H.P. Lovecraft

Halloween writing, poetry, fan pics and more!
User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Sun May 20, 2012 12:41 am

ChaosChick started a Poe thread. So I though I'd bring up another good author. I'm kind of going through an obsession with Lovecraft. I do that with everyone I like for what they make. I'm reading The Whisperer in Darkness right now because it takes place in Vermont, my state.

Anyone else read him? You might know him because of the Great Cthulhu.
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Sat Jul 21, 2012 9:25 pm

I've read some of his stuff. He definitely knew how to build an otherworldly air with his writing. I remember reading somewhere that a lot of the images and story ideas he had came from his dreams and nightmares.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Sat Jul 21, 2012 9:29 pm

He also borrowed from other writers.
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Sat Jul 21, 2012 10:02 pm

He did, certainly, and in some places better than others. To a certain extent though, everybody does that. There's nothing new under the sun. From what I understand, the new Batman movie borrows heavily from "A Tale of Two Cities". But I will say, when it clumsily done, it's cringe inducing.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Sun Jul 22, 2012 11:47 pm

I started The Shadow Over Innsmouth a while ago now and never finished. Same with a few other books. That tends to happen.

What have you read by him? Any favorites?
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Mon Jul 30, 2012 9:21 pm

Sadly, I read him many years ago and memory fades. I read Shadow Over Innsmouth recently. I liked it, but was a bit annoyed due to the fact that it was included in the werewolf anthology I was reading. I didn't really think it fit, though on it's own it wasn't a bad story. I'm pretty sure I read Pickman's Model though I may just be remembering seeing the Night Gallery episode. What I largely remember is the feeling I got reading his stuff. A creepy unease. His stuff didn't scare as much as it unsettled and made you look at the world twice. Or at least it did me.

Though there was one story, can't remember the title, but it was a first person narrative about this guy raised by this horrible looking creature in a subterranean environment. And the creature is always good to the narrator but he wants to see the world. So one day he leaves and goes to the world above. He enters a house and sees a truly horrific monster looking at him. Then on the heels makes a realization that drives him despairing back to the underground. He realizes he's found a mirror and he is in fact the same species as the creature that raised him. The reason the story stuck with me is the narrator is sympathetically written and felt kind of bad for him at the end.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Mon Jul 30, 2012 9:59 pm

I haven't read that one but I think it's The Outsider.

Pickman's Model, that one is awesome. There's an audio recording I listened to of it. I'll find it for you if you want.
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Wed Aug 08, 2012 9:26 pm

That would be really cool. Do you remember who did the recording? I found this amazing rendition of Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven as read by Christopher Walken. I absolutely loved it.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Thu Aug 09, 2012 2:28 am

Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Mon Aug 20, 2012 8:49 pm

Thank you for posting it. It's a great story, though the narrator could have been better. I found the voice distracting at points, but not enough to really detract from the story. Thanks again.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:29 pm

I loved the voice. It made it really creepy for me.
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Sun Aug 26, 2012 11:38 am

I listened to it again. I can see your point about how the voice does add to the overall effect, but something about the accent or cadence just kind of takes me out of it. Maybe it's that almost lisp the speaker seems to have.

Though I do wholeheartedly agree with the section where they are talking about the difficulty and art in capturing the essence of fear or the utter feeling of otherness that the really great writers/artists of the macabre can capture. I write a little, but can never quite capture terror. The best I manage is dark fantasy, but true horror escapes me. That's part of what I admire of Lovecraft, among others. The ability to convey that sense of otherness, and wrongness, that can come from well written horror.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Rising Dead Man
Halloween Master
Posts: 3392
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 5:06 pm
What is the highest number?: 9
Location: Eerie Acres Cemetery
Contact:

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Rising Dead Man » Sun Aug 26, 2012 7:50 pm

It's funny. Lovecraft hasnt really scared me, but creepypasta has.
Halloween wraps fear in innocence,
As though it were a slightly sour sweet.
Let terror, then, be turned into a treat...
~Nicholas Gordon

User avatar
ScarecrowJack
Haunt Master
Posts: 343
Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 8:45 pm
What is the highest number?: 10992
Location: in a Cornfield somewhere

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by ScarecrowJack » Sat Sep 01, 2012 11:54 am

I'd never been to creepypasta before, thanx for the tip. It's a pretty cool site. I like the Slenderman stuff, and the Candle Cove story was creepy. Definitely planning on exploring that one further.

As for Lovecraft, as I said don't find him "balls to the walls" scary. But I find him unnerving, like he's showing a world that's just under the surface and it unsettling. I find that sense of atmosphere to be elusive in my own writing, as well as straight "balls to the walls" horror.
We're the farmer's scarecrows
We scare away the birds,
We keep the farmer's corn safe
Without any words.
But when Halloween comes
We jump out of the ground
And we scare the boys and girls
When they come walking 'round.

User avatar
Boogeyman
Halloween Master
Posts: 644
Joined: Thu Sep 25, 2008 8:23 am
What is the highest number?: 9

Re: H.P. Lovecraft

Post by Boogeyman » Sat Sep 01, 2012 1:02 pm

Did you know that there some Slenderman games available?

Here is one... http://www.slendergame.com/

And the search I did...

http://www.bing.com/search?q=slenderman ... orm=MOZSBR
There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.

Henry David Thoreau

Post Reply