H.P. Lovecraft Performs "The White Ship"

Monday, November 30, 2009

Below is rare footage of the H.P. Lovecraft psychedelic band performing one of their overtly Lovecraftian songs, "The White Ship." The obscure band holding Lovecraft's name hit their prime in the late 1960s, and produced a limited number of albums. Only a few of their songs directly referenced their namesake's literary themes, but they remain notable for being the first major representation of H.P. Lovecraft based music. Somehow, these songs sound doubly haunting today.

Think of them as a ghostly chorus from an earlier epoch, infused with one of Lovecraft's own early spectral imprints.



-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Peruvian Gang Sold Fat as Protective Charms

Sunday, November 29, 2009


Cannibalizing different parts of the human body for occult purposes has long been a secret rite of certain obscure sects. It is a mostly lost history, but not a belief wholly condemned to the pages of historical journals yet. As this article shows, some groups and individuals who still hold parcels of the Old Knowledge continue to generate a criminal demand for this ghoulish product, and plenty of underground suppliers as well.


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The Lovecraftian Horror Sketches of Israel Galindo

Saturday, November 28, 2009


Israel Galindo's art is composed of black and white sketches depicting monsters shambling through isolated structures. And all of these eldritch places and unspeakable things are Lovecraft inspired. Galindo's vision contains a special touch. From a clear literary basis, the exotic shapes of Lovecraft's tentacled entities are pulled into unique new hells from the artist's imagination.

Boschian demons and zombie-like creatures populate other vistas Galindo puts to paper. These macabre gatherings of monsters are effectively conveyed through the strict adherence to black and white coloring. Indeed, one might imagine these particular creatures could be diluted by "realistic" coloring, so it's for the best that Galindo maintains a shadowy edge in his work through the yin and yang of light and dark. In more symbolic pieces, he breathes sustenance into his beings with a wide array of details injected into spinning collages, again with very obvious Lovecraftian inspiration.

Galindo's full gallery is available through his blog Thoth Ascending. Browse around in the archives for a slew of strange aesthetic delights. It also pays to check back often, as Galindo works seemingly quickly, fattening his blog with several new horrors on an almost weekly basis.

-Grim Blogger


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Thanksgiving 2009: Too Much Turkey

Thursday, November 26, 2009


Let this post be a mix of holiday well wishing and a cautionary tale about the dangers of too much turkey. Happy Thanksgiving!

-Grim Blogger


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Isebrand on Weird Fiction and Machen

Wednesday, November 25, 2009


The liberal politics and culture blog Isebrand.com offers a perspective on weird fiction's foundation and influence on contemporary media that differs from the one usually echoed by commentators within the genre. In fact, the author prefers lurching away from the supernatural characterizing much of weird fiction. It may come as no surprise, then, that he focuses upon Machen's war stories like "The Bowmen" and vanguard artists of the new weird such as China Mieville as favorable representatives of the weird. The post also does a fine job of narrowing the definition of weird literature for unfamiliar readers--clearly distinguishing it from the fantasies of J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. Though one wonders how the author would feel about the place Lord Dunsany often occupies, blurring the realm of fantasy and the weird?

-Grim Blogger


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Away in a Madhouse Music Video

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

DrMadMan of Youtube brings us a comical Lovecraftian animated short set to the tune of "Away in a Mad House." The music is a parody carol from the "Scary Solstice" series of Lovecraft themed holiday music produced by the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society. The video in question appears to have been made using Garry's Mod: a popular 3-D modeler for Half Life 2. With relatively simple techniques and a dash of inspiration, it looks as though almost anyone can pump out effective Lovecraftian films in today's high tech age.



-Grim Blogger


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Noxious Fragments Reviewed

Sunday, November 22, 2009


Noxious Fragments is a collection of eleven tales selected from the first seven issues of Fantastic Horror. For years, Fantastic Horror has been a ghostly presence on the web as a longstanding e-publication, dishing out regular servings of frightful tales. A large proportion of these stories have mirrored classic weird fiction in style and content (especially Lovecraftian pieces), so it is little surprise that Noxious Fragments contains tales like this. As is often the case with small press anthologies, this one presents a range of diverse stories differing in quality, though about half of the eleven offerings could qualify as Cthulhu Mythos pieces.

Stefano Magliocco's "The Lure of the Kraken" opens the collection, and clearly represents Lovecraftian atmosphere. It is, in effect, a re-telling of Lovecraft's "The Call of Cthulhu," substituting Kraken mythology for the Old Ones. It is solidly written, but struggles to escape the gravity of HPL's literary style and plot trajectory. This piece would have been better served by using more of the interesting Norse and Kraken folklore that occasionally crawls through its pages. "Song of Shub-Niggurath" by Richard Eline, as its title implies, is another Mythos story. A hardened investigator and Vietnam veteran encounters the shadow of Shub-Niggurath by prying into the workings of a local cult with his reporter girlfriend. Here, the Cthulhu Mythos elements are married to a slurry of Vietnam War flashbacks, alongside unusual regional horrors from York County, Pennsylvania--spikes of originality that impale the reader's mind to these pages.

J.J. Burke's "The Coyman Manuscript" is another injection of Lovecraftiana. A man attempts to unravel clues left by the disappearance of his friend Robert Coyman. The tale shows off Burke's talent for constructing a well researched story told through real time action, letters, and manuscripts. Fairly visceral imagery also seeps through as the narrator Emiel encounters the horrors of the otherworldly "custodian." Unfortunately, the narrative becomes slightly disjointed by the end--perhaps a product of wavering between several different literary mediums--yet it still offers enough creaturely terror to appeal to H.P. Lovecraft fans.

Jerome Banks Brown's "The Horror in the Traquair Maze" similarly relies upon careful research, and could be read as a sequel to Lovecraft's "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward." In it, a typically Lovecraftian Professor lurches to his doom via a trail of clues that lead him to a mysterious maze in Scotland. Though this sort of Mythos story has been seen before, Brown nevertheless constructs an engaging story that utilizes historical tidbits in the manner Lovecraft himself was hailed for. Slightly more subtle Lovecraftian references appear again in "A Terrible Binding" by D. Alexander Ward. This story sees a young boy accompanied by a mysterious stranger, who shows up at his house, set off to combat a monster in the woods--the source of their troubling nightmares. Lovecraft's/Derleth's Elder Sign shows up, though the protection it yields is questionable by the dark conclusion of this story that is nearly equal parts horror and adventure.

Amid these deeply Lovecraftian stories are others that may tip their hats to Lovecraft from time to time, but move into stranger territory. "Burkhardt's Masterpiece" from Jack Faber/John Wright features an alien influence that warps a wealthy intellectual's treatise on modernity. Evil book tales of various kinds hold a special charm, and this one is no exception, as the masterpiece and the master fall prey to the unexplained madness poisoning each word. John Di Rosa's "Beat the Devil" brings another questionable influence into the limelight--is it demons or her own head taunting and tormenting his character? Di Rosa answers with a rather predictable ending, but also a gallery of unsettling imagery along the way.

A slightly less compelling tale is Matt Shaner's "A Pale Horse," which places a new doctor in a nodding southern town haunted by a witch. Shaner establishes a convincing backdrop and even an interesting history of bondage involving the witch and the townspeople, but the story feels rushed to a hollow conclusion. Fortunately, the anthology houses another curious southern tale in the guise of Ronald E. Wright's "Rough Justice." This story conjures up its own myth in the form of a monster kept in an old smokehouse to torment prison inmates. The lawyer protagonist unravels the mystery behind this entity and its connection to his respected grandfather's legacy at a gnawing personal price. Without giving away too much, he finds a horror that is both gut-wrenching and in the finest tradition of what might be called weird curse fiction.

Though quite a few of the tales mentioned above are adept, the clear standouts of Noxious Fragments are "The Levee" by Ben Thomas and Anita Dalton's "Gray." Thomas' contribution, like some of the best strange tales, creates its own logic and answers only to itself. Set in a city alternately wracked by unnaturally long periods of rain and drought, a Twilight Zone like twist becomes apparent through the mysterious presence of a meek old man and a sanity demolishing vision in the sky. "Gray," on the other hand, has little supernatural or traditionally weird about it at all. This makes its emotionally charged presence all the more surprising. Dalton shows us an awkward marital relationship with a husband who decides to take the ultimate plunge into inhumanity with an agonizing series of cosmetic procedures. The husband's suffering and its impact on his wife is gripping, and relies only on mildly fantastic technological advancements to achieve its horror. Personally, I usually shun realism in favor of the surreal and pure weird, but not this time. There is something almost damnably indefinable, but nevertheless excellent about Dalton's tale, a quality prompting an immediate desire for a fiction collection from her, if her other works are even half as good as this one.

Noxious Fragments might appear a bit rumpled in the final analysis, but it nevertheless contains skilled the stories that will appeal to several demographics: the general horror reader, the weird fiction aficionado, and the Lovecraft purist. This alone makes it worth the price of admission. Best of all, it is free to read if one cannot be bothered with a physical copy, as is every issue of its benefactor Fantastic Horror. It should also be remembered that these stories were drawn from a market often pigeon-holed into the category of "for the love" (i.e. little to no payment for writers besides exposure). Virtually every tale in this anthology is a sturdy step beyond what one would expect from this sort of market. In fact, Fantastic Horror may well be playing the role low-to-no-paying small press magazines once did in the 1980s. From those bygone outlets, names like Thomas Ligotti, W.H. Pugmire, D.F. Lewis, and a host of others are still with us. Who can say what--or who--may emerge from Fantastic Horror's continuing online presence, and this new foray into print publication?

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Distant Poe Relative Haunting Cathedral?

Saturday, November 21, 2009


In the lives and deaths of great weird writers, it appears even distant relations can take on a strange existence years after their earthly one has come to a close. One wonders how much certain people want a haunting by a Poe relative to be true for sheer folksiness. The mystique of Edgar Allan Poe adds a touch of bizarre legitimacy to anything creepy connected with the long dead author. It also makes this haunting more interesting than it might otherwise be, and perhaps more "authentic" as well.


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Weird Fiction Holiday Reading at Toronto's The Central

Friday, November 20, 2009


Two upstart weird writers of note, Simon Strantzas and Richard Gavin, will be conducing holiday readings of their respective works at Toronto's The Central next month. The evening should provide an extra chill as the cold grip of winter sets in amid the eerie blanket that ordinarily clings to holidays set in the dead of winter. Full details are available here:


A Ghost Story for Christmas
Spectral Hauntings for the Holidays


Date: Sunday, December 27, 2009
Time: 7:00pm - 10:00pm
Location: The Central, 603 Markham Street, Toronto.

A night of frightful original fiction read by the city's finest authors, including:

Richard Gavin, author of "The Darkly Splendid Realm"
Ian Rogers, author of "Temporary Monsters"
Simon Strantzas, author of "Cold to the Touch"
"Apparitions" editor Michael Kelly, and contributor Michael Colangelo

Doors open at 7:30PM, readings begin at 8:00PM.


-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft's Enlistment Card

Wednesday, November 18, 2009


Thanks to Chris Perridas of the H.P. Lovecraft and His Legacy blog, we now have a scan of Lovecraft's enlistment papers. The registration card is a harrowing ghost of the Great War era, and perhaps an appropriate specter, seeing as how Armistice Day passed by last week. Lovecraft never quite saw action once America entered the war, but he came very close to joining the military after years of fierce polemics in defense of Great Britain and the Entente. The document gives us a thin, but clear snapshot of Lovecraft's life: his Angel Street address in Providence, and his status as a self-employed writer.

-Grim Blogger


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Miskatonic Valley's Truly Authentic Cthulhu (and Other Horrors)

Tuesday, November 17, 2009


Joe Broers of Miskatonic Valley Fine Arts makes a Cthulhu the way idols were really meant to be made--at least according to a drawing by H.P. Lovecraft. Broers is perhaps the only artist to attempt a statue of this sort, which brings Lovecraft's actual vision to life as much as possible. This resin monstrosity adds the insectoid flair that Lovecraft seemingly intended: six eyes rather than the standard two that usually turns up in today's Mythos depictions.


To date, Miskatonic Valley also has a sinister looking statue of Shub-Niggurath available. "Fictitious documentation" accompanies the two horrors. These are curious letters and news clippings that "vouch" for their faux authenticity. The documents add a dimension of blurred reality between art and life to the enterprise. As far as quality statues go, they're fairly cheap too, at under $150 for either chiseled lump of cosmic insanity.

It's easy to imagine Broers' gleaming sentinels guarding one's library of weird fiction, or at least making one hell of a paperweight. Keep an eye on him. This is an artist who may go far, with his outre visions chained to a business model that emphasizes presentation as well as product.

-Grim Blogger


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Virtual Innsmouth

Sunday, November 15, 2009

This video from Youtube depicts another Lovecraftian place modeled into (virtual) reality with computer technology. The brief tour through the dilapidated port of Innsmouth is quite effective, as far as CGI creations go. It was reportedly created using a graphics' engine from Second Life, a popular online game. A few aspects of the town look a bit too modern to be a representation of Lovecraft's diseased harbor in its early 20th century prime. However, it could just as easily be an Innsmouth that has sunk further into its decline across the decades.



-Grim Blogger


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The Character of Robert W. Chambers

Saturday, November 14, 2009


An exceptionally revealing quote on Robert W. Chambers from a contemporary publication turned up online recently. Here, one can easily peer into the Renaissance Man lifestyle of this weird writer, who is largely overlooked, with the exception of his King in Yellow cycle. Chambers' wide array of interests gives insight into how he crafted his small, but notable body of weird stories. It also shows how he was able to churn out the less forgivable romance stories for money, effectively ending his literary career.

"What impresses one most about Mr. Robert W. Chambers is his amazing versatility. In addition to being a popular novelist, he is an expert on rare rugs; an artist, and so well qualified a judge of fine art that he can talk intelligently to the curators and directors of museums about the old masters on exhibition there; equipped with an understanding of Chinese and Japanese antiques so that he can detect forgeries in that art; an authority on mediaeval armor; a lover of outdoors, of horses, dogs, and an ardent collector of butterflies; and, in addition, a thorough man of the world, who knows Paris and Petrograd, and many of the out-of-the-way corners of the earth. These are the qualities that come to mind readily, but the list is far from complete. The longer one knows Mr. Chambers, the more varied the knowledge he finds in him."

- The Editorial Staff of the Mentor Association. (The Mentor, Vol 6, No. 14. Copyright 1918.


-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Scientists Speculate on Zombie Attack

Thursday, November 12, 2009


Zombies usually pass outside the genre of weird literature. Diseased, flesh-eating corpses aren't terribly weird on the surface of things, and they are often difficult to use in the subtle, artistic manner that, in my opinion, raises the weird an artistic grade above the rest of today's horror. There are notable exceptions, of course, like Thomas Ligotti's "Drink to Me Only With Labyrinthine Eyes," which dizzies us with a zombie-like revenant manipulated (in more ways than one) by hypnosis.

Still, it's impossible to resist posting the article below. Any reasonable person would agree our world would become very weird, very fast should science or nature release an infectious plague on humanity that mimics the zombie traits of note in recent films. The news is also a fascinating instance of fictional horror so thoroughly creeping into the recesses of our "what if" mechanism that it demands serious scientific inquiry.


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Thomas Ligotti's Songs of a Dead Dreamer Up for Pre-Order

Wednesday, November 11, 2009


For those who haven't yet heard, Subterranean Press has opened up the gates for pre-orders of their new edition of Thomas Ligotti's Songs of a Dead Dreamer. They're offering a limited number of leather bound deluxe editions in addition to the standard hardcovers. The books will actually finish production and ship out next spring. This short story collection features the original tales of the book that launched Ligotti's weird fiction career, with revised versions that should add a new touch to old gems for seasoned Ligottians.

The nightmarish art of Aeron Alfrey adorns the cover. Alfrey's collage of terror is a welcome contribution; it almost brings full circle the strange cycle of illustrations that have trailed Ligotti's career. An older edition of Songs of a Dead Dreamer was printed by Harry O. Morris, and included frightening black-and-white artwork that holds a slight similarity to Alfrey's own. The cover art for this edition was reportedly inspired by Ligotti's tale "Vastarien."

The best part is that this is the first in a line of Ligotti reprints Subterranean Press has planned for his collections. Grimscribe, Noctuary, and possibly others will appear in subsequent years from the quality small press. Pre-order now for a Ligotti collectible that hasn't looked this fantastic since Dutro Press' books.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraftian Beer Wisdom

Monday, November 9, 2009


Some vicious (and thirsty) little gremlin has decided to tie H.P. Lovecraft to liquor as of late. A rebuke from beyond the grave of his lifelong sobriety? Someone trying to hint that Lovecraft has been reincarnated as a bar tender (a different variant of Mark Samuels' story "A Gentleman From Mexico," where HPL resurrects as a Mexican writer)? Maybe. In any case, John Schuff of Brewcast.net has developed four principles for determining excellent barleywines from Lovecraft's fiction. These are:

1. Some Things are Best Left Sleeping.

2. Cold Can Take the Life Out of Things.

3. Strength Without Finesse is a Monster.

4. Strength With Finesse is Even Scarier Than a Monster.


For a fuller explanation of what each of these entails, check out the article link above. Perhaps the most eldritch wisdom of Lovecraft's lore is that applied to the more mundane corners of existence.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraftian Beer Wisdom

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Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown Preview

Sunday, November 8, 2009

An extensive ten minute preview of the full Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown documentary has been uploaded to Youtube by its producer Wyrdstuff. The film was recently released on DVD for public consumption after receiving favorable attention at various film festivals. Check out this preview now, as Wyrdstuff's Youtube accounts says it will only be for a limited time.



-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraftian Beverage Menu

Saturday, November 7, 2009


Aaron Vanek has re-posted the contents of a Lovecraftian cocktail menu offered at last month's H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival. While the twelve drinks listed aren't quite full recipes, they contain enough information on ingredients for adventurous Lovecraftians to re-create them. Among these frightful brews, you'll find gut bombs like "Sweet Oblivion, "The Twisted Tentacle," "Starry Wisdom Blood Orange Cosmo," and even "Grand Ligotti." The creation of Lovecraftian beverages is actually ironic, given H.P. Lovecraft's famously puritanical attitude toward alcohol. But Lovecraft fans have never really let the Old Gent's long buried attitudes ruin the fun that might be had with his ideas and monstrosities.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Ghost Hunting on the Rise in Britain

Friday, November 6, 2009


The UK's Guardian newspaper continues to do a fine job of covering weird phenomena. This article from All Hallow's Eve covers the rise of ghost hunting as a niche past time in the British Isles. Somehow, though, it seems the taboo of ghost hunting may be diminishing in both Britain and the United States. Previously, some camps of ghost hunters liked to take their explorations to old derelicts, committing an act of trespassing for an additional thrill outside seeking the spirit realm. The taming of the ghost hunter is to be expected. As most ideas and actions become more mainstream, they are often watered down. But for the purposes of safety, the new model is certainly better than creeping around crumbling ruins in search of ghosts and demons.


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Guy de Maupassant's Tales of Terror Reviewed

Wednesday, November 4, 2009


Tales of Terror from Tartarus Press is the latest major incarnation of the Guy de Maupassant's work, featuring 32 of his most macabre and bizarre pieces collected in one convenient volume. Maupassant has long been an established figure in both weird fiction and mainstream world literature since the early twentieth century, though he has arguably slipped under the radar lately. So, it is a timely move to see his work re-introduced in a format specifically tailored to the strange. Tales of Terror offers an appetizing lineup of Maupassant's bleak, psychological, odd, and always paranoid tales to re-acquaint weird readers (and possibly the entire genre) with this important French writer. A Foreword by Ramsey Campbell and an Introduction by the translator, Arnold Kellett, give adequate background on Maupassant's queer life and literary output.

As a weird writer, Maupassant toyed with the horrors and potential monstrosities of existence from many angles: the purely weird and supernatural, the real and cruel, and the psychologically maddening. A further subset focused on the great traumatic event of his time and place: the disastrous Franco-Prussian War that the author himself served in. This Tales of Terror volume herds all of these dark works together, providing readers with a buffet of paranoid doubt, curiosity, and genuine fear.

The book begins strongly with Maupassant's most widely acknowledged weird masterpiece, "The Horla." In this story of a man haunted as much by an invisible vampire-like being as by his own head, readers get a distillate of Maupassant's entire weird oeuvre. An outside terror plays on the narrator's nerves, driving his inner self toward the breaking point, and a doom ultimately his own responsibility by the tale's end. In no other Maupassant story do the supernatural and the psychological enjoy such an intricate dance, though each of these components exhibited by the writer elsewhere pack a stronger individual punch.

Several other stories see Maupassant feverishly hawking unadulterated weird imagery that is nearly unsurpassed by his contemporaries and his literary descendants. These are his "pure weird" stories, with an almost undeniable element of the supernatural at work. In "The Hand," a foreigner keeps a captured human hand chained up and constantly fears its escape and retribution. "Was He Mad?" exposes the freakish magnetic powers of a man, and the sanity-shattering effects his abilities have on his visitor. "He?" is another tale where Maupassant boasts his abilities to infuse his work with something from his own heart. The story follows a man's visions of a mysterious intruder, and his obsessive desire to confront the weird invader or flee from him. Overall, it contains an embryonic Rod Serling like plot and imagery that predates the Twilight Zone by more than half a century.

Two other stories with potent supernatural actors read like hallucinatory dreams. "The Dead Girl" sees the dead rising from the ground in a night shrouded cemetery to re-write their epitaphs with what they deem truer assessments of their lives. "A Night in Paris" is an account of a nightmare (or is it?) for a nocturnal wanderer who feels his own life and his city gradually evaporate into an eternal night of blackness and (crawling?) chaos. This Maupassant tale may be another missing link in the field of weird literature, as it contains unmistakable proto-Lovecraftian themes that will cause readers well versed in weird fiction to applaud.

A lesser represented set of stories in Tales of Terror read like mysteries that wrap up in logical, mundane explanations. Though they contain imagery and actions worthy of the weird label, the supernatural in these pieces is clearly a farce. "The Devil," in which a peasant watching over a dying woman concocts a plan to hasten her departure by giving her a mechanical vision of Lucifer, is a perfect example of this. So is "The Mannerism," where Maupassant draws upon his predecessor Edgar Allan Poe in an exploration of premature burial. Here, however, the victim rises from the grave after an attempted robbery as a faux apparition, meting out indirect justice.

In other portraits of terror by Maupassant, the author moves to strictly real world horrors where mere men and women take the part of monsters. "The Blind Man" and "Coco," tales that graphically depict the torment of a blind man and a horse respectively, use base human cruelty as the specter. "The Diary of a Madman" fuses Maupassant's fixation on obsession with his ability to create obscene human devils. It introduces us to a crazed elder of justice whose bloodthirstiness leads him to swipe out at his victims from the secure perch of his position of power. Unlike most tales of this kind by other writers, these are not moral fables. They are raw images of creatures that must have haunted Maupassant's troubled mind and the France of his day, fiends that still haunt us today in ever greater numbers.

The same model of real life horror applies to what might be called Maupassant's war stories. Tales of Terror contains several of these, which may leave those with a taste only for the macabre and the outre wondering what they are doing here. Fear not, as these bits of historical fiction are not only full of their own horrors, but are also reminiscent of the weird Civil War stories of Maupassant's rough contemporary, Ambrose Bierce. "Two Friends" shows the cruelty invading Prussian troops inflict on two men who live mainly for fishing. "Sainte-Antoine," "Old Milon," and "Mother Savage" utilize a colorful lineup of French commoners fighting back against the Prussians in entertaining ways. Certainly, the patriotic affinities of Maupassant leave an impression in these tales. Yet, they are not crude propaganda pieces, but energetic and realistic ghosts of a war that could stand-in for most other struggles with a slight change of props and names.

Today, there is a lot of unsettling talk about the decline of literacy (and especially the diminished appetite for the rich prose of previous epochs) due to broken education systems and new technologies. Where will masters like Poe and his French incarnation Guy de Maupassant be in another century? None can really say. Fortunately, the small, but vibrant community of weird literature has been spared better than others from the troubled drain on readership. Tales of Terror is an artistic time capsule that should secure a lingering place for Maupassant's macabre, febrile horrors for a new generation, and may be a meteoric jolt of paranoid weirdism that will fire the pens of new artists in the field.

-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft in The Onion's AV Club

Tuesday, November 3, 2009


The satirical newspaper The Onion has given some timely autumnal attention to the life and work of H.P. Lovecraft. In a section they've titled "Gateways to Geekery," Jason Heller breaks down the essentials about Lovecraft's life and literary contributions. Recommendations about where newcomers should start in exploring Lovecraft are made, alongside a brief description about HPL's influence in culture.

The article's position in The Onion's arts and culture section frees it from the over-the-top humorous bent common to the rest of the paper. However, this exposure may not produce the increased interest or knowledge of Lovecraft's fiction that one would suspect. The Onion is primarily geared toward a younger demographic that already absorbs pieces of Lovecraftiana--consciously or unconsciously--through the usually humorous treatment of Lovecraft on the internet. Still, the fact that an expose could even make it to The Onion today just shows that Lovecraft will enjoy more time in major venues such as this in the days to come.

-Grim Blogger


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Church of the Octopus Short

Sunday, November 1, 2009

This amateur production by Goatboy Films takes heavy inspiration from Lovecraftian themes. The Outer Gods, the Esoteric Order of Dagon, and Cthulhuvian symbolism all show up in slightly altered, but easily recognizable forms. The film's description says it was pieced together from a fairy tale melded with the influences of Lovecraft, Poe, and Tolkien. Though the setting and costumes leave something to be desired, the ideas behind this short movie are quite good, and certainly Lovecraftian. Church of the Octopus is very reminiscent of the first battery of Lovecraft shorts made in the 1990s, but it's much smoother thanks to better camera and computer technology.



-Grim Blogger


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