Archive for January, 2011

Looking for Mythos Books

Posted in Miskatonic Books with tags , , , on January 31, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Here at Miskatonic we are always looking to purchase books, manuscripts and ephemera relating to Weird Tales, Lovecraftian Mythos, Gothic Ghost and Dark Fantasy both past and present.  We purchase single books to complete collections.  We also do consignments and estate work.

To get an idea of the type of books we look for take a look at our store www.miskatonicbooks.com

We are always looking for books  and ephemera from:

H. P. Lovecraft

August Derleth

Donald Wandrei

Clark Ashton Smith

Robert E. Howard

Fritz Leiber

Henry Whitehead

Frank Belknap Long

Brian Lumley

Ramsey Campbell

S. T. Joshi

Necronomicon Press

Arkham House

Weird Tales

Etc.

You can send your inquiries directly to us at arcanewisdom@me.com

S. T. Joshi Announces MODERN MYTHOS LIBRARY On His Blog

Posted in Miskatonic Books with tags , , , on January 30, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

From S. T. Joshi’s blog:

January 29, 2011

I’m excited to announce that Larry Roberts of Bloodletting Press and I are teaming up to launch a new series, the Modern Mythos Library, to be issued by one of Larry’s sub-imprints, Arcane Wisdom. This series will publish vital and significant contemporary works of Cthulhu Mythos fiction by leading authors. Our first two selections have been chosen: Rick Dakan’s splendid novel The Cult of Cthulhu and Jonathan Thomas’s novel The Color over Occam. The latter is a loose sequel to “The Colour out of Space” and is one of the finest supernatural novels I have read in many years. I don’t know the schedule of publication for these titles, but I hope they can appear this year.

My work on the Modern Mythos Library coincides with my withdrawal from the New Millennium Mythos published by Perilous Press. I hope that Perilous continues this worthy series.

You can read the full blog post by clicking here.   http://www.stjoshi.org/news.html

August Derleth: Writer and Pioneer of Publishing

Posted in Miskatonic Books on January 30, 2011 by miskatonicbooks


August Derleth is a name revered in both Lovecraft circles, and independent book publishing circles. Both a bullish and a bull-headed man, he alternately typed like a whirling dervish twists, and promoted like a P.T. Barnum. Just when you might think he was down and couldn’t pay creditors, whoosh, out came another book or story to pay the bills.


2009 would have been Derleth’s 100th birthday, and this year marks 40 years without him. The world seems so much less interesting without his grandness.


[Derleth to HPL, 3 August 1936] I went off on a four day vacation last weekend, beginning Wednesday, and returned home on Saturday evening to find a stack of letterssufficiently high to keep me busy most of Sunday and part of this morning, before the mails for today start coming. I also found the New Republic, issue 5 now out, is using my poem, Evenings at Wisconsin, and that the August issue of Scribner’s announced fiction by Augus Derleth in its September issue, which means that they are using The Old Lady Turns the Other Cheek, since that is the only one htye have left, though they have another under consideration now …

[HPL to Derleth, 22 August 1936] … Congratulations on Scribners and New Republic contributions.

References, Scribners, September 1936; Luna Monthly, August 1971; August Derleth siganture to Donald Wandrei, his off-and-on partner’ Fantasy and Science Fiction, Fall 1950.

We have several books by August Derleth at Miskatonic Books.  Click the cover art below for a list.

THE YELLOW SIGN by Robert W. Chambers Free Digital Download

Posted in Miskatonic Books with tags , , , on January 28, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Robert William Chambers (May 26, 1865 – December 16, 1933) was an American artist and writer.

The King in Yellow never fully describes the shape and purpose of the Yellow Sign. Nonetheless, “The Repairer of Reputations”, one of the stories in the collection, suggests that anyone who possesses, even by accident, a copy of the sign is susceptible to some form of insidious mind control, or possession, by the King in Yellow or one of his heirs. The stories also suggest that the original creator of the sign was not human and possibly came from a strange alternate dimension  that contains an ominous and ancient city known as Carcosa.

H. P. Lovecraft and many of his imitators were great admirers of Chambers’ book and incorporated many of his characters and symbols into their own works. In the latter-day Cthulhu Mythos, developed by August Derleth and other Lovecraft imitators, the Yellow Sign is the sign of Hastur and is used by members of his cult to identify one another. In addition, according to many of these works one of Hastur’s avatars is known as the King in Yellow.

Click the image below to download the free e-book complements of Arcane Wisdom Press.


Frank Belknap Long (Sr. & Jr.)

Posted in Miskatonic Books with tags on January 28, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Lovecraft was fond of Frank Belknap Long, Jr. So much so, he often called him “Belkapius”. It is somewhat unfair to look at an individual only through the eyes of HPL, so here’s a little extra information that might round out the long career of the weird tale writer.

Long, Jr. grew up in a relatively privileged environment, since his father was a dental surgeon in New York.


One supposes it all started a few years after Frank Belknap Long, Sr. graduated from the New York College of Dentistry (10 March 1892). On 20 November 1895, Dr. Long and his dear bride, Miss May Mansfield Doty, joined hands and were wed. The bride wore a gown of heavy white satin with flounces of point lace.

As nature took its course, Frank, Jr, came along on 27 April 1901. Sadly we lost him in 1994, but he lived a long and productive life.


At first, he was a champion and practitioner of the weird tale. While Lovecraft remained to his last day challenged to write the ultimate weird tale, time marched on and the atomic era dawned. While the venerable Weird Tales hung on for several decades, the new rage was Scientifiction (later Sci-Fi, coined allegedly by Forest J. Ackerman).

Long embraced the new writing style, and for a time put out both weird tales, horror, and Scientifiction. It is little known that he also wrote neo-gothic stories with the pseudonym Lyda Belknap Long.


After HPL died, Long missed him. As the years moved by, he thought of his long-ago friend and finally came out with a very readable memoir. Sadly, it has never been reprinted, and like so much of Lovecraftiana, it is hard to acquire, and expensive. In it he told a classic few stories.

Once, HPL was sitting in a cemetery with Long, and Long said, “Look, Howard.” In the coolness of the crepuscular darkness, wisps of moisture coiled. Long thought they resembled ghosts. Lovecraft pshawed this notion, and went into a scientific explanation that added a different kind of chill to the supernatural evening. However, HPL was just as quick to conjure weird out of the mundane. Once he went to a museum with Long, and upon touching part of an Egyptian exhibit went rapturous over evil and long dead Egyptians on a rampage.


Just as some have “heroes of the faith”, we honor the antiquarian thread of horror as it twists and turns through history, time and space. On this occasion, today, we celebrate a firmly woven thread of the tapestry: Frank Belknap Long, Jr.

Below are a few title of Frank Belknap Long, Jr. we have available at Miskatonic Books

Click on any of the cover arts below to get more information on the title

Part 3 of the H. P. Lovecraft Literary Podcast of THE DUNWICH HORROR

Posted in Miskatonic Books on January 27, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Part Three of a retrospect on Lovecraft’s Dunwich Horror

Another fantastic episode of The H. P. Lovecraft Literary Podcast.  Your hosts are Chris Lackey and Chad Fifer

This podcast is not to be missed!

Click the picture below to listen to the new episode.

Three New Tartarus Press Titles Announced

Posted in Horrorgy, Miskatonic Books with tags , , , , , , on January 26, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Click on the book for ordering information:

FRANKENSTEIN’S PRESCRIPTION by Tim Lees:

Hans Schneider is a drunkard and a womaniser; everyone agrees he’s heading for a bad end. When he kills a fellow student in a duel, he finds himself banished to an isolated rural hospital, far from the pleasures he desires. There he meets the mysterious Dr Lavenza, and learns about Frankenstein’s prescription-the secret of eternal life.
Together, Schneider and Lavenza set out to collect the missing pieces of the formula. But they are not alone. From Germany to Rome, from Rome to Paris, to the failed and wretched Eden of an all-too-human God, a dreadful creature follows in their wake, bringing destruction wherever they go.
Poor Schneider wants an easy time: drink, women and good company. Instead, he finds himself beset by ghosts and madmen, in a world where music brings the dead to life, and even the most terrifying monster can prove strangely sympathetic . . .

DARK ENTRIES by Robert Aickman

As Dr Glen Cavaliero states in his introduction to this new edition of Dark Entries, “It is Robert Aickman’s peculiar achievement that he should invest the daylight world with all the terrors of the night”.
Dark Entries was the first solo collection of “strange stories” by British short story writer, critic, lecturer and novelist, Robert Aickman. First published in 1964 it contains the classic “Ringing the Changes” and perhaps Aickman’s best femme fatale in “Choice of Weapons.” The version of “The View” is slightly re-written from its first appearance in We are for the Dark.
Contents: “Introduction by Glen Cavaliero, “The School Friend”, “Ringing the Changes”, “Choice of Weapons”, “The Waiting Room”, “The View” and “Bind Your Hair”.
 

WORMING THE HARPY by Rhys Hughes
Imagine (if you dare) a whimsical marriage of Lord Dunsany and S.J. Perelman, and you have something approaching the tales of Rhys Hughes, filled with gaudy colour, slapstick, puns, fantastic creatures, and the occasional unexpected chill. Hughes’ world is a magical one – and his language if the most magical thing of all. - Ted Klein, author of The Ceremonies
The tales contained within Worming the Harpy and other Bitter Pills are set in a surreal world of nightmares all too closely identifiable with real life. If The Cabinet of Dr Caligari was retouched by Ralph Steadman, with The Rolling Stones ‘Sympathy for the Devil’ as a soundtrack, you would have only the slightest inkling of the scintillating and horrific world conjured by Rhys Hughes. For too long out of print, we are pleased to make this collection available once again, now in paperback.
As E.F. Bleiler states in his Afterword: “What do I like about Rhys Hughes’s work? Fun. Hughes sees and precipitates in words the latent humour in almost anything.”
Contents: “Cat o’ Nine Tales”, “Worming the Harpy”, “The Falling Star”, “Quasimodulus”, “The Good News Grimoire”, “The Forest Chapel Bell”, “Flintlock Jaw”, “Velocity Oranges”, “A Carpet Seldom Found”, “The Chimney”, “One Man’s Meat”, “The Man Who Mistook His Wife’s Hat for the Mad Hatter’s Wife”, “Cello I Love You”, “What To Do When the Devil Comes Round For Tea”, “Arquebus for Harlequin”, “Éclair de Lune”, “Grinding the Goblin”, “Afterword” by E.F. Bleiler .

There once was a star … Beyond the Wall of Sleep …

Posted in Miskatonic Books on January 26, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Chris Perridas is guest blogging today.

There once was a star … Beyond the Wall of Sleep

I have often wondered if the majority of mankind ever pause to reflect upon the occasionally titanic significance of dreams, and of the obscure world to which they belong. … I have merely set down certain things appealing to me as facts, allowing you to construe them as you will. … I will quote the following account of the star Nova Persei verbatim from the pages of that eminent astronomical authority, Professor Garrett P. Serviss: “On February 22, 1901, a marvelous new star was discovered by Doctor Anderson of Edinburgh, not very far from Algol. No star had been visible at that point before. Within twenty-four hours the stranger had become so bright that it outshone Capella. In a week or two it had visibly faded, and in the course of a few months it was hardly discernible with the naked eye.”

Lovecraft scholars long ago discovered that this quotation by Serviss was from his book, Astronomy With the Naked Eye (1908, Harper Brothers) and an extended clip from this book is posted below.

Though Lovecraft may have quoted Serviss, what was not previously known is that as a little boy, he could have seen that very star! In fact everyone in Providence could have seen that star! On several days it outshone Venus and was seen even in full sunlight.

While Chrispy can’t say that HPL ever recorded that he saw it in his astronomy writing, we do know all he and grandfather Whipple had to do was pick up the paper and read about it. Below is an article by Lovecraft’s astronomical mentor, Winslow Upton of the Ladd Observatory/ This e-clipping actually comes from the circular printed by the Providence Journal the Manufacturers and Farmers Journal. [Link]

Now no one can claim that HPL saw this star, only that he could have glanced up and saw it in late February of 1901. He stated once, “…astronomy has always been my favourite science, followed assiduously since I was twelve years old.” (H.P. Lovecraft to Clark Ashton Smith, 25 March 1923). Anderson’s star, though, was more than a year before this. perhaps as an older man he realized what a spectacle he missed, or at least did not have a full reckoning of what was happening. Contemplating this nova, years later, he felt compelled to add it to Beyond the Wall of Sleep as part of his weird tale.

The e-clippings below should expand into larger size in a new window if you click them. To see the entire article, see the links.

Note the headline from Manufacturer's and Farmer's Journal (Providence Journal) Thursday, 28 February 1901

You Know Lovecraft is Mainstream When You See This

Posted in Miskatonic Books on January 25, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Lovecraft Corset?…

Tried to talk to wife into one of these but she’s having none of it.

These are actually for sale.  Click on any of the pictures to go to the sellers website. A mere $60 an you can have one of your very own…

I think I hear Lovecraft rolling over in his grave.

Sit Under a Gibbous Moon and Listen to DAGON.

Posted in Miskatonic Books with tags , , on January 24, 2011 by miskatonicbooks

Here is a free reading of DAGON by H. P. Lovecraft read by Nick Gisburne

“Dagon” is a short story by H. P. Lovecraft, written in July 1917, one of the first stories he wrote as an adult. It was first published in the November 1919 edition of The Vagrant (issue #11).

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