Showing posts with label Weird Scholarship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weird Scholarship. Show all posts

Understanding Ghost Stories: Books by ST Joshi and Andrew Smith

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Reading ghost stories provides a familiar chill to many readers, but only a select few want to delve deeper, burrowing into a thorough understanding of what drives the spectral tale. Today, with weird fiction scholarship more vibrant than ever before, that journey doesn't have to happen alone. Two outstanding study aids published in recent years head up a multiplying field. Look to S.T. Joshi's Warnings to the Curious and Andrew Smith's The Ghost Story 1840-1920: A Cultural History for proof of ghostly energies in literature.



S.T. Joshi Shines the Light on Jamesian Demons

Warnings to the Curious: A Sheaf of Criticism on M.R. James recalls the glory days when most scholarship focusing on literary horror occurred in obscure journals. Aside from H.P. Lovecraft, M.R. James enjoyed zealous attention to his supernatural works. Ghosts and Scholars was a long running publication devoted to unveiling the many mysteries he left behind, headed by Rosemary Pardoe, who joins Joshi in editing this volume. The two wizened Jamesian observers have assembled a diverse array of discourse on M.R. James' most celebrated stories.

Unlike Ghosts and Scholars, which occasionally delved into minutiae that was only decipherable by absolute Jamesian fanatics, Joshi's scholarly collection is much more accessible. Occult, historic, and erotic tensions are explored as deep and relevant influences behind James' work. In many ways, gaining added insight into the forbidden knowledge fearfully communicated by M.R. James does nothing to dispel his demons.

Instead, Warnings to the Curious peels back the layers of beautiful illusion responsible for obscuring pure horror in James' tales. The demons, ghosts, and less definable terrors are then revealed in all of their alien glory. This book collects the most well thought and illuminating studies of James' fiction to date, and it should remain master for some time.


Andrew Smith Uproots Ghostly Terrors

By the time The Ghost Story 1840-1920 ends, M.R. James' ascent to the spectral throne of literary horror is just nearing its peak. This fat volume by Andrew Smith attempts to pierce the historic origins of the ghost story in the United Kingdom and beyond. More importantly, Smith lets loose an important bridge rarely completed in scholarship that's strictly centered around the weird.

Smith's haunted history talks about not merely James and Sheridan Le Fanu, but household names such as Charles Dickens and Henry James. Whatever other conclusions this book draws, no one can ignore its ability to place spectral fiction in the forefront of art and society. Smith's revelations are always tied back to the mainstream literary scene, political events, and economic turmoils that influenced the rise of the British ghost story, perhaps the same elements that were influenced in turn by a new and fearful aesthetic.

For a product of academia, The Ghost Story 1840-1920 is pleasantly readable to the average horror fan. Smith capably connects crucial figures and events back to phantoms, without droning on like an absent minded professor.

Understanding ghost stories isn't easy. It's conceivable that the most devoted weird horror readers could spend a lifetime contemplating the nuances of uncanny play between the dead and the living. Thanks to study props like these, at least they won't have to ponder in isolation.

-Grim Blogger



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The Great Old Ones: Pinpointing Cthulhu on the Kardashev Scale

Saturday, August 13, 2011


The Kardashev Scale is a famous projection of a civilization's development. Analyzing H.P. Lovecraft's Great Old Ones, including Cthulhu, requires unorthodox means. Since Kardashev's estimates include wonders from a lowly industrial age up to godhood level, perhaps his futurist fantasies deserve a closer look in the Lovecraftian arena.

The Kardashev Scale: Power Ranking Civilizations

Generally, the Kardashev Scale endorses four civilization types based on how much energy an advanced society harnesses. Type I civilizations can successfully utilize the power of an entire planet. For our purposes, this scale is the most tangible from where humans sit today. Its beginnings are best observed in the fevered dreams of utopian media, like William Gazecki's film, Future by Design.

Type II beings have tapped into the energy offered by an entire solar system, presumably through advanced cosmic engineering constructs backed by even headier principles. Type III is greater yet, wielding almost unimaginable power on a galactic scale. Finally, the scale tops out at Type IV, where an all consuming power controls all the energy available in the whole universe. Think about the near omnipotent architects in Michael Moorcock's The Dancers at the End of Time series.


Pinpointing the Powers of the Great Old Ones

So, where does Cthulhu and the nefarious cabal he belongs to fit in? Presumably, Cthulhu's power is nearly unlimited. The ability to move through and manipulate multiple dimensions, soar through the cosmos, and use energy on a wide scale for warfare with other extraterrestrials makes him seem godly in comparison to mankind. Particularly, the meek post-Great War civilizations of Lovecraft's own day, which hadn't yet split the atom.

Not that nuclear power does much for humanity. Even a tripling of nuclear power plant input wouldn't put us anywhere close to a Type I society on the Kardashev Scale. It's not an effective defense against Cthulhu either, based on the imaginings of many writers. The Greatest Old One (or at least the best known) is hit by a nuke in August Derleth's The Trail of Cthulhu, and manages to survive without a breaking a runny green sweat.

However, is Cthulhu actually all he's cracked up to be? Clearly, Cthulhu may not be a Type IV being, let alone something greater, since he is subject to well known limitations. Virtually imprisoned in R'lyeh until the stars are right, Cthulhu was on the losing side of an ancient battle with alien forces that were seemingly even more powerful than he is. Multi-dimensional or not, it's hard to imagine any real Type III or Type IV power getting bested. Even Azathoth, who often appears superior to Great Cthulhu, seems little more than a stunted Type II being or less.

Then again, it's worth remembering that the Kardashev Scale is meant to measure civilizations, not individuals. If Cthulhu and the other Great Old Ones are merely high ranking members of an immense civilization that spans several universes, they may well be in the Type III-Type IV range. A better estimation will remain elusive, and only based on the unapproved works by subsequent Mythos writers. Lovecraft's lasting gifts are horror and mystery, despite his frequent forays into sci-fi territory, not detailed scientific histories that give away the secrets of his most famous terrors, as S.T. Joshi notes in The Weird Tale.

In the end, the Kardashev Scale is an amusing thought experiment, but doesn't say much about the Great Old Ones. Not without liberal boundaries and much imagination, anyway. Trying to apply these measurements to Lovecraft's most nightmarish beings seems impossible for boosting any serious artistic or literary analysis, but the clumsiest efforts to classify them are still fun.

-Grim Blogger


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Measuring HP Lovecraft's Influence on Other Writers

Sunday, January 23, 2011


Is it really possible to measure the exact influence exerted by H.P. Lovecraft upon writers he collaborated with during his lifetime, and those who carried on his dark tradition after death? There will probably never be a precise science for doing this, but the My Elves Are Different blog has compiled an interesting table, beginning with the original "Lovecraft Circle" of HPL's collaborators, friends, and clients:


0. H. P. Lovecraft

1. R. H. Barlow (The Hoard of the Wizard-Beast)
Zealia Bishop (The Curse of Yig)
Adolphe de Castro (The Electric Executioner)
Sonia Greene (The Invisible Monster)
Harry Houdini (Imprisoned with the Pharaohs)
Robert E. Howard (The Challenge from Beyond)
Frank Belknap Long (The Challenge from Beyond)
William Lumley (The Diary of Alonzo Typer)
A. Merritt (The Challenge from Beyond)
Duane W. Rimel (The Tree on the Hill)
Henry S. Whitehead (The Trap)

In my observation, this system, which was derived from an earlier method of tracking Isaac Asimov disciples, does an excellent job at tracking those touched by the living Lovecraft. Unfortunately, it becomes much harder to extend after that. This is partially due to today's many sub-genres filled with writers claiming Lovecraftian heritage. Weird fiction may seem the most legitimate heir to H.P. Lovecraft in style and purpose, but various types of fantasy and science fiction have also staked their claims.

Although experiments in "literary geology" are fascinating, their usefulness in serious Lovecraftian scholarship is dubious. But no more so than the way most are exposed to Lovecraft's literary descendants, in anthologies like Tales of the Lovecraft Mythos and The New Lovecraft Circle, which try to group "Lovecraftian" writers from different eras. This is particularly troublesome with books like The New Lovecraft Circle, where writers as distinct as Thomas Ligotti, Brian Lumley, and Ramsey Campbell are placed under one Lovecraftian umbrella. These are all Lovecraftian writers of a sort, true. However, no anthology grouping or degree chart can measure the character of Lovecraft's literary influence on these authors. And in the end, isn't that what really matters?

-Grim Blogger



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Thomas Ligotti's Christmas Eves: Atmospheric Possession in Old Grosse Pointe

Friday, December 24, 2010



Since it first appeared in Songs of a Dead Dreamer, Thomas Ligotti's seminal debut short story collection, “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise: A Tale of Possession in Old Grosse Point” has quietly haunted the brains of readers stricken with holiday memories. Some people re-visit this underrated tale near late December, when fiction and existential fact can collide like two screaming locomotives, leaving behind a marvelous, chaotic debris field capable of filling real life with unusual wonderment, if only for an instant. Ligotti's apt creation and manipulation of literary atmosphere has long been one of his most admired traits. In this ultimate holiday horror sideshow, his powers are at their height, inflating the story with a hyper-atmospheric aura equal to weird fiction's other rare Yuletide classics, like H.P. Lovecraft's “The Festival.”

How does Ligotti manage this curious feat? Though a true analysis will never be able to fully quantify Aunt Elise's dark magic, her powers (and by extension, the author's) reverberate from three blazing logs responsible for firing the story's atmosphere. There is a nightmarish toying with time, an anxious glimpse provided by Ligotti at a stagnant immortality and the tragedy of growing old. This theme is carefully fortified by the liminal irreality that churns throughout the piece, bound to an omnipotent dread manifest in Christmas Eve by Aunt Elise's gaudy decorations, as well as hypnotic tendrils of disorientation, bursting from the story's rich imagery and narrative structure. Possession, however, is the chief horror on exhibit. Like other tales by Thomas Ligotti, always at their finest when they are stitched together by elaborate mysteries, “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise” poses a confounding question: Who or what is being possessed in Grosse Point? This inquiry is ripe for speculation, but the answer – if there is one – may yield more Ligottian fear than comfort.

Among the many bizarre elementals weaving this story's unmistakable atmosphere, time is king. Ligotti shows us the equally strange and unsettling effects of time on the march and standing still. From the outset, when readers are introduced to the perspective character Jack - an introverted lad who wishes the holiday would pass uneventfully (or fail to arrive in the first place) - and enter Aunt Elise's abode, there is clear time manipulation. Christmas Eve with Aunt Elise is an affair that flits between otherworldly horror and an authentic family gathering. Yet, the recurring carols, presents, and décor in Elise's estate, year after year, portray a quiescent immortality terrible to behold in its repetitive stagnation. Jack feels, “...the nightmarish sense of a ritual forever reenacted without hope of escape” (page 131). So do we.

There is no comfort to be found, though, in the dramatic leaps through time Ligotti makes us privy to near the story's conclusion. Jack, no longer a little boy or a twenty-something smart ass, find himself remembering Aunt Elise's Christmas Eves in an inebriated state with a new slew of relatives – a gathering that differs only subtly from past Eves. It is clear Jack has nourished a lifelong disdain of Christmas, and cannot escape the long shadow cast by Aunt Elise. Even before she makes her grand re-appearance, Ligotti ensures that the old woman's ghost is alive, particularly by fulfilling a hidden prophecy contained in Elise's nickname for the hapless protagonist: “Old Jack.” Jack may be much older since her passing, but not necessarily wiser – as if anyone could indeed wisen up to her arcane knowledge.

Through this, one thing is certain: growing old is hideous, possibly equivalent to Aunt Elise's virtually unchanging existence. Nowhere is this better illustrated than in the yarn she tells on one particular Christmas Eve. It seems an old man used to live in a grand house down the street in Grosse Pointe. After his residence is dismantled piece by piece following his death, to transport it with him to another world per his beliefs, the ghostly estate reappears one festive evening, to a young antiquarian's delight. All seems well at first, as the youth follows the friendly elder inside and explores its mysteries to his content. But events quickly take a turn for the worse when the old man disappears, leaving his visitor stranded in an outpost amid a sea of darkness outside, populated by weeping, lost figures. Peering out at this hellish sight, the antiquarian sees an old face reflected back: “...then the young man realized that this was now his own face, and like those terrible, ragged creatures lost in the fog, he too began to cry” (135). And there is plenty to cry about, especially the possibility that advanced age is a mere gateway to joining the wandering, decrepit souls outside the house.

Aunt Elise's creepy tale concerning the antiquarian is an outstanding example of the story-within-a-story that helps generate severe disorientation in this work. Ligotti reinforces this facet in the symbolic wrapping paper adorning young Jack's gift that features little bears dreaming of presents, which in turn have sleeping little boys on their paper. Seasoned readers know Thomas Ligotti is fond of depicting these multi-layered realities. The one swirling around Aunt Elise, however, is extremely dizzying.


Displacing solid realities and environments is similarly conducted with rich, often contrasting imagery. Grosse Pointe's mundane, antique environs are upset by obscene lights and festive decorations. This lends the story's backdrop an unfamiliar atmosphere, as when Jack observes, “...a serene congregation of colors that for a time turned our everyday world into one where mysteries abounded” (130). It is this invasion by Christmas warpaint that mirrors the warping of Jack's environment and mind, and possibly even causes it. Outside the luminescent living rooms and halls is a darkened world where fog rolls off nearby lakes. Ligotti's juxtaposition of vibrant inner chambers with outer deadness successfully makes a heavily mysterious atmosphere, but also brings to the surface another important shadow within the story: a supremely transitory world, where anything and everything might happen.

Christmas Eve itself is a threshold between two realms, the uneventfully normal and the holiday. This, combined with weirdly leveled storytelling and supernatural occurrences, is exploited by Ligotti to make everything in this story appear restless and translucent, a liminal irreality where nothing is certain, except the sensation that something dreadful is going to happen. This decoupling of certainty opens the way for possession by Aunt Elise, representing a holiday spirit whose touch brings chills instead of cheers.

By the time the icy climax arrives, when Old Jack returns to a house he had thought forever vanished, and an Aunt he believed long dead, the matriarchal Elise's role as demon appears iron clad. “Oh, how nice, how nice and lovely to be settled in a world where it's always dead with darkness and always alive with lights!” (137), the old creature cackles, as she captures Jack's collected memories. Perhaps she actually functions more like a vampire than a demon, in the end.

Although concluding that Aunt Elise is the possessive maestro behind the horror, Jack's puppet master, and a malevolent holiday entity is the most popular and likely explanation, there is a different angle worth exploring. In Ligotti's work, little is what it seems, and labyrinthine passages to meaning abound. “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise” lacks a blatant reference to unseen forces, maniacally wrestling actors from behind the curtain, such as the existential blackness in his later tales, or the Great Chemists in “The Chymist.” Still, there seems to be a nameless force greater than Jack, Aunt Elise, or Grosse Pointe, beneath the uncanny holiday glamor, possessing all of these people and places.

What could it be? This power might best be described as an embodiment of the holiday season, a blind and groping, but real “Christmas Spirit.” Again, the idea of an endless “ritual forever reenacted without hope of escape” springs to mind. Now, imagine the ritual as an occultic rite that summons and sustains a terror more abstract than Aunt Elise. Though difficult to describe, it is easier to see this black holiday spirit's effects.

Christmastime's onset means a complete takeover of Grosse Pointe, the overwhelmingly rich infestation of decorations, guests, and lights in a sleepy suburb that wishes it could stay dreaming. In fact, the rolling fog, aside from its use as an atmospheric component, seems so much like an effort to quarantine the Christmas disease. This is not unlike Jack's reaction to Christmas – one of repulsion, as the holiday threatens all of his natural inclinations toward solitude and quiet. By the story's end, Jack rightly appears to be unwitting prey to Aunt Elise's omniscient machinations, just as the antiquarian falls to the mysterious old homeowner. But then, Aunt Elise and the old man apparently know what is going to happen to their victims and themselves. Their actions feel scripted as they dance to fate's command, so much like supernatural puppets plucking their lesser dolls' strings. In this way, Aunt Elise and her elderly neighbor act more like masks for a nameless force – possessed by an eternal Christmas spirit, just like Jack and Grosse Pointe's affluent homes – rather than demons or vampires with free will.

Thomas Ligotti discusses the surreal and frightening effects of determinism at length in his latest book, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race. Regardless of whether or not there is a deterministic spirit behind Aunt Elise's bewitching motives, the possession occurring in Old Grosse Pointe seems awfully familiar. The town, in fact, could be any, and Jack anyone with a slightly misanthropic streak, who dreads the arrival of candy canes, glittering trees, and family gatherings enacted by duty, not pleasure. By painting an all too common occasion in truly weird atmospheric hues, Ligotti has delivered a resonate tale of holiday horror that will surely gain recognition over coming Christmas Eves. Or, has he exquisitely described, not invented, a ghastly side to a holiday whose bright exterior has always hidden a greater blackness?

Works Cited

Ligotti, Thomas. Songs of a Dead Dreamer. Burton, Michigan: Subterranean Press, 2010 (1986).

-Grim Blogger


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Andrew Smith's The Ghost Story, 1840-1920

Friday, December 10, 2010


Readers with an interest in scholarly speculations on the ghost story are advised to keep an eye out for Andrew Smiths' new book, The Ghost Story 1840-1920: A Cultural History. In this wide ranging study, Smith charts the course of the English ghost story and carefully samples its spectral cobwebs reaching into other areas of 19th century life. Philosophers, political economists, and storytellers collide in an overarching snapshot that tries to x-ray the ghost story's heart. Winter is an exceptionally chilling season with its own ghost story tradition, reaching back to M.R. James and beyond, so this book is a fantastic compliment to any fireside horror.

More importantly, Smith's contribution is an original one to weird fiction studies focusing on ghostly literature. His position as an English Professor at the University of Glamorgan signals a perspective that may also be less commonly encountered in weird scholarship. Smith's main scholarly interests are in Gothic literature, rather than the depths of near contemporary supernatural literature. Quite a different outlook than one might get from other minds, like S.T. Joshi and Robert M. Price.

I haven't had a chance to thoroughly read and review this title yet, but Matt Foley's blog post whets the appetite. The Ghost Story 1840-1920: A Cultural History is worthwhile, in my opinion. New weird studies of this magnitude are rare these days, and Smith's book sounds remarkably approachable, not to mention engrossing.

-Grim Blogger



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W.H. Pugmire's Latest Interview with S.T. Joshi

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

The always entertaining and informative Wilum Pugmire has uploaded a video of his latest talk with weird fiction scholar S.T. Joshi. Here, Joshi talks about his current projects in the weird realm, his mystery novel, and Lovecraftian writing today, among other things, including tentative plans to do a fiction work about H.P. Lovecraft. Pugmire's easy to digest video interviews also show how the weird can be explored with newer technology, a trend one hopes to see more of in the future.



-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft: Rational Socialist?

Monday, September 6, 2010


A provocative post by Kerry Bolton at the Counter-Currents blog spotlights H.P. Lovecraft's political leanings in the context of his times, and wisely charts his development from backward looking monarchist to reason seeking socialist-fascist. In retrospect, it's not surprising that Lovecraft came to admire the command economy and civilization building quests of the socialists and fascists. As Bolton notes, the perceived failures of democracy and capitalism loomed large in HPL's day, as did the fear of Soviet communism, and remained unresolved by his death in 1937.

As unpalatable as ideas defended by Lovecraft might be--especially in today's charged and very present day consumed discourse--pieces like these beg the question of whether or not H.P. Lovecraft should be evaluation as a serious political philosopher. Many will be quick to note, quite rightly, that his ideology did not break much new ground. He was not a Marx, Mussolini, or Keynes, but he was forced to respond to all three, as well as many other socio-economic thinkers. More than anything, it seems like Lovecraft's spin on his ideology that was new, and the passion he deployed in defending his ideals.

For Lovecraft, as much as he prided himself on rationalism, it seems passion engendered his strongest views. His juvenile support for aristocracy, legendary Anglophilia, racism, and late life authoritarian inclinations all arose from what he loved and despised most. So, while it may be a stretch to evaluate the political Lovecraft as an original philosopher, there's definitely merit in studying his evolution and arguments, for they reflect the sharpest debates of his era.

-Grim Blogger


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Lecture on M.R. James and The Romance of Scholarship

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

A lecture given by Dr. Edward Bridle of Australia's Newcastle University has surfaced online. In it, Bridle discusses the well noted scholarly atmosphere dear to the heart of most ghost stories by M.R. James. The English weirdscribe's ominous tomes, erudite travelers, and ghastly knowledge are covered in their own right, and compared with other literary creations, in the weird and beyond. Bridle concludes by taking questions about James from the audience. Professorial talks on weird fiction are still not terribly common, despite the high reputation of writers like James, Poe, and Lovecraft, but they are a definite treat to those interested in unraveling the macabre's resonate depths.







-Grim Blogger


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Side Effects: H.P. Lovecraft's "Body Out of Time"

Sunday, June 13, 2010


Dylan Trigg's thoughtful article over at the Side Effects blog deserves the attention of Lovecraftians with a soft spot for "The Shadow Out of Time." In somewhat obscure philosophical terms (at least to those not well schooled in formal philosophic studies), Trigg compares the conflicted self-hood experienced by Nathaniel Wingate Peaslee with the phenomenological conjectures of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, an early twentieth century French thinker. The selection of quotes from both Lovecraft and Merleau-Ponty by Trigg generates a commendable feedback array that illuminates the murkier aspects of consciousness and self-hood in Lovecraft's work. Out of the intelligent static comes a promising angle for dissecting some real unexplored territory nestled in HPL's literary subconscious. This is an example of the critical lens needed to propel Lovecraft studies into truly new, fascinating, and strange directions.

-Grim Blogger


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Pugmire-Joshi Video Interview

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Lovecraftian writer Wilum Pugmire recently interviewed S.T. Joshi in a recorded video posted at his MrWilum channel. In this short, but informative talk, the respected Lovecraft scholar talks with Pugmire about his latest projects: an imminent unabridged edition of the biography, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life, a second Black Wings anthology of Lovecraftian fiction, and several new books of Lovecraft's letters. It's clear that Joshi is balancing a lot of Lovecraftian material, which means a rich flood of it will continue to pour out into the literary world for years to come.



-Grim Blogger


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Paul Charles Smith on Defining the New Weird

Friday, April 30, 2010


Blogger Paul Charles Smith has posted an in-depth discussion about the ambiguous "New Weird"--if there is such a sub-genre--which has risen to the surface the past few years mainly due to the editorial cohesion offered by The New Weird anthology. Smith, like the Vandermeers (Ann and Jeff were the editors of the anthology mentioned), seems to lean toward the idea that the New Weird exists. His article is an extended commentary, chronicling how and why this term has evolved the way it has. To understand what this fairly new concept is believed to be, it would be difficult to find a more comprehensive and intelligent entry than Smith's.

However, like others working with purportedly New Weird materials, Smith cannot totally prove this genre exists, though doing this is probably not his goal. For myself, the jury is still out. Although promoters and students of the New Weird undertake a valuable service by highlighting important authors forcing speculative fiction in new directions, and by rendering scholarly observations on contemporary weird literature, they fall short in divorcing the New Weird from the old.

Again, though, semantic battles over what New Weird actually means is half the issue. Nearly everyone would agree that weird fiction is experiencing a vast explosion in quality works. There are new weird authors and artists, but whether or not their new creations are sufficiently weird enough to be classified as a distinctive genre remains to be seen. That's not to say this couldn't be generally agreed upon at some point. After all, most weird fiction today is recognized as being Gothic literature's distinctive offspring, as well as a niche operator within the nebulous "horror" field.

While questions about a detached New Weird won't be resolved for some time, discussion about it is likely to gain prominence in the coming years. Marketers will continue to use the phrase, and critics will try to demarcate new literary civilizations as foundations for a better understanding of certain writers. Anyone looking to keep up with weird fiction's future is encouraged to check out Mr. Smith's article. It's an easily accessible tool for understanding the New Weird controversy so that individuals can begin focusing their own thoughts on this matter.

-Grim Blogger


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Chris Perridas on Lovecraft's Health

Thursday, April 8, 2010


Before March is out, it would be remiss not to mention this fantastic post about H.P. Lovecraft's health from Chris Perridas' blog--a speculative exercise in attempting to identify the possible roots of his early demise. Yes, another anniversary of HPL's death blurred by on March 15, the unlucky Ides of 1937 that may have been the parting shot in a long line of blows for this man.

Perridas muses on Lovecraft's infamous "nervous breakdown" in 1907, and wonders if it may have been the result of an unknown disease. If so, it would help explain the bizarre state of the Providence writer's health in the three decades he existed after that fateful year. Frequent troubles with cold, bipolar energy fluctuations, and a various digestive issues plagued him. Assuming all of these were not psycho-somatic (after all, the digestive problems proved real and fatal enough), they are well worth investigating in the effort to understand his career.

Lovecraft's life was not a happy one, as is clearly reflected in the worldview left fossilized in his fiction and voluminous letters. But could ill health have been the main cause of his bleak, cosmicist trajectory? Many would say no. They will point to the valid damage inflicted by Lovecraft's environment--most notably his strange, overbearing, and sometimes cruel mother, as well as the lifelong financial siege he weathered as the family fortune wilted.

Still, the involuntary physiological shocks that frequently gripped him may have been the most persistent reminder that he inhabited a frail body in a universe that could do little to offer him relief. The nature of these painful episodes is fairly well understood, but their causes are not. Short of exhuming the old weirdscribe's body, current technology and interest only allows speculation on the origins of Lovecraft's pivotal handicaps. Chris Perridas, however, publishes well thought speculation; ideas that may lead Lovecraft researchers to one day pinpoint his birth as writer and philosopher by demarcating the rise of his bodily downfall.

-Grim Blogger


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Dandies Blog: Unemployment in Arthur Machen's Work

Thursday, February 18, 2010


In the hubbub of other weird fiction developments, I somehow overlooked this excellent post from the Dandies and New Women blog. "Arthur Machen's Horror of Unemployment" is a thought provoking article that illuminates economic horror in the Welsh author's work. Clearly, it's also one that hits close to home in today's post-meltdown order. As blogger Marc Dipaolo notes, Machen himself experienced a grim period of austerity when he was just starting his writing career. This may have contributed to his dour portrayal of joblessness long after his literary star began to rise.

One wonders if the stricken economy will generate new lenses for weird fiction interpretations that wouldn't otherwise be available. The economic imprint on other authors' work may become clearer as the minds of scholars are unable to wrench themselves away from today's crises.

-Grim Blogger


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S.T. Joshi's Website Reanimated

Wednesday, February 10, 2010


S.T. Joshi, arguably weird fiction's most famous and tireless authority, launched a revamped website several weeks ago to help chronicle his ongoing explorations of the genre. Visitors won't find the site clanging with high-tech bells and whistles, but they will find a utilitarian, easily navigable resource on Joshi's scholarship. His past writings are described and listed on several bibliographical pages. Others provide contact information and an autobiography.

Followers of Joshi's scholarship, however, are possibly more interested in what he is up to now. In what will hopefully be the first of many blogs, Mr. Joshi expounds on his forthcoming projects. Among his recent works are several edited volumes of Cthulhu Mythos fiction, an elaborate history of supernatural literature, and an updated two book biography of H.P. Lovecraft called I Am Providence.

Joshi's seemingly boundless energy has long been an asset to the field of weird literature. H.P. Lovecraft might not be treated as seriously as he is today without Joshi's critical eye and advocacy insisting on the importance of Lovecraft's works. Moreover, Joshi occupies a unique niche in the weird aesthetic, a full time position investigating the nuts and bolts of classic and contemporary writers--something rarely found in other spokesmen for the weird, who are often occupied with promoting their own literary careers. He shows no sign of letting up either, and this remodeled website is a welcome addition to his sturdy career of identifying and illuminating the weird's vast topography.

-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft's Missing Manuscript for "The Unnamable" Sold on Ebay?

Wednesday, January 13, 2010


An auction closed on Ebay.com not long ago, seemingly for a good quality manuscript of H.P. Lovecraft's story, "The Unnamable." Although this is a typed version and not a handwritten draft, a rare surfacing of an unknown Lovecraft manuscript from private hands appears to have occurred--though only for a moment. The $2026.00 total the manuscript closed at means it passed into the hands of another collector, as it's unlikely any scholar or university would shell out that much for a single Lovecraft artifact. And that relies on assuming there are a few of those out there, trawling the online markets for rare bits of Lovecraftiana: an unlikely phenomena in of itself.


Still, the (re)appearance of "The Unnamable" manuscript is curious for a few reasons. Many Lovecraft materials--especially his voluminous letters--remain in private hands, hidden from the prying eyes of scholars. More importantly, however, S.T. Joshi listed "The Unnamable" as one of the missing Lovecraft manuscripts in his essay "Textual Problems in Lovecraft" (which made an appearance in Darrell Schweitzer's 2001 collection of scholarly texts, Discovering H.P. Lovecraft). Joshi notes, "The task of restoring the texts of Lovecraft's fiction is in essence simple, thanks to the survival of manuscripts for nearly all of his original tales...Important tales for which no manuscripts exist are...'The Unnamable'" (Page 100). Earlier in the same piece, he records the fact that certain H.P. Lovecraft texts are "notoriously corrupt," with stunning misprints of words and entire passages.

Clearly, the diligent work of S.T. Joshi and other enthusiasts has done much to restore Lovecraft's texts to their intended constructions, even moreso since this essay appeared in 1982, and again in 2001. Still, it would be interesting to know if this "Unnamable" manuscript that exchanged hands on Ebay is one of the fabled lost manuscripts, and, moreover, what textual alterations could be lurking in its old pages.

-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft's Missing Manuscript for "The Unnamable" Sold on Ebay?

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Hypnogoria on the Christmas Ghost Story

Saturday, January 2, 2010


The fascinating Hypnogoria blog has done an exhaustive overview on the traditional Christmas ghost story and its media adaptations, especially on television. Particular attention is rendered to the haunting and wintry works of two weird fiction masters: M.R. James and Sheridan Le Fanu. "Ghost Stories for Christmas" is a veritable exhumation of the weird's public face, seasonally appropriate even as this year's prime holidays are being buried.


It is almost equally as thought provoking when considering what the article doesn't say. The migration of the purely spectral weird onto television is the main place it continues to flourish, securing James and other artists a sort of immortality. This comes well after the classic ghost story peaked under James, then blurred into stranger territory, New Weird motifs, and psychological horror with Robert Aickman and his successors. Today, Reggie Oliver is one of the sole literary exceptions who continues to produce tales resembling the classic ghostly model.

In any case, Hypnogoria's post is a stimulating catalog that touches on weird literature and its expansion into new mediums. A real gem amid the rich and growing community of online scholarship on the outre.

-Grim Blogger


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Hypnogoria on the Christmas Ghost Story

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Hippocampus Press Announces Two Big Titles: Lovecraft, Ligotti

Sunday, August 30, 2009


Hippocampus Press, an instantly recognizable name in today's publishers of weird literature, has announced two big titles for release in 2010. Thomas Ligotti's long awaited book of philosophy The Conspiracy Against the Human Race is due to be published, along with a two volume biography of H.P. Lovecraft entitled I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H.P. Lovecraft. The latter seemingly represents a new unabridged work by S.T. Joshi, an update to his acclaimed H.P. Lovecraft: A Life. Of course, the full list of pending titles on their website lists a number of less earthshaking, but nevertheless high quality books slated for late 2009 and next year.


In the case of Ligotti's Conspiracy, the wait has been a long and somewhat anxious one over the past five years as the treatise changed publishers, tentative dates, and undoubtedly underwent waves of intense editing. During this time, Thomas Ligotti expanded his essay into a book length monument to philosophical pessimism and horror. Today, the virtually finalized version probably bares little resemblance to the rough draft temporarily published on Thomas Ligotti Online in 2007. The finished product will reportedly be a hardcover with an illustrated dust jacket in a print run of about a thousand copies, much like many other Hippocampus tomes.

Both of these mind salivating titles ought to spark a fever of yearning amongst weird fiction readers. Though just a flicker in the distance, 2010 looks to be a stunning year for the dark and unusual side of speculative literature. Hold tight, though, as 2009 may yet hold its own bizarre delights.

-Grim Blogger


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Electronic Version of Collapse IV Now Available

Friday, August 7, 2009


Urbanomic's scholarly and strange journal "Collapse" now has its fourth volume available as a free download. The "Collapse IV: Concept Horror" journal--a two hundred page plus work that might better be described as a book--notably contains a piece by Thomas Ligotti previewing his upcoming book, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race. Besides Ligotti, the journal features contributors and content from a host of names familiar to the realm of weird fiction: H.P. Lovecraft, M.R. James, China Mieville, and Michael Houellebecq.

This is a fat collection of articles all focused on concept horror, an array of ultra-intelligent scholarship bobbing between weird fiction and pure philosophy that cannot be missed by genre aficionados. The articles are interspersed with macabre illustrations and some grisly photographs that only enhance the power of the words. The "Dead Monkeys" photo set appearing next to Thomas Ligotti's words is especially unsettling--and appropriate.

Download the PDF file from this Urbanomic page. Though I lack the background to judge how Urbanomic's publication measures up to other philosophical journals, they have indeed issued a high quality product here. In the realm of horror studies, at least, "Collapse IV" can almost perch above prestigious past publications of weird scholarship like "Studies in Weird Fiction" in terms of sheer quality.

-Grim Blogger


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Electronic Version of Collapse IV Now Available

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Benjamin David Steele on William S. Burroughs, Philip K. Dick, and Thomas Ligotti

Monday, June 1, 2009


Benjamin David Steele's intriguing blog once again mentions some interesting thoughts on Thomas Ligotti, this time by evaluating the impressions left on the author by William S. Burroughs in comparison with similar impressions made on Philip K. Dick. Steele delves into a thought provoking analysis concerning the sharply contrasting responses he sees in Ligotti and Dick to Burrough's literary power. The blogger's article almost makes one think of Burrough's surrealist prose as a sort of disease that's produced two very different immune responses in the minds of the speculative fiction writers in question.

While I think Steele's belief that Ligotti has reached a literary and philosophical "dead end" is disagreeable and premature--especially seeing as how Ligotti's The Conspiracy Against the Human Race isn't released yet, nor is it clear what further projects he may pursue after this publication--there is a good deal of careful observations to mentally digest in this brief post. It's even regrettable these points aren't explored further in a more serious form than an informal blog post. With some elaboration, this is the type of analysis that would do well online or in print to help revive the curiously stifled field of weird scholarship the past few years.

Insightful explorations of weird writers like Ligotti in connection with more "mainstream" literary sources (or semi-separated genres like the science fiction realm Philip K. Dick hails from) is also sorely needed. This would provide good grounds for plenty of new scholarship, and perhaps gain weird literature higher respect in academic circles. In the meantime, it appears we'll all have to content ourselves with occasional shards of wisdom pouring through the blogosphere like this post by Steele.

-Grim Blogger


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Benjamin David Steele on William S. Burroughs, Philip K. Dick, and Thomas Ligotti

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H.P. Lovecraft's Carter Character Based on Poe?

Thursday, April 30, 2009


The second half of an article at Forcesofgeek.com titled "The Dreamquest of Edgar Allan Poe" posits the interesting idea that H.P. Lovecraft's frequent character Randolph Carter may have been a nod to his literary predecessor. A number of Carter's Poe-like aspects are examined by the author, with a noticeably humorous and bizarre turn (the blogger whimsically claims Lovecraft may have been magically divining supernatural details of Poe's life via dream). This gives the article itself more than a little fictional flair.

Still, the notion that Carter might have been Poe derived seems original and might be worth exploring in a serious study. The blog entry's fictional take would also make quite the story if adeptly written or even adapted to comic form. This is the sort of thinking about Lovecraft that bursts out with brilliant potential, and seemingly just waits for transmission to the right minds.

-Grim Blogger


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H.P. Lovecraft's Carter Character Based on Poe?

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