HP Lovecraft

Good point. Mods, please amend my post to read “Lovecraft’s putative grave”. Thank you.

Why, thankee, kind sir.

Actually, I had planned to wear a costume.

You ain’t got a hair if you don’t go there after dark on the 31st. Not a single one, I tellz ya! :D:D

I’m putting the costume together over a period of years. :smiley:

Seriously, If I had had time, I’d have made an Innsmouth/Deep One costume if I could.

And there’s always The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen.

The Outsider is an old favorite of mine, I read it as a kid and it made an impression. And another vote for The Colour out of Space being one of his best.

Definitely one of HPL’s influences.

There’s always this:

[moderating]
Moved thread from “Boo!” to Cafe Society so discussion can continue when the Boo! forum closes later today.
[/moderating]

Honestly, this isn’t a very accurate description of most of Lovecraft’s stories. At least, not his major ones. In addition to the description quoted by BrainGlutton, “At the Mountains of Madness” includes a clinical autopsy of one of the Elder Things that describes the creature in minute details - it takes about two pages to get through the whole description. Cthulhu, in his titular story, doesn’t get as much detail, but there’s still some pretty solid imagery describing him. “The Colour Out of Space,” despite having his most abstract monster, gives a good account of what the monster looked like. Likewise for “Pickman’s Model,” “Rats in the Walls” (no actual monster, but he doesn’t pull his punches on the shocking reveal at the end), “Dreams in the Witchhouse,” and “The Shadow Out of Time,” just going off the top of my head. Lovecraft makes a lot of noise about ideas or sights that the human mind can’t comprehend, but that never much stopped him from going on to described those ideas or sights in vivid detail.

The Whisperer in Darkness! That’s my fav.
(Whoops, Dunwich Horror, oh well)

I can’t wait until I get my Kindle. I look forward to diving back into his works, and so many more. Imagine, a book-sized item that holds many, many books that can called up instantly! My teenaged self can’t believe the really modern world his adult self lives in.

Link to some of his works from Project Gutenberg.
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/search.html/?format=html&default_prefix=all&sort_order=downloads&query=lovecraft

AUGH!!!
Why did i look???
Slide #12 had me climbing over the back of the couch again.
:smiley:

ATMOM also shows HPL’s talent for making a scary story even scarier by telling it indirectly. You know, when you read that account based on notes and transmissions and what is found in the camp, that what happened to the that missing sub-expedition was that some of the Elder Things they found were only hibernating, woke up, and killed all the humans and dogs, and buried those of their own who were too damaged to be revived. But it’s more chilling [snerk] than if he had simply described/narrated all that.

Slightly worse than that:

The Old Ones dissected some of the men and dogs, just as the men had dissected some of them. ISTR there were even some hints that the Old Ones dissected the men while they were still alive.

Why has it taken me so long to read The Shadow Over Innsmouth? I like it a lot. It’s got creeping dread and heart-pounding action. But I’m going to be a bit of a grump and say that I wish it had been overtly written as a journal. Presenting it as a single narrative being written immediately before the protagonist is determined to return to Innsmouth makes the horror he describes and his revulsion at the natives, etc., really jarringly contrast with his final decision to go with his ancestral tendencies. Making it individual journal entries over time would make more sense.

I heard an audio play version of The Statement of Randloph Carter that was really effective. Brrr. And Pickman’s Model might be the best story to introduce someone to Lovecraft - short and sweet, and it works on ya, long after you’re done reading.

You know what’s a lot of fun? Read Pickman’s Model right before you ride the Green line through Boston, then walk through the North End. Especially late at night - I swear I’ve seen a ghoul asking for spare change.

I keep imagining a writer I call H.P. Likecraft. He’s written:

*The Colorado Space

The Stumbler in Darkness

Pac-Man’s Model*

The last one is a horror story about the Happy Face.

(Call of Cthulhu has been done to death. There’s no way I could include a parody title.)

My review without before the movie even exists: “The most squamous, rugose, cyclopean movie of the year!”

Ghoul story, bro.