HPLinks #77.
* The NecronomiCon’s Armitage Symposium has its calls for papers out. Set for 13th-16th August 2026, in Providence, Rhode Island. The Symposium…
is mainly dedicated to the life and works of the Providence-based weird fiction writer, the father of cosmic horror, H.P. Lovecraft, but also to his milieu: his literary predecessors, contemporaries, and current successors of the genre.
Submissions are welcome from all, if one can give an in-person presentation. Presentations will be considered in due course for Lovecraftian Proceedings No.7. Deadline: 24th May 2026.
* The NecronomiCon art-show, Ars Necronomica 2026, does not yet have details for the forthcoming show. Other than that it will run in Providence… “for most of August 2026”.
* New from Charles University, the PhD thesis Lovecraftova literarni tvorba v kontextu objektove orientovane ontologie (2026) (‘Lovecraft’s literary work in the context of object-oriented ontology’). Freely available online, in Czech with English abstract. Also in Czech, this week they have the official translation of Tanebe’s mammoth The Shadow over Innsmouth manga adaptation.
* The hub website hplovecraft.com has a new page for Collections of Lovecraft’s Works, made re-sortable by year, publisher or title.
* Deep Cuts considers two 1973 publications about Lovecraft and Sonia.
* Sechrist’s grandson has made contact, via my 2018 Tentaclii post on Edward Lloyd Sechrist (1873-1953). See the comments at the foot of the post.
* Parker’s Ponderings reviews “The Craziest Commonplace Book Ever” ($ paywalled, Substack), apparently through the lens of an interest in notebook-keeping methods. It’s Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book, in a new illustrated version.
* One I missed back in 2016. Daniel Birmingham produced “At the Mountains of Madness” as a low-budget screenplay as the final dissertation submission for his Screenwriting degree… “Rather than scale the film to make it larger than life, I wanted to write a quiet, chilling piece that could be shot on a low-budget.” Now freely available online, from his university repository.
* The German Lovecraftians report on a forthcoming premiere for a drone-orchestral-visual “Colour Out Of Space”, in Berlin…
After more than 10 years of work and the creation of over 700 images, The Dunwich Orchestra will perform their complete production “The Colour Out Of Space” live for the first time, on 23rd April 2026 the venerable Babylon cinema in Berlin. The German Lovecraft Society is sponsoring the project as an official cooperation partner. Berlin-based comic artist and illustrator Andreas Hartung and The Dunwich Orchestra have adapted this horror parable as a dark, episodic visual show with an atmospheric soundtrack, entirely without words, drawing the viewer into a hypnotically slowed vortex of horror – a profound drone-comic visual spectacle.
* The Enki Bilal Collection, on show from June 2026 in Paris, France. The major retrospective will be ticketed and priced. Many Tentaclii readers will know Bilal from his distinctive artistry and storytelling in Heavy Metal and elsewhere.
The artist [himself] is opening the Enki Bilal Collection in the Marais district of Paris. Serving as both an exhibition hub and a creative studio, this museum [quality] exhibition space will showcase the painter and author’s works, allowing visitors to explore his creations firsthand. In addition, it will host temporary thematic exhibits, panel discussions, screenings, book signings, and meet-and-greet events. A retrospective exhibition showcasing Enki Bilal’s work is set to inaugurate the venue, running through September 2026.
* Also in comics, Creepy Presents: Bernie Wrightson was published last month as an affordable paperback and ebook. Wrightson’s various collected 1970s work for Creepy magazine. Including an adaptation of Lovecraft’s “Cool Air”, and with all the strips kept in b&w rather than being coloured.
* Publisher DMR has a new free ‘best of’ sword-and-sorcery story sampler book, The Battle Rages On: A Free Anthology from DMR Books. If you like what you read they have plenty more.
* The Robert E. Howard Foundation Press has a new fundraiser book to aid the restoration of Howard’s home, titled First Cuts – the Drafts and Fragments of Breckinridge Elkins. Elkins being Howard’s irascible hillbilly from Bear Creek.
* Talking of Howard, I see Titan Books have published a new… “Solomon Kane novelette, Where the Whitethorn Meets the Black”, a $1.99 ebook read…
Journeying back to his native [English county of] Devon, Kane finds his homeland is not as he left it. A foulness has spread across England, changing it forever. The devils that inhabited far-off lands have infiltrated this blessed plot.
No sign of it via search on Amazon UK for “Where the Whitethorn Meets the Black”, but it turns out the ebook is there. It also turns out that this is No. 2 in a series and that a similar No.1 ebook slipped out just before Christmas 2025 as Solomon Kane: The Lair of the Mari Lwyd. No. 1 was set in Wales, and appears to have had good reviews.
* Talking of Wales, the Welsh regional newspaper Powys County Times brings news of a new Lovecraftian anthology with a regional Welsh flavour…
‘Cthulhu Cymraeg: The Night Country’ brings together tales inspired by the work of H.P. Lovecraft, the influential American writer, and features stories by six Welsh authors […] The collection explores Lovecraft’s literary connections [with Wales], particularly his debt to Caerleon-born author Arthur Machen.
Sounds good, and better I see it’s on Amazon UK as a budget ebook. Amazon’s listings suggests Night Country may be a follow-up to the editor’s first Cthulhu Cymraeg (2013) anthology, rather than a reprinting.
— End-quotes —
Over Christmas and New Year 1927 Lovecraft dug out his crumbling copy of some old notes on the family tree… “I had copied it from my late great-aunt Sarah Allgood’s chart (plus a chart of the Lovecraft side) in 1905, and it had nearly fallen to pieces”. On re-copying for preservation, he discovers a… “shocking revelation of hybridism”…
“… who is this dame that my great-grandfather William Allgood married in 1817? Rachel Morris — yes, I knew that before. But where did she come from? Wales! [and] my great-great-grandmother, born in 1774 and died in 1845 […] was Isabella Purcell, daughter of Owen Purcell of Llanariba, and of his wife Susanna Rees, daughter of David Rees or Rhys. A Welsh gentlewoman of unmixed Celtick blood!” [and] my great-grandmother Rachel Morris had a mother wholly Celtic Welsh, and a father one-quarter Celtic Welsh.” — to Belknap Long, January 1927.
There is no Llanariba in Wales. Llan is common and simply indicates a place with an enclosed church and graveyard. a-riba or ariba is not Welsh, nor is there anything like it if one assumes an h for a mis-transcribed b.
Writing to Barlow in 1934, he still thought he had… “a good deal of Celtic blood from Welsh, Cornish, and Devonian lines.” Also in 1934 he wrote to Rimel… “Only lately did I learn that Rhys (on my Welsh side) is [pronounced] Reez. I had called it Riss.”
“Oddly — for one whose Devonian and Welsh and Cornish lines imply a good proportion of Celtic blood — my weird imagination is not at all Celtic. I not only lack but dislike the Celt’s whimsical angle toward the unreal world. When the genes were juggled around in the formation of my cerebral cells, the Teutonic ones seem to have pre-empted the fantastic division. However, I like to apply that Teutonic imagination to themes which may be far from Teutonic. The fact is, my instinctive loyalties and area of interest seem to follow cultural rather than biological lines … a tendency directly opposed to the Nazi tribal ideal. Undeniably, my own blood kinsfolk on the continent [i.e. the Germanic cultures] interest me less than my cultural kinsfolk, whose blood diverges sharply from my own as the stream recedes in time.” — Lovecraft to Barlow, June 1936.































