stephengrant Posted July 4, 2005 Report Share Posted July 4, 2005 Any fans? Was a big reader many years back; it's hard going, but in true Tolkein style the quality and depth of the world he paints far outweighs the clumsiness of the writing.Recommend 'At the Mountains of Madness' as a starting point if you want a flavour to the range of his writing, or 'The case of Charles Dexter Ward' if you want a fast-track to his better work (IMHO). Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Obskua Posted July 10, 2005 Report Share Posted July 10, 2005 Definitely a fan - bought my first HPL on honeymoon (!) in 1973, and carried on from there. Highly recommended for a true atmospheric horror feel, without the gratuitous 'slasher' approach of some modern writers - and absolutely no sex ! (Not that I am against this, you understand, but I feel it breaks the mood of so much horror and sci-fi when the 'love interest' is introduced). Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kats Posted July 13, 2005 Report Share Posted July 13, 2005 Yes, yes, another fan here. In fact, I've just bought two of the Penguin Classics editions of his collected stories. (The third one was out of print - will have to go elsewhere) The Case of Charles Dexter Ward is fantastic. At The Mountains of Madness I found intriguing and occasionally frustrating. What's sparked off my renewed interest was seeing a special edition (Voyager Classics I think) titled 'At the Mountains of Madness, and other stories' or something like that, and getting slowly sucked into his very odd world. One word of advice, I wouldn't recommend 'The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath' to anyone. I almost shouted at the pages whilst reading it. Not good when you're on the bus. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
widdershins Posted March 13, 2007 Report Share Posted March 13, 2007 I love a lot of Lovecraft's work. My favourite was Dreams in the Witch House with the witch's familiar Brown Jenkin, who I think is one of the scariest characters ever. I got into him when I was 17/18. I have the white volumes circa late 80s, called Omnibus 1,2 and 3. The Mountains of Madness volume did have some of his more peculiar and inscrutable stuff, such as the already mentioned Dream Quest of Unknown Kaddath. It's worth reading August Derleth if you like Lovcraft - he finished off a lot of stories for him. I have a rare book at home which was jointly written called The Lurker at the Threshold - it's a full length story. I love picking up old rare Lovecraft volumes. I picked one up the other week called Dagon and other tales, published in the 60s I think. I started a thread about Algernon Blackwood - if you like Lovecraft you'll like him. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Czar Silver Posted July 1, 2007 Report Share Posted July 1, 2007 I'm a big fan of Lovecraft. I embraced his books when I finally got the courage to read horror novels as a teenager. He is an acquired taste, but the slow burning nature and the fact that the horrors are beyond human understanding makes them a refreshing change from serial killers and their ilk. I have to say I love the Music of Erich Zann and Herbert West: Reanimator. I think I am going to have dig my books out an reread some of his other tales now. Although the last time I did that I was home alone and scared myself witless. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
megustaleer Posted July 2, 2007 Report Share Posted July 2, 2007 I thought I posted on this thread, but it must be a casualty of The Crash. I started reading The Call Of Cthulhu sometime last year, but gave up under halfway through. I found the stories tedious, and not at all scary...just silly. I like my horror to be credible. I had intended to read as far as the title story, but just couldn't bore myself any longer, It has gone back on the TBR pile for the next time I have one of those 'end-of-the-month' gaps when the next bookgroup book is due, and I don't have time for a full-length novel. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Freydis Posted January 26, 2008 Report Share Posted January 26, 2008 Not a big horror fan - most modern stuff is way too graphic for my taste - but I do enjoy Lovecraft, once I got past his racist tone in places (product of his time more than anything). It's what he leaves unsaid, what he only hints is lurking just round the corner, that grabs the reader. Caveat: do not read him on a windy February night with branches tapping at the window! I did struggle with At the Mountains of Madness a bit, but plan to do a reread one of these days. He has a big following among US sci-fi/fantasy geeks. Some of us even have Cthulhu bumper stickers... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Hazel Posted January 29, 2008 Report Share Posted January 29, 2008 I did struggle with At the Mountains of Madness a bit, but plan to do a reread one of these days. I tried to read this years ago and I just couldn't get into it at all. Even seeing Lovecraft's name brings back those days. He seems to have inspired so many horror/sci-fi writers though - a writers' writer possibly? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Freydis Posted January 30, 2008 Report Share Posted January 30, 2008 Fair enough - a surfeit of Lovecraft tales can easily devolve into silliness, especially when you're hearing about the blind idiot god for the nth time. But if you're in a certain mood a couple of stories can be quite entertaining! His allusions to the mad Arab and the Necronomicon remind me of the pronouncements in my childhood nightmares - that thing hovering in the corner, just outside our peripheral vision...and yes, definitely a writer's writer, judging by his representation in forums and college courses formerly devoted solely to "serious" literature. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Aurélien Arkadiusz Posted August 1, 2009 Report Share Posted August 1, 2009 Yes, I also read HPL's tales. In my (entirely prejudiced) view HPL's work can be summed up thusly - Fiction inspired by a truly cosmic imagination, letters that are a significant contribution to literature, but only a few poems that are worth the reading, such as: P r o v i d e n c e Where bay and river tranquil blend, And leafy hillsides rise, The spires of Providence ascend Against the ancient skies. Here centuried domes of shining gold Salute the morning’s glare, While slanting gables, odd and old, Are scatter’d here and there. And in the narrow winding ways That climb o'er slope and crest, The magic of forgotten days May still be found to rest. A fanlight's gleam, a knocker's blow, A glimpse of Georgian brick - The sights and sounds of long ago Where fancies cluster thick. A flight of steps with iron rail, A belfry looming tall, A slender steeple, carv’d and pale, A moss-grown garden wall. A hidden churchyard's crumbling proofs Of man's mortality, A rotten wharf where gambrel roofs Keep watch above the sea. Square and parade, whose walls have tower’d Full fifteen decades long By cobbled ways 'mid trees embower’d, And slighted by the throng. Stone bridges spanning languid streams, Houses perch’d on the hill, And courts where mysteries and dreams The brooding spirit fill. Steep alley steps by vines conceal’d, Where small-pan’d windows glow At twilight on the bit of field That chance has left below. My Providence! What airy hosts Turn still thy gilded vanes; What winds of elf that with grey ghosts People thine ancient lanes! The chimes of evening as of old Above thy valleys sound, While thy stern fathers 'neath the mould Make blest thy sacred ground. Thou dream’st beside the waters there, Unchang’d by cruel years; A spirit from an age more fair That shines behind our tears. Thy twinkling lights each night I see, Tho’ time and space divide; For thou art of the soul of me, And always at my side! H. P. Lovecraft, 1924 [Version in “THE ANCIENT TRACK”] HPL's New England background in general, and his love for the College Hill section of his home city of Providence in particular, underpin so much of his writing that I make no excuse for quoting the above poem on this thread. ‘Aurélien Arkadiusz’ Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Cathy Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 Does anyone else find his works hard to get hold of? Do you have to look in a special section of the bookshop? (not for me, for someone else!) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Grammath Posted August 10, 2009 Report Share Posted August 10, 2009 I'd have thought Lovecraft would be in the horror section in most book stores, although given that there are collections of his stories available in Penguin Classics (I own the "Call of Cthullu" one), if a store has a classics section they could conceivably be shelved there. Of course, if you were to buy online this wouldn't be a problem. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Aurélien Arkadiusz Posted August 11, 2009 Report Share Posted August 11, 2009 But if you aren't a fan of buying on-line, Cathy, you might like to try the bookstores catering to the students of your local university/college - perhaps not if it's a Women's College, given that even these days noticeably fewer women read HPL. Beware of the Lovecraft imitators. There are several books with H. P. Lovecraft proclaimed as the author on their cover that were 95%++ written by one of his fans, so unless you already have a definite shopping list you may need to check the small print on the reverse of the title page. Good luck. ‘Aurélien Arkadiusz’ Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Cathy Posted August 11, 2009 Report Share Posted August 11, 2009 Thanks for the tips, I love a challenge so I'll keep hunting Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jeremy DEagle Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 I'm enjoying Lovecraft a lot. Not so much a fan of his dreamworld type stories where he goes of wandering on boats etc... I have a huge big copy of 'The Necronomicon' that I paid 20 quid for. Loads of stories in it. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
megustaleer Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 I never did finish the book of Lovecraft stories that I found so boring three years ago. I put it on my RiSi list and it was snapped up straight away. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lostinfiction Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 Other than Cthulu, most of his books are quite hard to find in bookstores here. Libraries are okay though, if they're the bigger ones. While on the subject, has anyone had a look at Lovecraft's <a href="http://www.infloox.com/person?id=8bd1e9b2">infloox page</a>? I especially liked the notes on his influence on Stephen King. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted August 16, 2015 Report Share Posted August 16, 2015 How do you pronounce cthulu? Not read any Lovecraft as of yet, but I just might. They are all in tne horror section of Waterstones in my neck of the woods. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Clavain Posted August 17, 2015 Report Share Posted August 17, 2015 (edited) How do you pronounce cthulu? Not read any Lovecraft as of yet, but I just might. They are all in tne horror section of Waterstones in my neck of the woods. Luna most books by Lovecraft are now freely available online, You shouldn't pay for a digital copy One I just found but not checked http://arkhamarchivist.com/free-complete-lovecraft-ebook-nook-kindle/ And this was on youtube A relief since apart from the accent same way I pronounce. Lovecraft haunted my teenage years and still shiver thinking of. Edited August 17, 2015 by Clavain Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted August 18, 2015 Report Share Posted August 18, 2015 (edited) Thank you Clavain. Have now successfully downloaded from your link and it looks fine, on a cursory look round. Edited August 18, 2015 by lunababymoonchild Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted August 26, 2015 Report Share Posted August 26, 2015 Have been reading these slowly in between other things. I like them! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted August 30, 2015 Report Share Posted August 30, 2015 I would like some help. Today the Complete Works of H P Lovecraft that I downloaded to my Kindle App for iPad disappeared. I re-downloaded it, re-unzipped it and although Kindle App would open it the Kindle App no longer kept my book marks. I did manage to download it to iBooks so all is not lost but given that it can disappear I'm not sure how long that will last. Anybody got any ideas as to what I can do about that, other than buy the same thing from Amazon? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Clavain Posted August 30, 2015 Report Share Posted August 30, 2015 (edited) Not sure luna. I just emailed the complete works to my kindles and voila all there. Ipads not used but have the kindle app on my android phone.and I can email it to my phone if I wish. Up to you but the download is the complete works and I'm very happy dipping in. Can only suggest if not done already that you email it to your kindle account. http://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindle/email Edited August 30, 2015 by Clavain Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted August 31, 2015 Report Share Posted August 31, 2015 (edited) Yes, I managed to get it on my android phone. I'll try emailing it to my Kindle account, thanks Clavain. ETA that worked. As it turned out so did the method I was using yesterday. I didn't know that I had to look under All Items and not just Books (which is where it was originally). I am enjoying the tales very much Edited August 31, 2015 by lunababymoonchild Quote Link to post Share on other sites
lunababymoonchild Posted September 7, 2015 Report Share Posted September 7, 2015 Clavain, I have been reading these, one at a time, and they are marvellous! Thanks for the link. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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