Tenebrous Tales Promotional Video

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

A promotional video for Tenebrous Tales, one of Ex Occidente Press' latest titles, has surfaced on Youtube. The short is based on the story "The Tableaux," which appears in the collection. Its author, Christopher Barker, also shows up here. He's the man propelled toward the strange mannequins (I cannot comment on how accurate the video is, not yet having read the tale it's based on). Barker is notable for several essays on weird fiction, and for his previous work publishing the short lived Weirdly Supernatural journal, as well as Reggie Oliver's first two story collections. This is his first collection.



-Grim Blogger


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Pickman's Muse Reviewed

Monday, August 30, 2010


There is sensation, and then there is atmosphere. These two themes--always in variant, sometimes conflicting doses--help define the boundary between Horror and weird fiction. In film, the effect is even more pronounced. Though there is a hint of sensation in Robert Cappelleto's new film, Pickman's Muse it relies heavily on an ominous atmosphere steeped in strange imagery. It may, in fact, be the most strictly atmospheric movie of this type to surface for a long time. When considering the enormous amount of effort H.P. Lovecraft marshaled to craft atmosphere in his own work, while continuously stressing its importance to weird fiction as a whole, Pickman's Muse may also be one of the most authentically Lovecraftian screenplays yet.

Any Lovecraft admirer will guess the production is based on HPL's story "Pickman's Model." Not quite. Instead, the cinematic storyline only owes a small part of its inspiration to this tale, while much more is drawn from "The Haunter of the Dark." Cappelleto's Pickman (played by Barret Walz) is an unsympathetic and psychologically unhinged painter, renting a shabby apartment and struggling to overcome the painter's equivalent of "writer's block" to get on with his shadowy existence. He has just come away from an indeterminable period under the care of his psychiatrist, Dr. Dexter, and soon finds new inspiration in an unusual looking church outside his apartment window. The plot thickens when Pickman's new creations begin to resemble another psychopath's products.

If two stony legs can be identified as key support for the atmospheric success here, one is definitely Walz's performance as Pickman. This character undergoes a radical shift from tormented drone to maniacal apostle, and his obsession's depth is convincingly portrayed. Pickman's shunning of relationships and reality will not appeal to some viewers, but weird aficionados are sure to find his character potently Lovecraftian. A few may even see a slightly Ligottian sleepwalker being nudged into an unwanted, demonic lucidity by forces that exhale the sinister. For Robert Pickman, Cappelleto wisely appropriates Lovecraft's pessimistic observer, but substitutes a downtrodden, malfunctioning mindset for a civilized one. When Pickman's encounter with the remnants of Starry Wisdom reaches its zenith, the result is more chilling than when Lovecraft's many genteel narrators fall to the beyond.



The Starry Wisdom Church, an otherworldly temple reeking decay and mystery, exudes more atmosphere than Pickman or any other character. Its cosmic malevolence is well reflected in one scene, where Cappelleto employs very conscious cinematography to capture a Medieval looking spire wrapped in exotic yellow sky. Yet, as haunting as its exterior is, Starry Wisdom's gutted innards house many oddities as well. Curious idols, including a crucified octopus, reveal a toxic persona that is beyond human occultism. Additionally, the abandoned shrine houses the shining trapezohedron, the source of unimaginable "visions" for artists who have made psychic contact with the church.

In surprising, but effective contrast to the dreamy fortress of Starry Wisdom, Cappelleto chooses to make other horrors more subtle. Pickman's blood curdling paintings are left to the imagination. The same goes for the spectral representatives of Starry Wisdom, who manifest as shadows in glass and swirl through the night. Adapting Lovecraft is unique in that many of his well described horrors can, theoretically, be brought to life on the screen. However, the long track record of disappointing gore and soggy monsters in Lovecraftian film making does not always mean directors should deploy the Providence author's creatures directly. The maker of Pickman's Muse realizes this, and he succeeds in casting a spell upon the viewer's imagination, where images and sounds suggest terrors far scarier than actually pulling the curtain back all the way would.

Despite Cappelleto's tasteful preference for subtlety and atmosphere, there are a few exceptions which, fortunately, complement this prevailing attitude. The mindless laughter and ravings of Goodie Hines, an interned lunatic touched by Starry Wisdom before Pickman, strikes a dissonant and tension building chord in several scenes. Similarly, the film's last act, where Pickman's frustration and artistic addiction rises to boiling point, features moments where the psychologically horrific spell withers into the background, replaced by concentrated blows of unmasked horror. The tempered pacing and precision with which action is delivered, though, ensures nothing is lost--and many will leave haunted by both the dominant, long running atmosphere as well as the final grisly revelation.

Pickman's Muse is a darkly beautiful journey, rendering its Lovecraftian elements in the vice grip of pure atmosphere. In a time when major directors are looking at giving Lovecraft's work a multi-million dollar treatment that will surely include overt action and shocks, Robert Cappelleto shows Lovecraftian cinema may be best in the artistic fog of unknowable phantoms. This is a technique that delivers not just images, but ideas nestled inside H.P. Lovecraft's stories. And, certainly, one hopes this will not be the last time Cappelleto uses it on weird fiction, translating its literary anxieties into moving, breathing demons.

-Grim Blogger



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State of the Site

Saturday, August 28, 2010


Grim Reviews recently passed its third anniversary on the web, and I'd like to thank all regular readers (and passers-by) for helping this blog to make it to its current modest heights without growing stale. I thought I would also provide a brief overview of the future, as it looks at this moment. First, the so-so news: due the demands of the industry I work in, posting will become a bit more sporadic soon.

What I'm losing in quantity, I hope to make up for in quality. Review submissions will open again in the next month, so stay tuned. I'm looking at giving this blog a slightly more unique flair than the default Blogger template that has rested behind its text for so long. Being the technical throwback that I am, it may take awhile to pick out just the right look and apply it correctly. Reviews and articles are stacking up so high now that an index of some sort may be in order too. Lastly, the idea of opening the gates for the occasional guest article or review is being toyed with, as is the thought of rounding up some interviews with authors, artists, and publishers.

With any luck, Grim Reviews' fourth year will be a transition to the more expansive content I have always wanted to offer here. Thank you again for reading. A blog without an audience can only be a narcissistic void.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Hunt for Stolen Relics Uncovers Secret Tomb in Turkey

Thursday, August 26, 2010


Forgotten tombs and treasure troves have long been a staple of antiquarian discoveries in weird fiction. Of course, the treasures are usually accompanied by some terrible knowledge or lost horror. It's no surprise these things have a loose basis in fact. Unsought excavations are as rare as they come, but remarkable in their ability to inspire the imagination when they do crop up.

-Grim Blogger


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Lovecraftian Flickr Offers Rare Ephemera

Wednesday, August 25, 2010


Will Hart's Flickr gallery, California Cthulhu, has added some wonderful and exceptionally rare albums lately. His newest additions include full content from several issues of "Eldritch Leanings," a late 1970s small press periodical devoted to the Lovecraftian. Further collections contain shots from decades old conferences on Lovecraft's work, as well as an extensive set of photos from Providence, circa 1990.

Needless to say, Lovecraft readers will not want to miss these well aged photos taken in a time when Providence was only one century removed from Lovecraft's birth. The retro looking pics of S.T. Joshi and several other important figures in weird fiction are worthwhile too.

-Grim Blogger


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House of Black Wings Reviewed

Monday, August 23, 2010


As the years soldier on since H.P. Lovecraft's death, it is a blessing and an honor to his legacy that Lovecraftian films are growing as capable in their performance as the diversity of their permutations. House of Black Wings, a 2010 release by writer-director David Schmidt under Sword & Cloak Productions, is another such success. The film effectively balances Lovecraftian cosmic menace with a cast that seems real, sympathetic, and tainted. Startling dream sequences and genuinely creepy art works inside the Blackwood, the dated apartment complex where the film's events occur, help bring its powers to fruition.

Schmidt's film carries a small cast of characters, and two struggling female protagonists drive the action. Kate Stone, played by Leah Myette, is a failed musician whose tragically abbreviated career leads her to the tenement managed by her old friend, Robyn Huck (Katherine Herrera). This landlord is an embattled artist in her own right, creating grotesque dollhouses, which constitute a distinctive and original eerie backdrop. The relationship between Kate, Robyn, and several alienated tenants is the sole bastion of humanity after outre forces begin making themselves known.

House of Black Wings' weird horror elements blend the traditional haunting with mysterious Lovecraftian entities from intangible black gulfs. By the film's climax, the tapestry of strangeness is nearly overwhelming: we see the ghostly presence of a 19th century singer, hear a curious fairytale that only mystifies the legendary origin of the movie's eponymous bat like creatures, and experience a slurry of imagery that crushes the dream-reality barrier. Dreams play an important and subversive role throughout the production. Although each oneiric sequence's shock endings become slightly predictable after the first few, each is pulled off in a way attentive to weird atmosphere. Virtually every vision seems like a successful and tasteful translation of dark fantasies from mind to cinematic record.

It is that atmosphere which marks this production as truly unique. The unknown nature of the apartment's spectral influences generates a claustrophobic air that dominates all others. Pipes, drains, and walls are especially loathsome, inner recesses of malevolence that mirror the bleakness within both main characters. Atmosphere is cautiously maintained throughout the film's duration by clear detail to pacing. Weird phenomena are interspersed with clues about the evil at hand, and viewers are given just enough time to digest these strange parcels before another drops.

Ultimately, Kate and Robyn are forced to confront all the horrors aligned against them, as well as persistant memories of violence and failure that pre-date the Blackwood's far more sinister challenges. The uncertainty about whether or not the demons have really been vanished, both inner and outer, by the journey's end is adeptly portrayed in the best tradition of horror cinema's lingering ghost. Possible escape offers relief, but not closure, and this is all well as far as the audience should be concerned. The sheer number of numinous occurrences and inexplicable sights would be cheapened by a real defeat of the terror.

Besides being commendable for its performance and bizarre aesthetic, House of Black Wings, marks another innovation in Lovecraftian cinema. It shows that, with the right balance, cosmic horror can be combined with other supernatural threats and need not be cheapened by plot mixing in human emotion. Consider this a liminal production, a cinematic bridge to the future. House of Black Wings offers a fleeting glimpse of what a big budget Hollywood Lovecraftian film could look like in a flashier suit one day, and stands as an evolutionary winner in today's small but growing niche of independent horror films.

-Grim Blogger


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Chômu Press Announces New Titles

Saturday, August 21, 2010


The new Chômu Press, which made its debut with Quentin S. Crisp's Remember You're a One Ball!, is about to extend its literary tendrils with several new releases. Books by Reggie Oliver and Mark Samuels are in the works, according to the publisher's website. At the time of this writing, it's unclear if these will be story collections, novellas, or something else entirely. Chômu's next title is a story collection by Justin Isis, I Wonder What Human Flesh Tastes Like.

If these releases are even half as excellent as Crisp's book--and there's a very good chance this is the case with the track record of these writers--then Chômu Press should quickly find a permanent home in weird publishing.

-Grim Blogger


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Masque of the Red Death Animation

Thursday, August 19, 2010

This slightly dated, but excellent animation adapting Edgar Allan Poe's "The Masque of the Red Death" demands sharing. The short won second place for ghost story at the Los Angeles Animation Festival in 2007. It effectively captures the fantastic and apocalyptic feel of Poe's story very well.



-Grim Blogger


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S.T. Joshi Turns Mystery Writer

Tuesday, August 17, 2010


Longtime Lovecraft scholar S.T. Joshi has unleashed an eldritch secret upon the world: he's now a fiction writer. Curiously, his own scribbling is not in the genre he has so long devoted himself to studying, but rather, in the mystery novel tradition. The Removal Company, written under his pen name J.K. Maxwell, is a detective adventure, evidently without a trace of supernatural phenomena. Wilum Pugmire's blog carries the full story on this surprising development.

 Weird fiction scholars have enjoyed some notable successes in recent times when they have turned to fiction. One need only look at Mark Valentine or Brian J. Showers for the latest triumphs. But Joshi's case is the first in awhile where a weird literary student's own writing is in a significantly different genre.

Time will only tell whether or not Joshi ever tests his creative energies in a supernatural literary medium. In the meantime, mystery lovers who are also into ghostly yarns and strange stories can experience an unexpected thrill by picking up The Removal Company.

-Grim Blogger


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Nemonymous Ten: Null Immortalis Reviewed

Sunday, August 15, 2010


Nemonymous Ten: Null Immortalis, edited by D.F. Lewis, is the last in an illustrious line of anthologies devoted to making fiction stand squarely on its own legs. Previous Nemonymous volumes did this by famously leaving the author's name off of each story until months after publication, making readers guess at the faces responsible for the often excellent fiction. Since Null Immortalis is the finale, there is no guessing here. However, there is little lost by breaking with tradition, because the lineup of tales in this capstone book more than makes up for lost anonymity (or is it nemonymity?) in sheer quality.

Like previous anthologies, the editor's eccentric and very open guidelines have set the parameters for this last literary venture: all stories here are conceived from the phrase "Null Immortalis" and contain a character named Tullis (from S.D. Tullis, winner of the last Nemonymous competition), and many reference the ghostly fan blades adorning the anthology's front and back covers. Naturally, there are a lot of references to oblivion and eternity to be found, almost two dozen completely different Tullises, and story lines fired from pure imagination.

The stories crafted and laid out by Lewis' impeccable editorial selection amounts to nothing less than a feast for all the senses, and a gallery of literary iconography for the intellect that cannot help but prompt deep contemplation. One such story is "Lucien's Menagerie" by David Fitzpatrick, where a tormented woman must spend the night with her dead ex-husband's haunted taxidermy in order to inherit the mansion. Fitzpatrick's piece tugs on fear from two angles--the realistic and the supernatural--and skillfully portrays the unheard of cruelty that can surround immortality. This is hardly the only story where emotions run deep, hand-in-hand with horror. Cameron Pierce's "Broom People" pairs self-loathing with surrealism in a story that runs purely on its own logic--and it works. Gary Fry's "Strings Attached" delivers a deeper melancholy experienced by a man who hopes to settle in a small town, sandwiched between bureaucratic corruption and hazy memories of a clown dabbling in darkness rather than laughs.

Although Nemonymous books have traditionally been an eclectic mix without genre boundaries, many of the stories in Null Immortalis exude the heavy atmosphere of weird fiction. How could it be otherwise with some of the writers featured here? Reggie Oliver's contribution, "You Have Nothing to Fear," exhibits a slightly more subtle terror than those that have appeared elsewhere in his oeuvre. Yet, the "nothing" festering just beneath the surface of Oliver's tenuous relationships is no less powerful, and the villainous aristocrat who takes center stage will linger repugnantly in readers' memories well after absorbing this tale."The Man Who Made the Yellow God" by Mark Valentine is another story cross referencing the weird with Null Immortalis. An accursed elder recounts how he came by his immortality after one eyed idols bewitched him long ago. Stephen Bacon's "The Toymaker of Bremen" is another effective sample of high strangeness. A Tullis boy learns about his own limited mortality after staying with a mysterious German family following his parents' disappearance. Bacon's offering is exceptionally original, and one of the book's richest in atmosphere.

Immortality is certainly a heady subject, but several authors chose to take it along more lighthearted avenues. Richard Gavin's "Only Enuma Elish" introduces us to a loner whose elderly female neighbor believes she is a Babylonian goddess. Gavin's story is a balanced concoction of unease and humor floating just above the mysterious overlay that has always characterized his fiction. "Holesale" by Rachel Kendall is a palate cleansing dark comedy, chronicling the last frenzied misadventure of a black hole salesman. Andrew Hook's "Love is the Drug" illuminates a future where emotions are distilled into recreational substances. Hook thoughtfully portrays the love drug as a blessing and a curse. Meanwhile, Bob Lock's "Haven't You Ever Wondered?" stars D.F. Lewis himself and Null Immortalis as meta-fictional constructs threatened by inter-dimensional interlopers. This is an inspired and unusual sci-fi story that is especially pleasing to longtime Nemonymous devotees.

More serious meta-fictional boundaries are breached in the real S.D. Tullis' story, "The Return." The young Tullis girl has returned...changed, following a curious disappearance. Her soullessness and startling actions make this the most directly chilling horror story in Null Immortalis. D.P. Watt's "Apotheosis" similarly draws outside its fictitious borders by presenting a sort of literary experiment by which all writers' words are collectivized into an entity named Tullis, the greatest author in the world. Watt's stylistic repetition lends an extra jolt to his story, a play on language very at home with the Lewisian fondness for coining new terms like "Nemonymous."

S.D. Tullis' potent horror is virtually equaled by a couple other works. Derek John's "Oblivion," which imaginatively drags its horrors up from history's depths and into the daylight, is particularly haunting. Insane dates and incantations lead an inquisitive narrator to a place where immortality is oblivion, an intelligent and eerie meditation on these dichotomies clothed in fiction. A handful of other stories utilize more tangible real life threats to generate anxiety. Joel Lane's "The Drowned Market" pans in on a disgruntled author whose implied rampage is cut short by a confounding transformation mirrored in his literature. "The Scream" is a story about an invisible tumor, a sinister business empire spearheaded by Tullis, and a secret society, all impressively woven into a coherent and engaging narrative by Tim Casson. The Great Recession (or Depression 2.0) looms in the background of both tales by Lane and Casson.

Megazanthus Press, which has "published" the first spectral anthology in existence (Nemonymous Six), has never been shy about experimental styles. This boldness continues with Null Immortalis, where several stories demand a deeper level of focus from readers to unravel. Tony Lovell's "The Shell" brings into view a couple's daily life and the husband's nocturnal existence, ultimately blurring into mutually inseparable realities marred by subtle cues that will easily provoke heated interpretations.  "Violette Doranges" is a mystery buried alive in the meaning of this name, a febrile quest after the eponymous character in a phantasmal environment painted by its author, David V. Griffin. As with "The Shell," interpretations of who or what Violette Doranges actually is are sure to be diverse. "The Green Dog" by Steve Rasnic Tem links up a green dog, a bizarre mirror, and a dying man in a painful and moving relationship that subsumes a mildly absurd character into a believable one through vibrant prose. Tim Nickels' tale "Supermarine" is exploratory by several more orders of magnitude. A mythic wartime invasion on the liminal rock of Gibraltar is overshadowed by rich doses of magical realism, an almost decadent journey illuminated in a layered style certain to delight those who love a literary challenge.

The unifying theme in this last roundup of stories can be applied to the whole of Null Immortalis, and perhaps all of Nemonymous too. These tales, these books, are nothing less than dreams laboriously rendered into prose. The horrors, the heavens, and the gray voids in between preserved by the editor and his authors are attempts to communicate their visions on a common theme in a dialogue as labyrinthine as any philosophical discourse, and far more entertaining. Null Immortalis' probing into space, psyche, and time is four-dimensional, and few story collections ever chance at achieving this. For this reason, Nemonymous will be missed, and will one day live on in collectors' clutches, occasionally crossing vast distances for large sums of money. Null Immortalis is a distinguished epitaph for the series, but it may also drift into the future as relentlessly as the fan blades on its cover, a subversive ark intent on spawning new literary flora when and where they are least expected.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Man Kills Dog He Believed Was Satan

Saturday, August 14, 2010


This article is an unsettling and all too real example of the roads madness can lead down. A little bit removed from reality and the story becomes a nucleic episode with many potential weird connotations...not to mention campy ones. Although it's not entirely new to weird fiction or film, the devilish canine may have some lingering possibilities, as long as it's done right.


-Grim Blogger  


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Stefan Grabinski Inspired Illustrations

Thursday, August 12, 2010


Due to a pause in the flurry of interesting weird fiction news, I thought I would bring forth this art thread inspired by Stefan Grabinski's tales. This rough contemporary of Lovecraft, who lived half a world away and who has garnered the pet name of "Polish Poe," really needs no introduction. Those familiar with his work know there's nothing else in weird literature quite like the darkly beautiful vistas, accursed train rides, and warped erotica woven into Grabinski's tales. Best of all, there are still a few untranslated pieces by the writer lurking outside his recent English language collections: In Sarah's House, The Motion Demon, and (most famously) The Dark Domain.

A detailed sketch from Grabinski's "A Tale of the Gravedigger


Another macabre drawing, this time from "The Grey Room."

Like other writers, the enduring strength of Stefan Grabinski's power is expressed in his ability to inspire visual images lifted from his stories. Many excellent fan images have crept slowly across the soft pages and online voids as his reputation quietly spread. The pictures here are just a few of the splendid horrors summoned in Grabinski's name, and round out his best stories collected in The Dark Domain.



-Grim Blogger



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Lovecraft the Prophet?

Wednesday, August 11, 2010


The Warlock Asylum site brings us an interesting and quirky twist exploring H.P. Lovecraft's prophetic abilities. Basically, this piece stretches numerology's outer (or should I say outre?) limits by suggesting the Providence writer may have predicted not just his own death, but 9/11 as well. The article owes its origins to an exchange with noted scholar Dan Harms, and a viewpoint that sees Lovecraft as a sort of intermediary for channeling the Old Ones' arcane knowledge.

Whether the argument raises chuckles or eyebrows, it's definitely worth a read.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird Fiction Writers Write Like...

Monday, August 9, 2010


I was toying around with story passages from a few of my favorite weird writers on the I Write Like website, and its textual analysis generated some bizarre results. For H.P. Lovecraft, I chose the famous opening from "The Call of Cthulhu:"

The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and i twas not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining it its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.

The result? Lovecraft writes like Arthur C. Clarke! Though his Cthulhu Mythos stories are commonly associated with science fiction, Lovecraft never ventured toward the celestial concepts and prose of Clarke. Fortunately, I didn't have high expectations for these tests.

To see if the generator would do better with Arthur Machen, I submitted the following from "The White People:"

"Do you know," he said, "you interest me immensely? You think, then, that we do not understand the real nature of evil?"

"No, I don't think we do. We over-estimate it and we under-estimate it. We take the very numerous infractions of our social 'bye-laws'--the very necessary and very proper regulations which keep the human company together--and we get frightened at the prevalence of 'sin' and 'evil.' But this is really nonsense. Take theft, for example. Have you any horror at the thought of Robin Hood, of the Highland caterans of the seventeenth century, of the moss-troopers, of the company promoters of our day?

"Then, on the other hand, we underrate evil. We attach such an enormous importance to the 'sin' of meddling with our pockets (and our wives) that we have quite forgotten the awfulness of real sin."

"And what is sin?" said Cotgrave.

"I think I must reply to your question by another. What would your feelings be, seriously, if your cat or your dog began to talk to you, and to dispute with you in human accents? You would be overwhelmed with horror. I am sure of it. And if the roses in your garden sang a weird song, you would go mad. And suppose the stones in the road began to swell and grow before your eyes, and if the pebble that you noticed at night had shot out stony blossoms in the morning?...

Curiously, Arthur's writing is compared to that of another Arthur...Conan Doyle. This is, at least, better than the comparison given with Lovecraft. Conan Doyle was roughly contemporaneous with Machen, and occasionally a slight Holmesian mystery resonates alongside the supernatural in some tales.


Testing out today's authors is just as interesting. For consistency's sake, I went with another American and a Brit. First, this opening from Ramsey Campbell's "The Same in Any Language:"

The day my father is to take me where the lepers used to live is hotter than ever. Even the old women with black scarves wrapped around their heads sit inside the bus station instead of on the chairs outside the tavernas. Kate fans herself with her straw hat like a basket someone’s sat on and gives my father one of those smiles they’ve made up between them. She’s leaning forwards to see if that’s our bus when he says “Why do you think they call them lepers, Hugh?”
I can hear what he’s going to say, but I have to humour him. “I don’t know.”

“Because they never stop leaping up and down.”

IWL claims that Campbell writes like David Foster Wallace, if this very short snippet of his work is any indication. Not really being familiar with the late Mr. Wallace's work, I can't comment much, only to say that this seems like another mismatched match-up. It doesn't appear that Wallace is a writer of horror or the fantastic at all.

Then there's Thomas Ligotti. Surely, I thought, the website would have to return something obscure and entertaining after inputting this unforgettable scene from "Mrs. Rinaldi's Angel:"

'Now will you leave me?' she said. 'Even for myself there is nothing I can do any longer. You know what I am saying, child. All those years the dreams had been kept away. But you have consorted with them, I know you did. I have made a mistake with you. You let my angel be poisoned by the dreams which you could not deny. It was an angel, did you know that? It was pure of all thinking and pure of all dreaming. And you are the one who made it think and dream and now it is dying. And it is dying not as an angel, but as a demon. Do you want to see what it is like now?' she said, gesturing toward a door that led into the cellar of her house. 'Yes, it is down there because it is not the way it was and could not remain where it was. It crawled away with its own body, the body of a demon. And it has its own dreams, the dreams of a demon. It is dreaming and dying of its dreams. And I am dying too, because all the dreams have come back.'

Getting Dan Brown returned left me understandably confused and slightly shocked (and not in a good way). I decided soon after that these exercises are far more futile than they are fun. To call the technology "hit and miss" would be vastly overstating its power. But, hey, at least the machines are a long way off from being able to outwit mankind's analytical abilities in comparative literature.

-Grim Blogger


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Puppet Enlightenment

Saturday, August 7, 2010

This exceptionally Ligottian performance was first brought to my attention thanks to a thread on TLO, and it's too haunting not to share. Anyone with an inclination toward dark art can appreciate the woeful, eerie style displayed here. Those of a pessimist and determinist mindset might take things further--seeing this marionette as a symbolic victim of the suffering and self-delusion that criss-crosses this world with maddening skill.



-Grim Blogger


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Weird Things: Six Cliches of Lovecraftian Writing

Friday, August 6, 2010


This witty article from the Weird Things blog lists Lovecraftian cliches regularly found in most Cthulhu Mythos tales. Mercifully, the shrinking pool of stories today which can be labeled purist Mythos works have recognized many of these cliches, but it doesn't hurt to reiterate them. As Lovecraft's popularity grows, would-be horror writers yearning to follow HPL's literary trajectory are particularly at high risk for falling into these traps. So, writers beware, with a little help from Weird Things' list: great Lovecraftian fiction is that which pioneers, not regurgitates.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird News: Corpse Found at Closed Funeral Home

Wednesday, August 4, 2010


This story isn't particularly outlandish, but it does illustrate the careless treatment that sometimes attends the dead. More than a few popular legends and ghostly tales have the origins of their strange phenomena in underhanded doings against corpses, or unredeemed remains. Then there's always the possibility of hidden bodies just waiting for a fearful and shocking discovery. The world is a graveyard.


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James Cameron Joins Mountains of Madness Project

Monday, August 2, 2010


The big Hollywood centric blogs are reporting that James Cameron has signed onto Guillermo del Toro's At the Mountains of Madness film as a producer. Cameron, who recently won attention for his work on Avatar, is definitely the latest big name to approach this most Cyclopean of Lovecraft projects. Early reactions to this news across the Lovecraftian community are varied, and with good reason. Many believe Cameron's addition will launch what is already slated to be the largest and most public Lovecraftian movie to greater heights yet, while a smaller number of detractors fear he will bring strictly non-Lovecraftian baggage aboard, like romance and politics. Though alien to H.P. Lovecraft's work (at least in modern terms--Lovecraft wrote several stories there were overtly political, such as "The Street"), any film as immense as this can only be expected to bring in elements that will jive with public interest and sentiment.

In other news about the project, renowned weird fiction scholar S.T. Joshi has reportedly been contacted by del Toro's office to serve as a literary consultant. Details are scant about Joshi's involvement beyond this fact.

Additionally, a very early script by Guillermo del Toro has been attracting some discussion as well. While this draft is several years old and differs much from the film's current stage, in all likelihood, it's useful for offering a glimpse into the thought and style being exerted on Lovecraft's story:



-Grim Blogger


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