(no subject)
Dec. 10th, 2005 08:15 pmI recently came into possession of an HP Lovecraft anthology called Dreams Of Terror And Death; the foreword is by Neil Gaiman. Aside from the fact that several stories make me profoundly glad Lovecraft's domestic animal of choice was the cat (since cats so often fare horribly in horror stories), there is a little matter of accompaniment which I feel I must address. Namely: mind your playlist if you are ever reading Lovecraft, because certain songs tend to tip over from pleasant or nostalgic to Really Quite Unnerving if you hear them under those circumstances. In my case several of the songs currently on my iPod playlist qualified, but the most notable- for a confluence of lyrics and Lovecraft's racist tendencies- was the Paul Simon song "Under African Skies". The tune is a bouncy, upbeat, major-key tune; the words themselves are really quite pleasant- but... well, Lovecraft worked best when he was intimating and hinting, and the whole thing reeks of his kinds of hints.
( Lyrics here. )
Put the words in the hands of H. P. the Human Poikilotherm, and let's face it, there is something excessively nasty waiting in there.
On another note entirely, Lovecraft grabs my brain and shoves in a temporary world-altering filter in almost exactly the same way that Hellblazer does, so there's gonna be some John Constantine when the Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath is finished (I'm about halfway through and I started on the train home tonight). So that's good, at least.
( Lyrics here. )
Put the words in the hands of H. P. the Human Poikilotherm, and let's face it, there is something excessively nasty waiting in there.
On another note entirely, Lovecraft grabs my brain and shoves in a temporary world-altering filter in almost exactly the same way that Hellblazer does, so there's gonna be some John Constantine when the Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath is finished (I'm about halfway through and I started on the train home tonight). So that's good, at least.