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1 posted on 07/24/2025 3:27:29 PM PDT by kawhill
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To: kawhill

The best.


2 posted on 07/24/2025 3:28:22 PM PDT by ansel12 ((NATO warrior under Reagan, and RA under Nixon, bemoaning the pro-Russians from Vietnam to Ukraine.))
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To: kawhill

RE: a recluse, a virulently xenophobic racist...

An all around fun guy.

“The kind of personality of someone who can liven up a party simply by leaving it.”
——Arthur C. Clarke on the American astronauts in the early space program.


3 posted on 07/24/2025 3:37:55 PM PDT by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: kawhill

Cthulhu Mythos


4 posted on 07/24/2025 3:41:28 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: kawhill

One of the other major writers of the Weird Tales magazine group was Robert E. Howard. After writing of prize fighters and the big muscled heroic creations Conan the Barbarian, Kull and others, Howard was told by doctors that his beloved mother was going into her last days with no hope for recovery from a coma.

In the hospital parking lot he opened the glove compartment of his car and took out a revolver and shot himself in the head because he couldn’t face life without his mother.


5 posted on 07/24/2025 3:45:14 PM PDT by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: kawhill
...a virulently xenophobic racist..

Given that one race in particular seems to be more trouble than it's worth and that the World would be better off with one religion in particular (Islam) I might tend to agree.

6 posted on 07/24/2025 3:50:32 PM PDT by Nateman (Democrats did not strive for fraud friendly voting merely to continue honest elections.)
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To: kawhill

His writing is terrible. Had he ever met another person?


7 posted on 07/24/2025 3:55:17 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: kawhill

I just LOVED this guy’s stuff when I was a prepubescent nerd. I bought paperbacks, was given a few by a friend after he read them, borrowed them from the city library (St. Petersburg, FL). Between his work and Robert E. Howard (L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, Michael Moorcock later) and a few other names I no longer remember, I read and read and read and then discovered Robert H. Heinlein when I was 15 and “horror” and “fantasy” took a distant second to Science Fiction. It wasn’t the “monster”/“other world” aliens that I found interesting so much as the creation of the genre itself; Lovecraft’s story “The Thing in the Cave” scared me SO much when I was twelve (HPL wrote it when he was younger than that, nine, IIRC) I only ever went into a cave TWICE in my life. I’m not claustrophobic, I’m “thing-o-phobic.” If you know the story, you know.

*shudder*

Oh, of course,I read Plato, Socrates, the major philosophers (I liked Camus and Sartre - a little less), Hesse’s Siddharta (and others, and later, Noch einmal auf Deutsch) and of course I read Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, The Iliad, Odyssey, many other classics.

It was a good time. I wrote a paper once on Robert E. Howard for a HS English class; Mrs Kogar gave me a B - grudgingly - as she accused me of making everything up because SHE had never HEARD of the guy. I brought in a stack of paperbacks and she make it a B+.

Mrs. Kogar, a middle-aged wannabe socialite with a heavily affected New England accent (this was Florida, I have no idea where she was from originally just that she didn’t sound like she was from THERE - neither did I, I learned English in Ohio and still have no accent to this day) had us reading twisted crap from Truman Capote and his ilk who she just RAVED about. I could barely stomach it.

But I did read a lot of Tom Wolfe a few years later (Hollyweird made a couple movies from his works, like “The Right Stuff,” Bonfire of the Vanities and I found the novel “Mauve Gloves Madmen Clutter and Vine” to be a real riot. Wolfe’s stuff about New York elitists and business world I found even stranger than the worlds of science fiction. To this day I hate cities with a passion. Cities are for termites, not humans.

Thanks for posting this link.


8 posted on 07/24/2025 4:04:06 PM PDT by normbal (normbal. Non-native Tennessean.)
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To: kawhill

I found his works back in 1961 at the Carlsbad NM Public Library. I enjoyed them! One girl in my high school class laughed at me for reading them. I told her to read the first story in the book (THE RATS IN THE WALLS) and see if she likes them.
The next week she came in and cussed me out for having her read that story.”I could not sleep all week end because every sound I heard sounded like THE RATS IN THE WALLS!”
Now got several collections of his stories.


13 posted on 07/24/2025 4:19:54 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar ( )
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To: kawhill

My first exposure to the genre was Lovecraft.

Amazing writer.

L


18 posted on 07/24/2025 4:28:00 PM PDT by Lurker ( Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: kawhill

I think Lovecraft’s chief claim to fame is Cosmic Horror.

19th century British writers Lord Dunseny and Arthur Machaen (of The Angels of Mons fame) were influences upon him.

Some of his stories have been adapted for film and television with mixed results.

My favorite Lovecraft tale is The Music of Eric Zahn. Which I think could be handled as a small stage play with a four-piece string quartet (or whatever musicians think they can pull it off) for the musical interludes.


20 posted on 07/24/2025 4:34:36 PM PDT by BradyLS (DO NOT FEED THE BEARS!)
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To: kawhill

I’m a huge fan of Lovecraft, and my daughters are as well.


25 posted on 07/24/2025 5:27:34 PM PDT by dinodino ( Shut it down anyway. )
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To: kawhill

At the mountains of madness.


26 posted on 07/24/2025 5:28:11 PM PDT by No name given ( Anonymous is who you’ll know me as)
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To: kawhill
Lovecraft is Mark Zuckerberg doppelganger.



27 posted on 07/24/2025 5:31:24 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie ( O give thanks unto the Lord, for He is gracious, and his mercy endures forever. — Psalm 106)
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To: kawhill
At the Mountains of Madness
I can't recommend it enough.
28 posted on 07/24/2025 5:37:50 PM PDT by ComputerGuy
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To: kawhill
For any Lovecraft fans out there, you know how hard it is find a good movie that can mimic HP's writing style. But here's a few I've come across that have a cosmic horror element to them:

Older Gods. This is available on Tubi, and I highly recommend this.

The Empty Man

The Endless

31 posted on 07/24/2025 5:59:17 PM PDT by voicereason (When a bartender can join Congress and become a millionaire...there’s a problem.)
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To: kawhill

Thomas Wolfe on a bad acid trip


33 posted on 07/24/2025 6:08:36 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If Hitler were alive today and criticized Trump, would he still be Hitler?)
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To: kawhill

Pickman’s Model is one of the creepiest stories I’ve read. And the Shadow Over Innsmouth when the Traveler is trying to escape from the Deep Ones at the hotel scared me when I read it. And it takes a lot to scare me.


35 posted on 07/24/2025 7:28:23 PM PDT by Feasor13
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To: kawhill

I was a proud reader of hard SF pretty much exclusively (with an exception for Tolkien) until I discovered Lovecraft and Howard........have been more of a fantasy fan ever since.


36 posted on 07/24/2025 7:39:12 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite its unfashionability)
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To: kawhill

i read HP Lovecraft as a youngster and STILL get the heebie-jeebies from some of his stories!


37 posted on 07/24/2025 8:25:40 PM PDT by catnipman ((A Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils Still Counts As A Vote For Evil))
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