
Howard Phillips Lovecraft, born 1890 in Providence, Rhode Island is generally referred to as one of the founding fathers of Science Fiction (and steam punk), with his most monumental work being ‘The Call of the Cthulhu’.
Being somewhat of a weirdo and an eccentric, Lovecraft had a bias towards the overly dramatic, strange, nether-worldly, alien, and outright bizarre. He was known to write mostly during the night-time, as he was — as cultured and sane people should — sleeping during the day.
It is said that great genius is often born out of a great tragedy, and it was no different in our sci-fi writer superstar’s case.
Lovecraft’s dad, Winfield – the traveling jewellery seller — sort of lost his mind at some point. Rumour had it that the man was getting some nookie on the side, which resulted in him contracting the syphilis. Sadly he succumbed due to muscle dystrophy at the Providence psychiatric institution.
Luckily enough for Howard and his mama the family was not left destitute. The strapping young lad was brought up by his doting aunts, and loving grandfather, Whipple.
Whipple notices that the boy had an uncanny aptitude for reading, writing, memorizing, and reciting poetry. This prompt Whipple to give the boy a bunch of not very child appropriate books to read.
Aside from being super-duper smart, Howard also suffered from pretty horrible night-terrors, sleep paralysis, and a very severe case of highly vivid imagination.
So all these super weird tales of Lovecraft you ever read: all the surreal landscapes, outer space beings, and of course the ‘madness’ (the running theme in all of his stories), yup, ALL THAT was inspired by his ludicrously imaginative and delirious mind.
At any rate I decided to make a small list of all the things that are the traditional staple in a Lovecraft tale, so read on and pay some respect to one of the masters of horror:
5) The Young Man, aka the protagonist
Our young man is usually of the New England stock, which automatically makes him trustworthy, logi
4) Madness and geometrical forms
3) Aboriginals, or the native locals
In Lovecraft’s defence he did not live in the most politically correct of times… Yet he was a highly educated, and fairly open-minded individual. Don’t be surprised to find offensive words like ‘primitive’, ‘primal’, ‘undeveloped’, ‘ape-like’, and etc… In his works. In the good old times of the 19th and all the way until the mid 20th century there was a clear underst
2) Outer-Space
Ah, outer-space, still such a mystery. According to many early sci-fi writers this was where evil things came from; evil thing
1) The House and the Ancient Family Curse
Old houses and ancinet curses are as much a staple of gothic literature as explosions and a Michael Bay movie. House of Seven G
Lovecraft was too sickly to attend schools without long intervals, thus he spent a lot of his time reading tales of horror and the macabre. Wanna know Lovecraft’s secret? f(x)= a house + curse + unsuspecting young man. Eureka!
Cheers!