HP Lovecraft - Classic Or Dud?

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Yes, people really latched onto Cthulhu. He's such a likeable Old One. I was introduced to Lovecraft by the Call of Cthulhu role-playing game. Where you had a character for a while, then they slowly went insane and you lost control of them. Or they died a horrible death quickly. Fun game!

Christopher (Christopher), Thursday, 6 February 2003 15:03 (twenty-three years ago)

He's buried about a half-mile away from where I live now.. off Blackistone Boulevard in Providence, Rhode Island. he's one of the most famous Rhode Islanders (besides the pirates), & lots of his stories are set in College Hill and around the city. fans put up a tombstone w/the inscription "I AM PROVIDENCE".

daria g, Thursday, 6 February 2003 16:18 (twenty-three years ago)

there was a great BBC radio documentary about him called "Man of Providence", which did end by claiming that he was Providence.

all this talk of Lovecraft makes me want to go up to Vermont on my next US trip.

DV (dirtyvicar), Thursday, 6 February 2003 16:23 (twenty-three years ago)

The Shadow Over Innsmouth is so scary... when he is being chased through the town by THEM... brrrrr!

DV (dirtyvicar), Thursday, 6 February 2003 17:36 (twenty-three years ago)

>he Shadow Over Innsmouth is so scary... when he is being chased through the town by THEM... brrrrr!

Actually the true horror is when he learns.... he is one of THEM!

fletrejet, Thursday, 6 February 2003 17:48 (twenty-three years ago)

Hey!

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Thursday, 6 February 2003 19:34 (twenty-three years ago)

daria g: wow a fellow Rhode Islander...


I picked up one of the collections when I was in high school and absolutely loved it.

"Mountains of Madness" = Totally awesome!

Jonathan Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:18 (twenty-three years ago)

Specifically, the description of the terrible landscapes, setting the mood.

Jonathan Williams (ex machina), Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:19 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah no spoilers - Starry will be straight on this thread when she gets into work tomorrow and she's only read Dagon.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:20 (twenty-three years ago)

I liked clark Ashton Smith's books much, much better. I liked michael Moorcock's comment re H P Lovecraft - his books were effective because his writing was so bad that you could imagine all the horrors better than he could!!

Pashmina (Pashmina), Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:24 (twenty-three years ago)

You only want to read the word "squamous" so often, is my view.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:35 (twenty-three years ago)

I apologize for the "spoilers", the mods may delete the post.

Clark Ashton Smith - He was a much better writer in the traditional sense than HPL, but he didn't have the ideas that Lovecraft had. Still, "The City of the Singing Flame" and "The Master of the Asteroid" are classic.

fletrejet, Thursday, 6 February 2003 20:40 (twenty-three years ago)

the thing to remember about Lovecraft stories is the twist ending is only a twist to the narrator. Although the spoiled one above is just great for its IA! IA! ness.

what do people think of the "Call Of Cthulhu" roleplaying game?

DV (dirtyvicar), Thursday, 6 February 2003 21:04 (twenty-three years ago)

I enjoyed the game. My first character was a hard-headed private eye, very Spade/Marlowe, who thought it was all bollocks. He went insane almost immediately. My second was a twisted middle-aged doctor with social aspirations who was obsessed with communicating with his dead wife. He ended up joining the evil cult, because it was full of the wealthiest and most respectable people in town. The DM was very annoyed, as these people were no help at all in the adventures, but I found them fascinating as character play.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Thursday, 6 February 2003 21:11 (twenty-three years ago)

The game ruled -- very good way to kill time in 1990.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 6 February 2003 21:41 (twenty-three years ago)

My first character was an Indiana Jones clone. He went insane when he went too deep into a tomb.. good times.

Christopher (Christopher), Thursday, 6 February 2003 21:44 (twenty-three years ago)

s'funny i had a hankering and was googling to see if i could find any cheap rulebooks and stuff for the roleplaying game of this today.

i'd certainly go for classicness. The case of charles dexter ward is grateness. At the mountains of madness is pretty good and they do a great roleplaying one based on that too but i don't think they have one based on charles dexter ward.

I like reading his short stories and stuff late at night when i'm too tired to decipher poe, not that' they're really grately similar i guess. except for the whole slow build, terror brimming at the seams kind of thing.

jeffrey (Danny), Thursday, 6 February 2003 22:42 (twenty-three years ago)

HP Lovecraft used to live in Providence RI and his house is gone but there are still these old spooky stone steps in what used to be his front yard, leading up into.... nothing!

the crawling chaos Nyarlathotep (tracerhand), Thursday, 6 February 2003 22:54 (twenty-three years ago)

yeah i was going to mention that he was a racist, he lived out in the country 'cause he hated cities 'cause they were full of black people & foreigners.

duane (doorag), Friday, 7 February 2003 00:05 (twenty-three years ago)

his house was right off Benefit Street, near Prospect Park; Providence at that time was chock-a-block with foreigners and crazies of every persuasion since it was the only place guaranteeing absolute religious freedom - not saying i don't believe you, dz

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Friday, 7 February 2003 01:03 (twenty-three years ago)

oh ok i don't even remember where i got that "fact" from

duane, Friday, 7 February 2003 01:21 (twenty-three years ago)

"Lovecraft met Sonia Haft Greene, a Russian Jew seven years his senior, shortly thereafter at a writers convention and they married in 1924. As THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FANTASY puts it, '...the marriage lasted only until 1926, breaking up largely because HPL disliked sex; the fact that she was Jewish and he was prone to antisemitic rants cannot have helped.' After two years of married life in New York City (which he abhorred and where he became even more intolerantly racist) he returned to his beloved Providence."

www.darkecho.com/darkecho/horroronline/lovecraft.html

in googling that i found a drinking game! maybe Sarah can add to it?

...uses more than one adjective in a row, i.e.: "Molded by the dead brain of a hybrid nightmare, would not such a vaporous terror constitute in all loathsome truth the exquisitely, the shriekingly unnamable?" ("The Unnamable")

...uses a purposely vague description. (i.e. "unspeakable horror")

...refers to an other-worldy location. (i.e., Sarnath, Kadath in the Cold Waste, and the like. "The Dream-Quest of the Unknown Kadath" will put you under the table easily.)

...refers to an other-worldy entity by proper name. (Remember, Cthulhu and Nyarlathotep are proper names of single entities, but Mi-Go and shoggoth are not; they are types of entities.)

...states anything racist, sexist, fascist, or generally non-PC. This rule makes "The Horror at Red Hook" particularly nasty to get through. Don't debate too much about what is racist or sexist, though... When in doubt, drink.

...uses the "British" spelling of any word, such as "colour" or "favour".

...any time a character winds up at a temple or church.

...any time a "forbidden" book is mentioned in the story. This includes De Vermis Mysteris, Unaussprechlichen Kulten, and, of course, The Necronomicon, among others.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Friday, 7 February 2003 01:34 (twenty-three years ago)

the BBC documentary I heard asserted that Greene and Lovecraft separated amicably. It also suggested that a lot of his racism was based on ignorance and collapsed when confronted with reality - eg he was rabidly antisemitic but still married a Jewish woman.

the funniest bit in the documentary is the letter Lovecraft wrote before going to volunteer for the first world war ("The blood of the fjords flows through me!") and then the letter he wrote after being classed as permanently unfit for any military service.

DV (dirtyvicar), Friday, 7 February 2003 13:21 (twenty-three years ago)

haha m.moorcock dissing the writing skills of others!!

mark s (mark s), Friday, 7 February 2003 13:24 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm thinking about the misogyny thing... are there enough Lovecraft stories with women in them to prove this? Just because Asenath Waite is an evil sorceress doesn't necessarily mean that HP hated all women.

or does it?

DV (dirtyvicar), Friday, 7 February 2003 15:08 (twenty-three years ago)

Umm, spoilers and stuff

DV: But Asenath wasn't really Asenath, her father(?) exchanged minds with her. He found out that a female brain was somehow inferior to a male one, and that is why he went about seducing Edward Derby in order to mind-switch with him. Implying, of course, that women were dumb.

As pointed out, in person Lovecraft was said by all to be a nice and well-manned and charming individual. And later in life he dropped most/all of his reactionary beliefs and even began to lean toward socialist politics. So his racism/sexism/anglophilia was mostly just protracted adolescent nonsense.

fletrejet, Friday, 7 February 2003 15:28 (twenty-three years ago)

This stuff isn't funny when you dated a guy who actually believed it was true, you know.

Or maybe that makes it more funny??

Ally (mlescaut), Friday, 7 February 2003 17:35 (twenty-three years ago)

All the more funny, I'm thinking.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 7 February 2003 17:37 (twenty-three years ago)

An interesting what-if -- had Lovecraft survived and continued to write fiction in the wake of World War II, what would his stories have been like? Post Hitler and post A-bomb, hrm...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 7 February 2003 17:39 (twenty-three years ago)

numerous people have combined Lovecraftian themes with the Nazis... given Himmler's interests in the occult it's not much of a leap to imagine the Nazis as servants of The Eater Of Souls.

DV (dirtyvicar), Friday, 7 February 2003 17:41 (twenty-three years ago)

I usedta be friends with people that were into the whole lovecraft occult thing, or maybe just the WHOLE occult thing. They usedta sit and discuss the occult points of his novels interspersing this with monty python quotes now THAT is scary.

Jeffrey (Danny), Friday, 7 February 2003 17:44 (twenty-three years ago)

But did they ACTUALLY BELIEVE THE SHIT WAS REAL? I mean, who on earth thinks this is real? I mean, he was honestly paranoid about the coming of Cthulhu. I was kept up all night on at least three occasions DISCUSSING this.

This person also stayed up all night on two occasions freaking about the implications of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in relation to whether or not he had any of the massacrists personality traits and if it made him a terrible person. The last episode of Twin Peaks also set him off in similar fashion about "dirty" versus "clean" and various personality traits he was certain he shared with Windom Earle. So maybe the whole Cthulhu thing was relative to a bigger issue than HP Lovecraft.

In retrospect, it implies more about my sanity than his that I put up with it, but regardless it was obviously the workings of a completely unhinged mind. Monty Python quotes would've been the saving grace of nonseriousness.

Ally (mlescaut), Friday, 7 February 2003 18:41 (twenty-three years ago)

>But did they ACTUALLY BELIEVE THE SHIT WAS REAL? I mean, who on
> earth thinks this is real?

Occultists will, generally, believe anything they want to believe in.
The Necronomicon is no more fake than any other "real" occult book of forbiden knowledge.

Ned: If Lovecraft survived, I believe he would have continued his trend of writing more science-fictiony type stuff. He became disenchanted with his more occult/magical stuff, which he refered to as "Yog-Sothothery".


fletrejet, Friday, 7 February 2003 18:55 (twenty-three years ago)

I got a hummer about five feet from his grave once.

The stories are great, also; the best editions are the hardbacks put out by Arkham House. They also published his letters, which are often quite interesting--to the likes of R.E. Howard etc.

Ian Johnson, Friday, 7 February 2003 19:54 (twenty-three years ago)

Ned: If Lovecraft survived, I believe he would have continued his trend of writing more science-fictiony type stuff. He became disenchanted with his more occult/magical stuff, which he refered to as "Yog-Sothothery".

Makes sense. "At the Mountains of Madness" certainly showed the way (and was plenty chilling enough without that sheer freakout at the end, a little bit of the ol' Yog there).

Yeeps, Ally.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 7 February 2003 21:15 (twenty-three years ago)

anyone ever read "The Walls Of Eryx"? it's set on Venus and while still being a scary horrore story does not have any Cthulhu Mythosy elements.

DV (dirtyvicar), Friday, 7 February 2003 21:35 (twenty-three years ago)

Ned knows exactly whom I'm talking about too. Anyone who met him (ie anyone who had the misfortune of being at the first NYC FAP for example) probably finds this hysterical!

I know nothing of Lovecraft's works besides this, of course. He was referred to as sort of a scientist by the ex, imagine my surprise to read this thread.

Ally (mlescaut), Saturday, 8 February 2003 02:51 (twenty-three years ago)

I disagree that his Cthulhu mythos stories were his best.
They were great, to be sure, but some of them were
perfunctory (probably in his later years). In my mind
his best stories were: Pickman's Model, Cool Air, and
The Colour Out Of Space, and, ESPECIALLY the Rats In The
Walls. RITW definitely needs it's punchline, I think it
would be utterly spoiled if you knew what happened at the
end...

Actually though, I think most of Lovecraft's stories are
good. I never read any of the novels. And I also disagree
that he was a bad/good author; sure his language was
sensationalistic and overblow, but it still has a great
flow to it. And he is archaic but the first books I
ever read were Edgar Rice Burroughs and Lang's Coloured
Fairy Tale series, so I think I've always been very
comfortable with that type of language.

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Saturday, 8 February 2003 19:23 (twenty-three years ago)

one month passes...
I think part of his brilliance is the way that he employs obscure (/uses of) words (gambrel, cyclopean) and repetition to turn up the tension, when by all reason it shouldn't work.

I understand these trends intensified as his life continued. One of his last manuscripts was destroyed except for a single page, and on that page only one sentence appears in full:

"It was with a terrible and dawning horror that I realised that something unsmurfy had taken place."

Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Sunday, 9 March 2003 22:43 (twenty-three years ago)

When he's doing creepy/gothic stuff, he's classic. When he's doing rambling, interminable Dunsany riffs, he's dud.

ChristineSH (chrissie1068), Sunday, 9 March 2003 23:31 (twenty-three years ago)

ten months pass...
RE-VIVE

omg, Thursday, 22 January 2004 00:55 (twenty-two years ago)

Yog-sothoth, our friend.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 22 January 2004 00:59 (twenty-two years ago)

Hmm. I'm divided on Lovecraft. I read a lot of the stories in my teens and they were good and addictive, as good horror/fantasy should be. You kept reading in the hope you would discover more
forbidden secrets about his world. But what did it all amount to? i'm not sure....i'll write more soon possibly

pete s, Thursday, 22 January 2004 01:31 (twenty-two years ago)

The French biography about him has some interesting stuff. Compares his fear of sex to his objects of horror, talks about xenophobia and paranoia in his stories vs. his real life etc.

95% of his horror-type writing is beyond classic, especially because the stilted writing makes it sound like it's actual lost antique blasphemies that have been hidden in Stygian tombs for eons beyond count. His Dunsany stuff is crap, "Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath" is the one thing by him I could never get thru. He has some poetry too which is awful, if you can find it. Have never read his political essays but those are probably pretty un-PC and not really worth reading unless you are ultra-completist.

sucka (sucka), Thursday, 22 January 2004 04:44 (twenty-two years ago)

Oh yeah and destroy everything filed under his name which is actually junky stuff written by other people and revised by him/used his settings/were based on his notes after he died.

sucka (sucka), Thursday, 22 January 2004 04:46 (twenty-two years ago)

one year passes...
The Wall Street Journal celebrates. (With some help from the National Review.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 15 March 2005 16:11 (twenty-one years ago)

i drew a picture of CTHULU today in english class

latebloomer: damn cheapskate satanists (latebloomer), Tuesday, 15 March 2005 16:20 (twenty-one years ago)

I have a soft spot for "The Dreams In The Witch House"

Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 15 March 2005 17:06 (twenty-one years ago)

can be weirdly racist and prudish, but undisputably classsick. he casts a loooooooong shadow over horror/sci-fi (not to mention the occult). See also: RW Chambers "The King in Yellow".

Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 15 March 2005 17:23 (twenty-one years ago)

Interesting article that riled me up.

"As with so much genre fiction, Lovecraft's oeuvre isn't for everyone."

'Look at him, he's too imaginative.' Fuck you, no one's OEUVRE is for everyone. Lovecraft is in a direct line from Nathaniel Hawthorne, EA Poe, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman to Thomas Pynchon, Kathy Acker, and Stephen King. But I guess the Wall Street Journal writing about literature is like the Wall Street Journal writing about music.

Carl Solomon, Tuesday, 15 March 2005 17:53 (twenty-one years ago)

On a random whim, I started reading the Illuminatus! trilogy after skipping it all my life and there’s a surprisingly amount of Lovecraft in it. He must have been having a moment in the mid-70s

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Thursday, 22 October 2020 21:50 (five years ago)

in the early-mid 70s Ballantine published almost all of Lovecraft's fiction in paperbacks ... prior to that I think most of it was available only in pricey Arkham House editions

Brad C., Thursday, 22 October 2020 22:07 (five years ago)

I think my first ever was this paperback:

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51VdU2lrV0L._SX373_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 22 October 2020 22:10 (five years ago)

A friend of mine who has a kid says that Cthulhu is now in the Beano, which is something.

The New Dirty Vicar, Friday, 23 October 2020 22:27 (five years ago)

Can never wrap my head around kawaii + Lovecraftian grotesque
https://imgur.com/gallery/L76LU

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 28 October 2020 18:25 (five years ago)

three weeks pass...

this SCP short, SCP Overlord, (i couldn't find an SCP thread on ilx) is a v good mix of tactical warfare, videocam supernatural perception (think Ringu), and modernised, new england lovecraft:

trailer here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrZUj1fNQL8

Fizzles, Monday, 23 November 2020 16:34 (five years ago)

two months pass...

https://www.wired.com/story/scientists-discover-strange-creatures-under-a-half-mile-of-ice/

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 17 February 2021 01:16 (five years ago)

two years pass...

Whisperer in Darkness was dope, even though I felt at times the narrator had to be the dumbest smart person in the history of man

Cthulhu Diamond Phillips (Neanderthal), Saturday, 29 April 2023 05:45 (three years ago)

"Yaddith would be a dead world dominated by triumphant bholes"
"Below him the ground was festering with gigantic bholes; and even as he looked, one reared up"
"There were hideous struggles with the bleached, viscous bholes"

OH COME ON

Cthulhu Diamond Phillips (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 3 May 2023 01:51 (three years ago)

Dud.

meat and two vdgg (emsworth), Wednesday, 3 May 2023 03:12 (three years ago)

I always thought that story was terribly padded, badly structured and he kind of goes overboard to keep talling you how old the place is, but it's got some cool stuff. Shadow Over Innsmouth will probably always be my favorite.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 3 May 2023 21:30 (three years ago)

I have a collection of other writers (Ramsey Campbell, Gaiman, etc.) expanding on the Innsmouth mythos... it's not all great but it's pretty fun. Lovecraft was known for encouraging other writers in this kind of shared world-building

Andy the Grasshopper, Wednesday, 3 May 2023 21:45 (three years ago)

N.K. Jemisin wrote a short story (expanded into 2 books) specifically to tackle Lovecraft's racism https://www.tor.com/2016/09/28/the-city-born-great/

She is explicitly not a fan while Victor LaValle takes a more - not sympathetic but maybe more steeped in some level of appreciation to Lovecraft in The Ballad of Black Tom a response to The Horror at Red Hook

H in Addis, Thursday, 4 May 2023 04:02 (three years ago)

read John Langan's The Fisherman novel and Wide Carnivorous Sky collection late last year, they were some of the better Lovecraftian things I've read that aren't implicitly critical takes on the Lovecraft idea (like The Ballad of Black Tom and Lovecraft Country, I bailed on NK Jemisin's first Great Cities book about a quarter of the way in).

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 4 May 2023 04:39 (three years ago)

I really wanted to like The City We Became, but I just couldn't.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Thursday, 4 May 2023 04:40 (three years ago)

I've read The Ballad of Black Tom and The Fisherman and liked both a lot. Keep meaning to read more by LaValle. I loved Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy but read a description of the city book and winced so hard I thought I felt the skin on the back of my head split.

I also read Lovecraft Country and liked it a lot. The series was pretty disappointing, though, and the new sequel book, The Destroyer of Worlds, was kinda weak. I read it, but I can't even remember any of it now.

but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 5 May 2023 23:32 (three years ago)

Yeah, agreed re: the Lovecraft sequel as unmemorable. Was looking forward to the Atticus divergence, book vs. show, and the sequel book gave him short shrift.

the body of a spider... (scampering alpaca), Saturday, 6 May 2023 00:37 (three years ago)

Disappointing, I didn't even know there was a sequel.

papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 6 May 2023 01:11 (three years ago)

one year passes...

I had never read "Medusa's Coil" before - that ending is maybe the most jaw-dropping thing I've ever read in fiction.

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 30 May 2024 19:18 (two years ago)

Color out of Space is on TV tonight (uk Freeview channel 32). starring... Nicholas Cage...

koogs, Saturday, 1 June 2024 19:25 (two years ago)

one month passes...

I had never read "Medusa's Coil" before - that ending is maybe the most jaw-dropping thing I've ever read in fiction.

Having just spent a commute reading "Medusa's Coil" to experience this remarkable ending, I feel like I need to clarify for future thread-readers that it is not jaw-dropping in a good way

I'm plenty compelled by the "cosmic horror" but find it weird that anyone is ever able to see that as distinct from the "xenophobic tropes" and social views and whatnot. They're kinda the same thing: the image of an Anglo-Saxon racial/intellectual aristocracy that is the lone fleeting outcropping of civilization amid an ocean of ancient primitivism, savagery, and dark irrationality that threatens always to engulf it. Still some dope stories and all, but it's not like the worldview is some incidental artifact, right?

ን (nabisco), Thursday, 25 July 2024 01:54 (one year ago)

It is absolutely intertwined. I guess for me Lovecraft's racism is so clearly pathetic, the product of isolation and a desperate need to be thought of and think of himself of as some sort of super genius, that it becomes somewhat comical and I marvel at how he came up with this distinctive, bizarre style and mythos based on these deeply stupid premises.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 25 July 2024 08:49 (one year ago)

Yeah, there is something about that quality that makes it feel weirdly less odious in the fiction -- you get narrators so floridly revolted by a peasant's unrefined skull shape that you're just like hahaha, wait till you see the Scary Geometry

ን (nabisco), Thursday, 25 July 2024 15:43 (one year ago)


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