Friday, June 29, 2012

My BIBLIOMANCY interview



Jason Rolfe at BIBLIOMANCY kindly asked me to do an interview for his fine literary blog . . .  Many know Jason as one of Chomu Press' strongest advocates, he's interviewed Chomu Ramrod, Quentin Crisp and insanely brilliant writers like Rhys Hughes and Brendan Connell, so I jumped at the chance to talk about my work, some of my influences, and some of the things I have going on.

Thanks, Jason. You made it easy and a lot of fun! !!

Here's a
link to my Amazon author page --



    

Sunday, June 24, 2012

The Starry Wisdom Library anthology

Today's guest post is by my pal, editor, Nate Pedersen. Nate's working on a special project Lovecraftians will be very interested in. Here's Nate to give you a first look at the blasphemies and revelations he's about to unleash . . . I think you'll be as excited by this as I am.

       In a rear vestry room beside the apse Blake found a rotting desk and ceiling-high shelves of mildewed, disintegrating books. Here for the first time he received a positive shock of objective horror, for the titles of those books told him much. They were the black, forbidden things which most sane people have never even heard of, or have heard of only in furtive, timorous whispers; the banned and dreaded repositories of equivocal secrets and immemorial formulae which have trickled down the stream of time from the days of man’s youth, and the dim, fabulous days before man was.
       --H P Lovecraft, “The Haunter of the Dark”

       The notorious library of the Church of Starry Wisdom was left to rot when the cult abandoned Providence for parts unknown.  Robert Blake discovered what was left of the library in his 1938 explorations - over fifty years after the cult had abandoned the Church.The library still contained such enormous rarities as the Necronomicon, the Liber Ivonis, and the Pnakotic Manuscripts. Imagine the library in its heyday, when the Church was still active.
       What if, on the eve of disbanding, the Church of Starry Wisdom organized a rare book auction of the various tomes in their collection? What if the accompanying auction catalogue was privately published and privately circulated, disappearing for over a century until its recent rediscovery in the archives of Miskatonic University?  What if we could read the 1877 original today?
       My new (and first) anthology for
PS Publishing is just that: a “facsimile” publication of the 19th century auction catalogue, entitled “The Starry Wisdom Library: being a catalogue of the unsurpassed occult library held by the recently disbanded Church of Starry Wisdom, offered for sale at private auction Midsummer’s Eve, 1877 by Messrs Pent & Serenade of Arkham, Mass.” The anthology will be presented and designed exactly like a 19th century book auction catalogue, with entries describing the major books in the Church’s collection, accompanied by essays from “noted scholars” on the history of each dread tome. The “noted scholars” will be contemporary horror and speculative fiction authors.  Their contributions will be similar in length and content to Lovecraft’s own “History of the Necronomicon”, a slightly edited version of which will also appear in the catalogue.
       The Starry Wisdom Library anthology was inspired by my personal love of rare book catalogues garnered from years spent working in the rare book trade in North Carolina and Scotland. I am now a freelance journalist and editor and write frequently for the magazine Fine Books & Collections. This anthology was the direct result of a blog post I wrote for Fine Books last October entitled
“The Grimoires of Lovecraft”.



       The finished anthology will contain approximately 30 essays on the history of Mythos books.  I can confirm sixteen of the contributors now:
Joe Pulver with an early copy of the banned play The King in Yellow
Livia Llewellyn with the “profane” version of Las Reglas de Ruina
Silvia Moreno-Garcia with the Aztec codex El Culto de los Muertos
Edward Morris with the medieval Irish manuscript The Book of Invaders
Robin Spriggs with a “copy” of the Dhol Chants
Gemma Files with the an entirely new version of the Testament of Carnamagos
Ramsey Campbell with the cult manuscript the Revelations of Glaaki
Kali Wallace with the mysterious stone-written Tablets of Nhing
Donald Tyson with the third Latin edition of Liber Damnatus
Michael Cisco with a 12th century manuscript of Liber Ivonis
F. Paul Wilson with the first German edition of Unaussprechlichen Kulten
Keith Taylor with Robert Boyle’s copy of the Book of Thoth
Genevieve Valentine with the elusive Seven Cryptical Books of Hsan
Scott Nicolay with the ancient South Seas manuscript the Ponape Scripture
Simon Strantzas with the dreaded Black Tome of Alsophocus
Richard Gavin with the ghoulish transformative manual De Masticatione Mortuorum in Tumulis
    The Starry Wisdom Library will also be illustrated with six original woodcuts by the incomparable Liv Rainey-Smith.




       No publication date has been set yet by PS, however the book is likely to be published in fall of 2013 or spring of 2014.  Interested readers can check out the website for the anthology for updates: http://starrywisdomlibrary.com

About the editor:

       Nate Pedersen formerly worked for rare book dealers in North Carolina and Scotland.  He now lives in Oregon where he works as a librarian in addition to freelancing as a journalist and editor.  He is a Contributing Writer for the magazine Fine Books & Collections.


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

URBAN CTHULHU: Nightmare Cities



Editor Henrik Harksen's Urban Cthulhu: Nightmare Cities (H. Harksen Productions 2012) is out [YAYYyyyyyyyyyyyyyy!!] and has arrived in Carcosa East. Pleased? You bet yer nightguant I am! !! It's a lovely looking tome and Paul Carrick and Tom Kristensen's art is lovely indeed.

Here's a little teaser from the publisher... What lurks in the damp recesses of urban existence? These new tales of weird fiction are a blend of urban horror, pulp noir and dark fantasy. Lovecraftian horrors and Cthulhu Mythos monsters have never been this gritty. From haunted Kingsport across the globe to shadowy Berlin and the otherworldly music of Bangalore. From kind, sexy neighbors to cyberpunk paranoia an The King in Yellow. A journalist's search with unexpected results. What really happened to Walter Gilman, and what is the origin of the witch Keziah Mason? And witness humanity fail against the forces from beyond. From weird sounds to screams of madness. Entropy. Chaos. Disorder. Death. Beneath cities, on the outskirts of ruined, aeon-old cities and INSIDE cities. The stench, the decay, the hopelesness... it is everywhere.  

And here's the ToC:

“Dancer of the Dying” by Jayaprakash Satyamurthy
“The Neighbors Upstairs” by John Goodrich
“Carcosapunk” by Glynn Owen Barrass
“Architect Eyes” by Thomas Strømsholt
“Slou” by Robert Tangiers
“Ozeelah’s Lake” by Morten Carlsen
“The Statement of Frank Elwood” by Pete Rawlik
“In the Shadow of Bh’Yhlun” by Ian Davey
“The Screamer” by T. E. Grau
“Night Life” by Henrik Sandbeck Harksen

“the guilt of each … at the end…” by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr.

Lovecraftian editor, writer, reviewer, and geek (aren't we all?), Brian Sammons has reviewed [PRAISED! !!] UC over at "Horror World". You can find his RAVE here:

http://horrorworld.org/hw/2012/06/urban-cthulhu-nightmare-cities/