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H.P. Lovecraft: Complete and Unabridged

Sep 1, 2007
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Some of you may be scratching your heads at this point. "Alex," you ask, "why are you posting a review of a work of fiction in the product reviews section of a magic site? Are you just being pushy and preachy with your opinions again? Is there a point to this? Have you finally drunk yourself stupid?"

In order, to shake things up, yes and no, yes, and not yet.

I post this here because Lovecraft is on my list for essential reading when it comes to learning how to tell a really good story. Let me illustrate. The following is the first paragraph from the story, "Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family" published in 1921 and then again in 1924.


Life is a hideous thing, and from the background behind what we know of it peer daemoniacal hints of truth which make it sometimes a thousandfold more hideous. Science, already oppressive with its shocking revelations, will perhaps be the ultimate exterminator of our human species - if separate species we be - for its reserve of unguessed horrors could never be borne by mortal brains if loosed upon the world. If we knew what we are, we should do as Sir Arthur Jermyn did; and Atrhur Jermyn soaked himseldf in oil and set fire to his clothing one night. No one placed the charred fragments in an urn or set a memorial to him who had been; for certain papers and certain boxed object were found, which made men wish to forget. Some who knew him do not admit that he ever existed.

Have you ever read that story? If you haven't, are you curious and want to read it now? That's the deft touch of a storyteller.

The compilation I describe in this review is the complete collected works of Lovecraft through his career. It's part of a series from Barnes & Noble to collect classic and modern literature for posterity. The stories are printed in their original format and in chronological order of publishing.

Lovecraft was an author who was ahead of his time. In the words of Neil Gaiman, Lovecraft presented us with a worldview. With an "impossibly inhospitable universe in which... you are screwed." He deftly wove folklore with science while at the same time creating a setting of horror that alternated with the secluded, Gothic motifs such as the cursed family blood line and the mind-blowing scope of cosmic horror to which there are few parallels in fiction today.

To aid in this construction of world view, Lovecraft created numerous recurring elements to his world, such as the New England towns of Arkham, Innsmouth, and Dunwich. Books such as the dreaded Necronomicon made frequent and repeated appearances alongside such volumes as the Pnakotic Manuscripts. And there were also recurring characters such as the enigmatic Randolph Carter.

Lovecraft is the most well-known for his Cthulhu Mythos, named posthumously by August Derleth. These were the stories that spoke of godlike beings from beyond the stars including Cthulhu, Azathoth, Yog-Sothoth and Nyarlathotep. It was from these works that the cosmic horror was derived. Lovecraft also created a number of stories involving an alternate reality based on the collective dreams of man, known to critics as his Dream Cycle.

The lesson to be learned here for magicians is in the creation of a believable story and one that connects with others through a unifying mythos. Especially to those who want to learn bizarre magic, this skill is essential. The hook, pacing, and climax are of supreme importance. And despite Lovecraft's obvious flaws as a writer (his use of archaic language, for example), his narrative abilities and the consistency of the world he had created have actually led some to believe that he was receiving visions of how the universe truly was. You read that righ! There are people out there who actually believe in Cthulhu!

The book costs $13 American and has over a thousand pages and includes an essay by Lovecraft titled "Supernatural Horror in Literature" along with a few early drafts. That's a bargain! So what are you waiting for? Stop reading this review and go out and buy the bloody thing!

Ia! Ia! Cthulhu fhtaghn!
 
Nov 16, 2008
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In the not to distant future
great post. Lovecraft's work is definately classic. Good to know that people still have good taste in books. On another note, I'm assuming you know about bal-sagoth and their 6 albums which contain his work.
 
May 13, 2008
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St Albans, UK
Nice post. I loved reading the Re-Animator and another brilliant short story about a cannibal, can't remember the name unfortunately.

I've got "Dagon: And Other Macabre Tales by H P Lovecraft" which i still haven't read so this is a nice reminder.
 
Sep 1, 2007
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Good to know that people still have good taste in books.

Some of us. I'm half-expecting someone to skip over the review proper and ask if this Lovecraft guy has any DVDs out or if he's planning to join the Theory 11 artists.

On another note, I'm assuming you know about bal-sagoth and their 6 albums which contain his work.

One of my favorite bands.
 
Sep 1, 2007
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Lovecraft sucks! Borges all the way. Argentinian writers are so much cooler anyway.
 
Aug 10, 2008
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In a rock concert
gosh, I kinda remember that name from somewhere!!! I have read a lot of books ( most of them poetry, spanish poetry to be sincere) But I dont remember reading a book from him.... mmmm, maybe somebody recommended it to me....

Thanks for the review steer, Ill grab a book from him next time i am at the library
 
Sep 1, 2007
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gosh, I kinda remember that name from somewhere!!! I have read a lot of books ( most of them poetry, spanish poetry to be sincere) But I dont remember reading a book from him.... mmmm, maybe somebody recommend it to me....

Thanks for the review steer, Ill grab a book from him next time i am at the library

Seriously though, do yourself a favor and get Collected Fictions by Jorge Luis Borges. Owns Lovecrap any day. Latin American surrealism is so much better.
 
Aug 10, 2008
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In a rock concert
Seriously though, do yourself a favor and get Collected Fictions by Jorge Luis Borges. Owns Lovecrap any day. Latin American surrealism is so much better.

Ill look into it, Most of the books that I have readed ( or poems) where from guys like gustavo adolfo becker and Octavio Paz, nice things....

I kinda remember that name too....Borges.....

good stuff:p
 
Sep 1, 2007
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Sorry, but it's just straight-up overrated to a point of being cliche. Lovecraft is whatever, but Borges is a true artist.

Lovecraft's imitators and the witless fans have made it a cliche. But the Golden Age of the pulps is an important period in American literature. Sometimes things are popular for a reason other than having Jessica Alba in the credits. We must look to the source before the concept became a cliche to appreciate its value.

To tell a horror fan not to read Lovecraft is like telling a fantasy fan that they shouldn't read Robert E. Howard.
 
Sep 1, 2007
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Lovecraft's imitators and the witless fans have made it a cliche. But the Golden Age of the pulps is an important period in American literature. Sometimes things are popular for a reason other than having Jessica Alba in the credits. We must look to the source before the concept became a cliche to appreciate its value.

To tell a horror fan not to read Lovecraft is like telling a fantasy fan that they shouldn't read Robert E. Howard.

I don't like Robert E. Howard either. I like Nabokov. And Flannery O'Connor.
 
Nov 15, 2007
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Raleigh, NC
Loved the original post. Already own over half of Lovecrafts books so I won't be buying the compliation, just buying the ones I don't have.

As for the debate of authors.

Borges is a great author, my main problem is he breaks rule number 17.

Omit Needless Words.

Flannery O'Connor is one of the best American short story writers to ever live. :)

Rober E. Howard, though not a personal fan, have nothing against him.

I have yet to read Nabokov, but will be buying one of his books this afternoon.

So here is my two cents, Cormac McCarthy as a great American author. For those who do not know, he wrote No Country for Old Men (book was so much better than the movie) and The Road, which is a phenominal book.

-Rik

-Rik
 
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Sep 1, 2007
1,699
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Loved the original post. Already own over half of Lovecrafts books so I won't be buying the compliation, just buying the ones I don't have.

As for the debate of authors.

Borges is a great author, my main problem is he breaks rule number 17.

Omit Needless Words.

Flannery O'Connor is one of the best American short story writers to ever live. :)

Rober E. Howard, though not a personal fan, have nothing against him.

I have yet to read Nabokov, but will be buying one of his books this afternoon.

So here is my two cents, Cormac McCarthy as a great American author. For those who do not know, he wrote No Country for Old Men (book was so much better than the movie) and The Road, which is a phenominal book.

-Rik

-Rik

Dude, have you read "The South?" That's about as tight a story as it gets...
 
Feb 27, 2008
2,342
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Grand prairie TX
Loved the original post. Already own over half of Lovecrafts books so I won't be buying the compliation, just buying the ones I don't have.

As for the debate of authors.

Borges is a great author, my main problem is he breaks rule number 17.

Omit Needless Words.

Flannery O'Connor is one of the best American short story writers to ever live. :)

Rober E. Howard, though not a personal fan, have nothing against him.

I have yet to read Nabokov, but will be buying one of his books this afternoon.

So here is my two cents, Cormac McCarthy as a great American author. For those who do not know, he wrote No Country for Old Men (book was so much better than the movie) and The Road, which is a phenominal book.

-Rik

-Rik

No Country for Old Men i thought was easily the best Coen work (i'm no huge fan of theirs ), until the last quarter, when the choice (in the book?) to exclude us from so crucial a development as the death of the protagonist completely baffled me. To my mind it could hardly have hurt the film more if they had simply chosen not to shoot the ending and left it unfinished - emotionally the effect was the same. I wasn't even sure he was dead at first. Maddening, because otherwise i would have agreed the film was a pulp classic.
yours in film-ophilia

F.M.
 
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Sep 1, 2007
1,699
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No Country for Old Men i thought was easily the best Coen work (i'm no huge fan of theirs ), until the last quarter, when the choice (in the book?) to exclude us from so crucial a development as the death of the protagonist completely baffled me. To my mind it could hardly have hurt the film more if they had simply chosen not to shoot the ending and left it unfinished - emotionally the effect was the same. I wasn't even sure he was dead at first. Maddening, because otherwise i would have agreed the film was a pulp classic.
yours in film-ophilia

F.M.

If you pay attention, you see that they left nothing out.
 
Sep 1, 2007
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Well, I do make quite an effort not to be.

It's just as well. The League of True Metal Warriors are very selective.

If you pay attention, you see that they left nothing out.

Which worked for and against the movie. Overall, I liked No Country..., but a book is a book and a movie is a movie, and some things just don't translate very well between the two.
 
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