Heroes. She visits the magical Nameless Land, where she is told how to save her brother, and is sent back to Earth with a young monk named Sora and the magical book...


When this book makes its scheduled appearance next year, it should be of definite interest to chroniclers of weird fiction. The use of a relatively obscure weird figure in fantasy--from a foreign source, no less--is an unexpected development. It's also worth noting since it could support the idea that Carcosa's King is enjoying wider popularity, spreading his maddening taint to new nests of pages.

-Grim Blogger


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Eldritch Formal Wear: Lovecraftian Ties

Monday, October 12, 2009


As if anyone needed a reminder of the freakish offspring that can result from H.P. Lovecraft's online popularity and the easy establishment of e-businesses these days, the website Zazzle.com is housing a nest of Cthulhu ties. The designs range from the unsettling to the "Cutethulhuvian," and run from amateurish looking cutouts to polished formal wear. The vast differences in talent, cost, and style isn't surprising given what Zazzle is: a market for anyone capable of uploading a few pictures and typing some text, where exorbitant prices are standard, a knockoff of the more well known Cafepress.

Don't get me wrong. Online markets following this model have their purpose--where else would one be able to deck oneself in Lovecraftiana of all types with a few clicks and a credit card? Whatever one thinks about it, the Zazzles of the online world are also fueling the proliferation of Lovecraft the icon--possibly even faster than the deeper identity he once held as reclusive author.

-Grim Blogger


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Simon Strantzas' Cold to the Touch Reviewed

Sunday, October 11, 2009


Simon Strantzas is a still looked on as a relative newcomer to the world of weird literature, but he has built high expectations for his stories. Fortunately, his latest collection, Cold to the Touch from Tartarus Press, goes beyond the rumors and the previous standards set, the comparisons and the anticipations, to arrive at an honest and promising representation of his work. In all fairness, Strantzas' Cold to the Touch must be considered his true debut collection, after his first book, Beneath the Surface, escaped the attention of many readers due to the unfortunate demise of Humdrumming Press. Perhaps this is for the better, as Cold to the Touch presents thirteen very polished pieces free from the stylistic groping and unbalanced themes that sometimes taint early collections by weird writers.

In this collection, Strantzas guides us through a world of surreal ugliness, where hope glimmers just long enough to be blotted out by a greater blackness, and the only escape from that darkness--when it appears at all--comes in salvations that are eerily vague, questionable, and definitely strange. In these tales, readers will hear the echoes of Robert Aickman, Thomas Ligotti, and H.P. Lovecraft, among others, but only from inside the steady voice of a different creature named Simon Strantzas. Still, this is not a writer clawing through the shadows of his predecessors and contemporaries, but one who has emerged as his own literary entity.

Cold to the Touch opens with "Under the Overpass," a strong tale about childhood cruelty and the lifelong footprints of psychological torment left in the wake of one senseless act. Without giving too much away, our viewpoint character experiences a coming of age that is distorted and feeble, never completely blossoming in every sense one knows when thinking about coming of ages. When he revisits the site of his childhood trauma, he finds paranoid reminders of the past, and a cocktail of emotions possibly more deadly unchained than suppressed. The story showcases Strantzas' talents for placing fairly realistic characters in strange settings. Readers come to know their pain and their feelings in an intimate way as they pass through less tangible, irrational shadows: a stylistic feature distinguishing this author from others like Ligotti and Lovecraft.

Later stories in the book such as "The Uninvited Guest," "The Other Village," "A Chorus of Yesterdays," and "Poor Stephanie" place similarly well portrayed characters in incredibly mysterious situations. Each contains an Aickmanesque sense of strangeness, but also border very close to the almost too confounding happenings represented by Aickman. However, Strantzas' talent for weaving this deep mystery with different sized doses of the supernatural is seen in these tales. The grotesque and unnaturally symbolic arrival of a spectral stranger in "The Uninvited Guest" contrasts with the shocking appearance of an...(ahem) "over protective" uncle in "Poor Stephanie," where a supernatural component more horrible than the cold reality served up in this story seems unlikely.

A different current runs through still other stories. Here, the sympathetic, pitiful, and wretched characters of Strantzas' worlds wander into bleak, modern settings reminiscent of Thomas Ligotti. "A Seen on Barren Ground" is a blatant nod to Ligotti's influence. References to puppets, a decrepit festival, and even gas station carnivals are alive in this story, where a tortured woman who has recently miscarried a child seeks relief from an old woman with a particularly odd ability. A character named "Tom" even shows up, though it does not appear to be a fictionalized representation of Ligotti himself (if so, it would be the first I am aware of). The story reflects familiar Ligottian themes, flickering shards of horrors from Ligotti stories like "Mrs. Rinaldi's Angel," "The Bungalow House," and "Gas Station Carnivals." It has a predictably bleak, but excellent ending that wraps up a homage by Strantzas to his literary predecessor, while proving he can comfortably work with the imagery and ideas of others on his own terms.

The stories "Writing on the Wall, "Here's to the Good Life," and "Fading Light" also recall Ligotti in more subtle ways. These are odd urban tales that take readers deep into the seedy urban vistas usually in the backdrop of Ligotti's work. Dark discoveries, awkward relationships, and terrible ailments cause the characters of these pieces to rush through haunted foreign alleys and appalling restrooms. Instead of the corporate horror found in these places in the words of Ligotti and Mark Samuels, Strantzas' characters find horrors of the self nearly equivalent to the visible frights lurking in the greasy bars and shoddy apartments. This is quite an accomplishment when one learns what creeps out of one's body--or into it--in "Here's to the Good Life" and "Fading Light."

Further stories in Cold to the Touch more effectively evade traceable literary influences and provide longer samples of Strantzas' skills. "The Sweetest Song" slams the prominent sense of mystery and alienation in aforementioned stories together to produce a stirring work of sad, bizarre, and mildly erotic horror. An unusual dance through the ballrooms of death and marital love animates every character, as the near hermit Cecil attempts to unravel the painful death of his wife, the unwelcome marriage of his nephew, and a myriad of strange events involving a flock of birds. Death, love, and ghostly partnership sketch a different story in "Like Falling Snow," where Strantzas introduces a dying woman cataloging her last days in a hospice. This story contains the only thing close to a happy ending in this collection, though the seemingly apparent migration of consciousness segregates this happiness from its normal meaning.

Strantzas is a Canadian writer, and two stories see the convincing usage of his nation's unique terrain and climate to stir chills. "Cold to the Touch," the title story of this collection, follows a science expedition to Canada's northern wastelands. Unlike H.P. Lovecraft's own strange story in the arctic, "At the Mountains of Madness," Strantzas' offering focuses on spiritual questions and frigid inner isolation rather than exterior scientific realism. Similarly, the punishing, otherworldly winds that bring havoc at a forest cabin in "Pinholes in Black Muslin" are one more problem to deal with for a viewpoint character already falling prey to his inner demons and soul killing weaknesses. Strantzas' Nature is a fearful catalyst that enlivens emotional furies rather than exorcises them, a nice opposition to the more elegant portrayals of nature by earlier weird writers like Algernon Blackwood and Arthur Machen.

Cold to the Touch is a formidable gift to the field of weird literature so full of diverse strangeness and mystery that it demands readers return to its pages in the days, weeks, months, and years after one has turned all its pages for the first time. In his Afterword, Simon Strantzas indicates a desire to coax readers into a dark nightmare they may never fully escape from. If this is the objective, it has been met in this collection that offers a fistful of bitter pills coated with different flavors of artistic weirdness. It also seems determined to mark the permanent addition of an important name to the newest circle of weird literature, a dangerously energetic writer who delights in filling other minds with his icy emotions and curious terrors.

-Grim Blogger


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The Kind of Face You Hate: Mark Samuels, Religion, and Weird Horror

Friday, October 9, 2009


Bill R. at "The Kind of Face You Hate" has posted an excellent piece on weird writer Mark Samuels, his stylistic portrayal of horror within the weird genre itself, and the intersection of religious philosophy with Samuels' weird fiction. His entry concerns itself with two tales: "The Grandmaster's Final Game" and "The White Hands." Bill does a fair critique of two important themes in Samuels' stories, and thus adds to the undersized body of intelligent discussion on one of weird fiction's most intriguing new writers.

On a personal note, I hope Bill's analysis will serve as a bit of a sales pitch for those who aren't familiar with Mark Samuels--especially while the paperback version of his collection The White Hands and Other Weird Tales can be cheaply acquired. Right now, Samuels occupies a somewhat precarious position as far as the availability of his work goes. While he has continued to publish new tales and a novella the past several years, these have been small press ventures, and already almost out of print. If copies of The White Hands should fly off the internet shelves (with the exception of a few costly copies), it may be years before some of Samuels' best stories can be accessed with ease again. Let this serve as a warning to the curious: if you like what you hear about Samuels, pick up a paperback of this collection now rather than later.

-Grim Blogger


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The Filming of "The Whisperer in Darkness"

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society has been busy shooting a new film version of Lovecraft's "The Whisperer in Darkness" at Mount Holyoke College. This video gives a brief behind-the-scenes glimpse at the film crew and actors involved. It appears the HPLHS is taking the project as seriously as they did their cinematic adaptation of "The Call of Cthulhu." So far, their selection of settings and period appropriate props for the movie looks excellent.



-Grim Blogger


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New Cthulhuvian Wallpapers

Wednesday, October 7, 2009




As the interest grows in H.P. Lovecraft's creations, so also do the badges of Lovecraftian pride that can be placed on your desktop. Here are a few of the latest wallpapers scrounged from the internet, mostly featuring Cthulhu. There's no time like now to decorate your computer with Lovecraftian symbols as we trundle through a season very favorable to Lovecraft and the weird.

-Grim Blogger


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New Cthulhuvian Wallpapers

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Weird News: The Psychological Underpinnings of the Paranormal

Monday, October 5, 2009


Okay, so this article seems more like anti-weird news than anything else. This MSNBC piece examines the psychological underpinnings of strange happenings through a look at the film "Paranormal Activity." The new movie seeks to investigate how the haunted come to believe their lives are disrupted by supernatural powers and presences. In some ways, it seems that the scientific explanation (and even over-explanation) for the bizarre ruins part of the thrill. But then, one would do well to remember H.P. Lovecraft's personal opinion: a big part of the reason he was so taken with the supernatural was precisely because he didn't believe in it.


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The Guardian on Arthur Machen

Sunday, October 4, 2009


Arthur Machen recently received some mainstream attention--quite an unexpected surprise for a long deceased master of weird fiction--from Britain's online and print news source "The Guardian." The paper's Damien Walter gives a rundown of Machen's critical works and influence on weird fiction. Among other things, the article references Tartarus Press, H.P. Lovecraft, and William Hope Hodgson. This isn't anything approaching an exhaustive expose on weird literature, but it ought to be a burst of welcome publicity for all of the individuals and enterprises involved.

Moreover, it's easily the most notable Arthur Machen press of the year--barring some huge revelation or magnificent study breaking in 2009's final months. Unfortunately, it seems that British titans of the strange like Machen, Blackwood, and others are not normally well publicized even in their native countries--though the same tragic analogy can be drawn in the US with the lack of attention H.P. Lovecraft and Edgar Allan Poe receive.

For classic weird scribes like Arthur Machen, almost any press is good press, but it's as though Fortune smiles down on his literary legacy when a major outlet like "The Guardian" is kind enough to spotlight weird literature in this way. Now, we just need more of it.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraft the Fascist?

Saturday, October 3, 2009


In a biting follow up to the discussion on Lovecraft as conservative from "Secular Right," Volgi of "The Gormogons" lashes out, convinced that the political Lovecraft was little more than a lunatic fascist. His heavy opinion is thought provoking, even if a sizable group of Lovecraft admirers will find the tone and some of the content disagreeable. Overall, however one might feel about the historical and political opinions taken by the author, "The Gormogons" piece provides a nice counterpoint to the sympathetic stance taken by most bloggers on "Secular Right."

For the record, I find Volgi's entry relies too much on the modern socio-political lens, where democracy and racial diversity have become sacrosanct. One would be hard pressed to find a Lovecraft reader today who isn't bothered by the draconian and prejudiced leanings of HPL on civilization, race, and government. On the other hand, the heightened passion some commentators continue to direct at Lovecraft on these matters seems more than a little overblown.

Do I believe Lovecraft to have been terribly mistaken in his opinions? Sure. Does that mean those distasteful opinions can be dismissed as psychologically "crazy," as Volgi's post asserts? No, especially in the context of the historical period.

It's also baffling to have the article's author state reluctance to "let him off" (Lovecraft) as S.T. Joshi allegedly has. What does this mean? It seems too intent on putting a dead man on perpetual trial, or permanently searing a scarlet "R" for Racist and "F" for Fascist over all works written by or about Lovecraft.

While "H.P. Lovecraft, Fascist" contains some disagreeable points (at least for this blogger), it's a well crafted, if emotional, case portraying the darker side of Lovecraft's politics. That makes it both an interesting read and an effective contribution to the broadening blogosphere of weird fiction.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraft the Fascist?

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2009 H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival Begins

Friday, October 2, 2009


Death wraps its shadow around the leaves, winds hurtle down from the north, and the membrane between worlds grows weaker. Fall has arrived, and with it familiar rituals strange and fantastic. As if it needs any further introduction, this year's H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con has officially begun in Portland, Oregon. The premier Lovecraftian event in this hemisphere continues its nearly decade spanning trek of excellence in serving as a venue for the best in weird art, especially cinema and Lovecraftiana. As with previous festivals, it's a weekend long event from October 2-October 4 at Portland's Hollywood Theater.

Since its inception, the HPL Film Festival has maintained its old locale. Their philosophy seems to be "don't fix it, if it isn't broken," and it works. Portland's innocuous looking theater is again the staging grounds for the most recent crop of Lovecraftian films hatching from the minds and cameras of producers. And their format is following the old, but effective trajectory as well: a block of major motion picture length "features" alongside a larger lineup of short movies.

With the usual deficit of Lovecraftian or weird fiction based blockbusters, the festival's main draw is its inspired block of short films. Many of these have been building interest this past year--shorts like "Dirt Dauber" have been featured here on "Grim Reviews." These shorts, like potent shots of strong liquor, also tend to be the most aesthetically developed, while others are arguably the most Lovecraftian compared to the feature films. The aficionado of weird cinema will find styles ranging from animations to black and white live action movies that all cloak an atmosphere-heavy pincer attack on the senses.

Needless to say, the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival is the place to go this weekend be for travelers who have made their arrangements already, or those who are fortunate enough to be locals. For the rest of us, there's always the vibrant photos, excited blog entries, and slow trickle of publicized Lovecraftian motion pictures to look forward to.

-Grim Blogger


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2009 H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival Begins

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