Friday 28 July 2017

Review: The Curious Case of H.P. Lovecraft


ROLAND, Paul, The Curious Case of H.P. Lovecraft, Plexus Publishing Ltd., London, 2014.

Octavo; paperback; 238pp., with a monochrome portrait frontispiece, illustrations likewise and 16pp. of black-and-white plates. Mild wear; a heavy bump to the text block lower corner. Very good.


I’ve read quite a few biographies of HPL over the years, of varying capability, and this is the first time I've read one that drops – absolutely drops – the fan-boy breathlessness and approaches the job with a serious attitude and no desire to discover the shoggoths lurking in the corners of the man’s existence. If you have anyone out there in your life pestering you for some kind of idea about who HPL was, give them a copy of this book – it’s “just the facts, ma’am”.

Roland is a clear-eyed reviewer of both Lovecraft’s fiction and his life and he takes a decidedly interesting tack in cruising through the muddy waters of the latter. Many other writers try to find moments of crisis which underscore HPL’s shifts and relocations – they want the dark times and phobias, the cris de couers, the supernatural influence; Houllebecq wants a detached philosophy of life coldly adopted at an early age despite the cost; Tyson wants the pernicious influence of an extra-dimensional Necronomicon working its malign will across the Veil. Roland, on the other hand, stares at the raw facts and ties the strange quirks of Lovecraft’s life together with his correspondence and his literary output.

Of course, he’s not the only biographer to wade through HPL’s enormous correspondence; what makes him unusual though, is that he uses Lovecraft’s literary output as a timeline for examining his life, identifying the substance and quality of each story, or novella, and correlating it with the man’s own words, and those of his correspondents at the time. In this way he gains insights beyond what HPL is saying to others, and what is actually going on inside his head: for instance, what he writes to, say, Sonia Greene at one point, can be quite different to what he writes to his Aunt Lillian, or Samuel Loveman, and this raises flags as to which account is truth and which is obfuscation. Roland then consults the historical record – what Lovecraft actually did – and also the writing he created at the time to solve the mystery.

For instance, he notes that during the writing of the instalment piece “Herbert West: Re-animator” for the small magazine “Home Brew”, both Greene and Loveman berated him for wasting time on a low-circulation rag when he might be serving-up something of better quality for a more widespread audience. In his letters to them both, he remarks that he is contractually-obliged to finishing the work, demeaning and arduous as it is, and that there’s nothing to be done until it’s over. When examining the story itself, Roland finds that it’s written with a definite ghoulish glee, lovingly-crafted and worked, belying any notion of it being an onerous task. It’s obvious therefore that HPL was taking distinct pleasure in the piece, and was simply attempting to deflect his friends while indulging in the guilty pleasure of penning it.

Conversely, while later battling the same criticism from his friends, he laboured while writing “The Lurking Fear”, which was written under the same contractual terms. Comparing the whingeing tone of his letters to his friends and the comparatively lacklustre efforts of this writing, Roland concludes that the shine had long come off working for “Home Brew” and that HPL was looking to other avenues for stimulation.

Speaking of Sonia Greene, Roland also compares the various records from which he is working to her account of her life with Lovecraft, as printed in the “Providence Sunday Journal” on August 22nd 1948. This material is entirely re-printed as an Appendix to Roland’s work and makes interesting reading after the analysis provided by Roland. Her observations are straightforward and lack the fawning worship of other narrators, coming as they do from one who sought to carve out a married life with the man, a person with whom she was very much in love. Her observations are clear-eyed and insightful, especially when she comments upon his racism and his self-image as a relic of a past generation.

Fans of Lovecraft – especially the breathless kind – will find that Roland seems to diminish their hero somewhat, and this is true to an extent. However, this is exactly the kind of treatment that such a sacred cow deserves. While not denying the power of his writing, Roland unveils Lovecraft as a pompous stuffed shirt, unwilling to engage with society on its own terms, but craving the attention and praise of his peers (although not Sonia, a writer of some merit herself, whom he referred-to amongst his cronies as the “ball-and-chain”). Roland also dissects HPL’s writing in a cruelly-efficient fashion, calling him out for overblown language and triteness of material. On balance he gives generous praise but it’s measured and fair. I should say “Spoiler Alert” too, for anyone about to embark on this biography – if you haven’t read all of Lovecraft previously, all the plots of his major and minor works are outlined as part of the forensic process.

If there’s one area which deserves criticism in this work, it’s Roland’s musing upon whether or not Lovecraft suffered from Asperger’s Syndrome. Nowadays it seems fashionable to drag figures from history and examine them for a potential spot on the Asperger’s spectrum, but seriously, it’s a lame and pointless exercise. There’s plenty of material out there to back the view that Asperger’s, ADD and ADHD are products of a modern age and that trying to fathom whether or not, say, George Washington might’ve needed a handful of Ritalin to get by, is about as useful as trying to work out if Donald Trump might be susceptible to St. Anthony’s Fire, or St. Vitus’ Dance (would that it were so!). The fact that Roland points out that HPL’s mother was a long-term fan of lead-based cosmetics and that complications of syphilis might have led to his father’s death seem worthy of follow-up, but he allows them to fall by the wayside in favour of the hot-button topic of Asperger’s Syndrome. It’s about as useful as Mormons converting the long-term dead to their faith; please stop it now.

All-in-all, that last caveat aside, this is a solid work on the life of Lovecraft, one that regards his own written word with a jaundiced eye and seeks out other (usually overlooked) sources for corroboration. Examining his written productions for clues as to his state of mind at the time of writing is an inspired take on the standard process, allowing both the work and its author to undergo critical scrutiny. If you’re looking for a solid biography for the creator of Cthulhu and Co., without the occult significance of New Age ritualists, the nihilism of career existentialists, or the exultations of the Post-humanists, then this is your best, meat-and-potatoes alternative.

Four Tentacled Horrors from me.

Sunday 23 July 2017

Local Colour...

One of the benefits of living where I do is that the environment is very picturesque and also extremely varied. The Blue Mountains of New South Wales was a barrier to the spread of the Sydney settlement for over thirty years after the first Europeans landed here. After it was crossed, towns sprang up all along the line created by the first road from Parramatta out to the Western Plains. All of these towns now comprise the City of the Blue Mountains, known as the “City in a National Park”.

Building started up here in the early 1800s and reflected the styles of construction at the time. The first people to settle down here were afflicted with the horror of the Bush which was so prevalent among Europeans coming to live Down Under. To combat this, they planted all of the trees and bushes which they remembered from their younger days in the Northern Hemisphere. Consequently, we have an odd and very eclectic mix of foliage up here, with native species sprouting up side-by-side with all kinds of colourful immigrants.

The basic native foliage ranges through several types, from Alpine on the high bluffs to Rainforest in the deep valleys. The majority conforms to two basic types – wet and dry sclerophyll forest, but there are pockets of almost every sort of Australian standard Bush.

What this means is that, if you’re looking for a particular type of scenery, you’re pretty much sure to be able to find it. In fact, the scenery can go from "Jungle" to "Northern Europe" often by just turning your head.

The other day I was walking the dog when I came across this little corner of a local park:


It looked a bit exotic, what with all the tree ferns. What you don't get from the image is that the ambient temperature was only about 100C (that's, apparently, 500 Fahrenheit).

This is the edge of a little wilderness area, criss-crossed by walking trails, but as it looked kind of jungle-y, I took a shot of it.


Throwing the image in Photoshop, I decided to play around with it. First, I removed the colour and tweaked the contrast. Then I fired up Google Images and went looking for a Victorian-era explorer: I could have picked Speke, looking emaciated with his Piccadilly weepers, or Richard Burton with his lugubrious walrus moustache, but I decided to go with the ever-dependable Percy Fawcett. I just copied the image and cut him out roughly before pasting him onto my park shot.


The next bit got pretty fiddly, but soon I was able to plant Percy right into the shot, tweaking the image to make it look as natural and real as possible. Then I built in a photograph frame and some other imagery and - voila! - instant Call of Cthulhu visual aid.



(The irony, of course, is the idea of pulling Fawcett out of a jungle just to dump him back into another one, but whatever.)

It just goes to show that inspiration is all around us and can be a great way to bring your games to life.

Saturday 22 July 2017

Deep Waters - Night Terrors!


For the second time in one evening I was headed out of Innsmouth across the salt marshes towards Newburyport. At a certain point though, the road diverged and I took the left hand path, down deep into the night-fog, along a dirt track that was more potholes than pathway. A few miles of this, then the road fell into thick swamp and we were forced to stop and proceed on foot.

Barney loped off into the dark ahead of me and I winced, looking down at my trainers. Around us the carolling of bull-frogs filled the emptiness and Barney’s voice joined them.

‘You comin’?’ he barked.

‘Sure,’ I answered, ‘let me just grab a torch from the trunk.’

Barney muttered something deprecating under his breath at that, probably along the lines of me being an unevolved loser. I heard him splashing away.

Torch in hand, I tip-toed gingerly through the ooze. I focussed on tussocks of wiry marsh grass and occasionally Barney’s boot-prints, to try and minimise the destruction of my sneakers, but the damage was soon done regardless. After awhile, the ground began to slope upwards and dry out, and we were soon heading up a steep, round-topped hill. There are a bunch of these throughout Essex County, especially out towards Dunwich, but this was a tiddler compared to most of them. Still, it was a hefty barrier to a train-line out to Rowley and it had seemed preferable to those building the line to punch through it rather than go around. Off to my left, towards the coast, I could just see the dark, overgrown line of the old rail tracks heading directly towards the hill from Innsmouth.

I stopped next to Barney and played the beam of my torch around the area.

‘So,’ I said, ‘any idea how we’re gonna access the tunnel?’

Barney flicked a luminous gaze towards me. ‘Yep,’ he said, ‘we head upwards. There’s a ventilation shaft over the tunnel – that’s how we get in.’ He shuffled off upwards into the dark.

‘Figures,’ I muttered, and started slogging up towards the crown of the hill. It wasn’t easy – being dome-shaped, these tumescences were very steep at their bases and took a long time to flatten out. I embarked upon activity more suited to a billy-goat and I was concentrating so hard on not falling that I lost track of where Barney had gotten to.

‘Hey!’ he hissed from one side, ‘where’re you goin’ y’idjit? It’s over here.’

His voice was coming from a patch of something probably green in the light of day and quite possibly thorny, off to my left and somewhat below my current position. I muttered something unfriendly under my breath and began slowly descending and angling sideways. Soon I was next to the thorn brake and trying not to get too intimate with it.

‘Hey! Barney!’ I called in a strangled voice, trying to keep noise to a minimum, ‘where’d you get to?’

‘Here,’ he responded. His voice came from the ground just above the bushes, and I scrabbled up and around towards him.

Behind the thorns, shielding it from anyone looking up from below, was a stone-lined tunnel that angled down into the heart of the hill, barred by a solid-looking steel grille. As I swung into the start of the passage, Barney gripped the latch which held it shut and leant on it with all his force. It initially refused to yield but, after a few seconds and with a complaining screech, it slowly gave way and slid open. Like I said, Barney and I are the local heavy-weights.

‘Right,’ Barney’s eyes glowed at me in the dark, ‘I’ll take it from here.’ The tunnel sloped straight downwards at a less than 45-degree angle from the hill’s summit, straight into the dark, and Barney slid headfirst into the opening, clinging to the sides like a gecko. There was a good reason that he’d been chosen for this job; I could hear his hands going ‘slap-pock, slap-pock, slap-pock’ into the darkness. I got comfortable at the lip of the passageway and lit up a cigarette, enjoying the view across the misty swamplands out towards the far Atlantic…

My solitary contemplation became disrupted by a distant sound borne on the high winds coming from somewhere above me. At first I thought I was imagining things but then, after I homed in on it, I distinctly heard the tones of someone laughing in an amused, and somewhat cracked, high-pitched cadence. Tittering, I guess you’d call it.

I stuck my head out into the night and angled my ears to try and trace the source of it. The sound was definitely coming from above me, towards the crown of the hill. I pulled my head back in and listened for sounds of Barney coming back up the passageway, but there was nothing.

‘Dammit!’ I spat. I stubbed out my cigarette on the stonework and crawled out onto the hillside once more.

The slope was almost vertical and I lay belly-first on the turf, trying to gain purchase and haul myself upwards. A wind had picked up and it had fun whipping around me and blowing grass and dirt into my face. I growled and re-doubled my efforts, cursing the fates for being parsimonious with the sort of gecko-hands Barney was blessed with.

Eventually, the slope became less intense as I neared the summit. I was soon able to progress from hugging the wall to kneeling and then standing in a half-crouch. Around me, low thickets of the same kind of thorny vegetation had sprung up in patches, providing me a handy type of cover. Ahead of me, the crazy giggling had increased and I had an idea that there must be at least five people sharing some sort of hilarious joke. Not that I could see anything. I decided that not knowing was worse than knowing, so I stood up and flashed my torch at the flat space that formed the top of the hill.

Instantly, my beam was slashed by an explosion of black wings bursting into action and lofting suddenly into the air, along with a whipping of barbed tails and the lashing of rubbery limbs. The tittering vanished to be replaced by a volley of panicked, thin screams. In a second all this blackness soared upwards into the night, leaving me standing by myself on the hill. “By myself”, but not “alone”: around me the air throbbed with flapping leathery wings, the whip-crack of tails and the angry sibilance of thin shrieking, circling malevolently around me. My flailing torchlight caught snippets of wheeling forms - horns; faceless heads; clutching claws.

‘Note to self,’ I muttered, ‘not knowing: definitely better than knowing.’

With a sinister crack, a long black tail snapped out of the night and wrapped sharply around my neck. I dropped my torch and grabbed hold, to try and stop choking. A huge buffet of air shuddered around me and I suspected that the tail’s owner was trying to haul me upwards. In retaliation, I made myself a dead-weight and threw myself onto the ground, rolling over on my back.

Above me, a black and rubbery figure dropped towards me, claws extended. Black horns curved above its forehead and its skin shone dully blue in the dark. What occupied my attention most was the fact that it had no face, just a blank, black oval on the front of its head that, nevertheless, had bones beneath it which were engaged in doing the things that faces usually do. The claws sank into my chest as the wings fluttered around us like a ragged cape ready to loft me up into the night once more.

‘Screw that,’ I gasped and punched the non-face with all I had.

The black shape jetted back from the impact; the long tail arrested its backward flight, and the whole evil form crashed to the turf like a broken umbrella. I stood up sharply, dragging the tail from my neck like an unwanted scarf, and looked quickly around, assessing the situation. I grabbed my fallen torch and wheeled about with it: around me, circling like a pack of deadly ebon birds, the thing’s buddies were taking me in and working on their next move. I noticed with satisfaction that the beam of light seemed to cause them some distress, so I used it to scare them back into the dark.

That didn’t last for long; they soon started to co-ordinate their efforts. As one descended towards me to be driven back, hissing and shrieking from the light, the others swooped in from behind to smack me in the head or back with a clawed hand or a barbed tail. I was getting, quickly, very angry, and I don’t think they realised what kind of trouble they were letting themselves in for.

At the next feint, I spun around and grabbed a handful of horn. I pounded the facelessness a couple of times and then drove it into the dirt, stomping on its neck with my boot: it lashed about like a snake deprived of its head. Without waiting, and tuning it to the despairing squeaks of the others, I looked up in time to see another one reaching its taloned hand towards my face. I ducked, grabbed its arm and smacked it bodily downwards onto its buddy. That gave me an idea.

Reaching down to the creature pinned by my shoe, I felt around for its ankle. This I seized and I stood up again, wheeling quickly about. Whenever I spotted one of his partners closing in for the attack, I belted him with his friend, being rewarded with the sight of the assailant hitting the dirt with a crunch and the satisfying crack of bones snapping. They soon re-grouped above me, hissing in frustration.

Suddenly, one of them jerked downwards, hauled by its tail. As I watched there was a sickening tearing sound and its head bounced into a thorn bush. The rest of its twitching corpus soon followed.

‘Hey,’ said Barney, ‘what are you doing, dicking about up here?’

I gaped at him. Around me the broken black forms flapped rapidly off into the dark in a panicked rout, including the headless one, carrying its hissing skull under one arm.

‘Ward’s intact,’ said Barney, wiping his hand on his leather jacket, ‘but there was this note for you.’

‘What?’ I gaped some more. ‘A note? For me? Down there?’

In reply, Barney just shrugged and held out a folded piece of paper with my name scrawled on it. I took it and opened it up, scanning its contents:

Don’t worry,’ it read, ‘your car is in the best of hands. It’s cool.

Distantly, from the road to Newburyport, hidden by the crawling fog, came the sound of my Pontiac Firebird, gunning off into the night…

To Be Continued...

Saturday 15 July 2017

How the West was Weird...

The other day I was shopping at my local DVD place and I saw a disc called “Brimstone”. I was immediately excited, because I thought this was the cool late 90s TV show about a dead cop returned from Hell to capture 113 escaped souls. It wasn’t. Instead it was some seedy torture-porn series about violent religious persecution in a Wild West town. Seriously not interested, folks. However, it gave me a flash of insight – there seems to be a lot of creepy Western stuff out there at the moment, and I think we’ve hit one of those pop-cultural nexus points once more.

It seems to have kicked off with the “Magnificent Seven” re-boot which, for the most part, seems to have been a vehicle to keep Chris Pratt in trim between “Guardians” flicks. And not weird in the least, although it set up a whole mess of Wild West archetypes to ponder about. Then along comes “Preacher”, “Westworld” and now “Brimstone”. Coincidentally, Flying Frog Games have kickstarted a new boardgame in the interim called “Shadows over Brimstone” with the premise that gateways have opened up into other realities within the mines being worked around the town of Brimstone (apparently ‘Brimstone’ is what you call ‘Tombstone’ when Hell is involved). So it looks like we’re back to being cowboys and indians for awhile.

Once again, I’m led to muse about how forgetful we are as a species, especially when it comes to such entertainment fare. Quote Santayana all you like, but when it comes to popular entertainment, we’re doomed to repeat ourselves endlessly. Of course Hollywood has always liked to push the Wild West shtick because it’s cheap; we all recall how Gene Roddenberry promised the TV execs a Western show and then delivered “Star Trek” regardless, don’t we? Don’t we? Hmm…

Well, before we start going off about how new all of this is, let’s take a few moments to recall where all of this material came from and to re-acquaint ourselves of all of the precursors, and give credit where it’s due. Otherwise, we’re going to do the mummy-shuffle all over again…


Western tropes have always been ripe for being overlain with material from other genres. One of the earliest and best is the 1935 novel by Charles G. Finney entitled The Circus of Dr. Lao. This is the story of a western town being bought up by developers in a shady deal which gets visited by a strange Chinese man riding a donkey, who brings a magical circus to the community. In the course of the circus’s duration, estranged lovers become re-united, deluded townsfolk have the blinkers ripped from their eyes, evildoers see the error of their ways, and of course the shady development deal is exposed. Dr. Lao has a knack of transforming into all kinds of alter-egos, from Merlin, to the Medusa, to the Abominable Snowman, and he uses these roles to save the troubled town. The book was successfully translated to cinema in 1964 as “7 Faces of Dr. Lao” and is well worth hunting down – it won an Oscar in 1965.


Ray Bradbury was very strongly influenced by Finney’s book and we have Something Wicked This Way Comes as a result. Along with this, Bradbury penned scores of short stories of strange events taking place in the American Midwest, from The Illustrated Man to the October Country tales.


Jumping forward (temporarily) to 1973, we get Clint Eastwood in “High Plains Drifter”. This is the tale of a stranger who comes to the frontier town of Lago and starts to coerce the townsfolk into preparations for the arrival of three riders who are steadily approaching. The stranger bullies the town leaders into ceding control to him and orders them to, literally, paint the town red, re-name it 'Hell', and prepare a feast for the riders. All Hell breaks loose when they show up and he bullwhips all three to death. We are left wondering if he was the revenant of the town’s former sheriff returning to exact vengeance on the killers and townsfolk. It’s powerful stuff and reeks of Wild West spookiness. Some say 1985’s “Pale Rider” is a sequel to it, but I’m not convinced. Try them yourself and see what you think…

1965 to 1969 saw the TV show “The Wild Wild West” violently attack our small screens to general acclaim, before being switched off by the moral majority. This show is like Scooby-doo based in America in the 1800s, but it proves how versatile the Wild West genre is when it comes to being overlain with outside tropes. Again, don’t bother with the 1999 Will Smith film…


In 1972, John Albano and Tony DeZuniga launched a new DC comics character, Jonah Hex in “All-Star Western Comics” number 10. The hideously-scarred gunfighter with bad manners helmed the comic title - which changed its name in issue 12 to “Weird Western Tales” - right up until issue 38, whereupon he gained his own comics title. Since then, as is usual with comics timelines and story arcs, things have gotten very strange indeed. Zombies are a hallmark of Jonah Hex tales and one narrative arc – “Riders of the Worm” – involves pure Mythos fare. Jonah Hex (re-launched as part of the New 52) bounces around the DC universe due to various time-travelling entities and organisations and has even had an appearance in the “Legends of Tomorrow” TV show. A 2010 movie starred Josh Brolin as Hex.


Speaking of comics, the ultimate example of the genre as far as the Weird West is concerned (in my opinion), has to be John Findley’s “Tex Arcana”. This strip ran in “Heavy Metal” magazine from 1981 to 1985 and is quintessential Western horror. The setting is the town of Hangman’s Corner and in three memorable storylines, the citizens are attacked by a vampire, a werecoyote and various demons. The strips are set up like the old EC Comics format with each episode being introduced by the Old Claim-Jumper – it’s not easy to find (there are some online sites which come and go) but it’s well worth it.


When it comes to Westerns, I prefer mine with pasta; that’s not to say I can’t see the quality of such fare as “Shane” and “The Searchers”, but spaghetti Westerns are more my speed. The arch stylings of these types of Westerns suits the possibility of incorporating the Weird and Sam Raimi’s 1995 “The Quick and the Dead”, with its comic-book pacing and cinematography, certainly proves my point. Jim Jarmusch’s take on the Weird West, 1996’s “Dead Man”, drops the mayhem into a gritty real world milieu and is one of my all-time favourite flicks. Also check out Antonia Bird’s 1998 “Ravenous” which puts Western Horror four-square into the frame and reminds me to fire up my Wayback Machine…


Ambrose Bierce is heralded as one of the precursors of the Lovecraft Circle and is responsible for The Devil’s Dictionary, acclaimed as one of the 100 Greatest Works of American Literature. Before his disappearance in 1913, he wrote many short stories and other pieces which display the power of horror in a frontier setting, chief among them “An Occurrence at Owl Creek” (1890) which is regarded as one of the most anthologised short stories ever written. Even his collected volumes of tales have intriguing titles, such as “Cobwebs from an Empty Skull” (1874) and “A Bottomless Grave” (1977): here is everything you really need for cowboy terror!

Not forgetting, of course, Algernon Blackwood, whose “The Wendigo” (1910) is crucial to the Cthulhu Mythos, and which conjures the silent emptiness of the wild frontier woodlands. Arthur Machen’s tripartite novel The Three Impostors (1895) has, as one of its extended diversions, a story set in the Weird West also.

Finally, let’s not forget that the roleplaying game of the Weird West has been done previously too. Shane Lacy Hensley’s “Deadlands” has been with us since 1996, providing us with much undead gunslinger action. It was released in a second edition in 1999 and then “reloaded” for re-release in 2006. There is also a boardgame version.

*****

This list is fairly disjointed, certainly not exhaustive, and non-chronological, but I hope that it’s enough to forestall the exuberance which is bound to come: yes, mixing the Wild West with the horror genre is fun and diverting, but please, let’s not kid ourselves that it’s anything new (“Cowboys and Aliens”, anyone?). It’s been with us, off and on, since the late Victorian era and so, let’s give those early sodbusters due credit, while breathlessly exulting over the new iterations.


Sunday 2 July 2017

Review: The Green Hat


ARLEN, Michael, The Green Hat, William Collins and Co., London, 1924.

Octavo; hardcover, with gilt spine and upper board titles, 329pp. (+4pp. of adverts), all opened. Moderate wear; slightly rolled; boards rubbed and stained; corners lightly bumped; spine extremities softened; previous owner’s bookplate to the flyleaf. Lacks dustwrapper. Very good.


I’ve been after this book for quite awhile. I went looking online for a copy some time back and it couldn’t be had for love or money: there were a handful of copies available in the Northern Hemisphere but prices were high and then factoring-in postage to Australia… It was outside of my budget.

Things changed in 2008, however. At that time a paperback version was released and suddenly the Internet was awash with copies, both new re-prints and the original copies which had been overlooked as not worth listing. Incredibly, I located a copy in Melbourne that seemed passable and reasonably priced and I swooped in to snatch it up. Finally, my quest was over.

But why, you might ask, was I in such a furor to get a copy of this book? Well here’s a clue: this is the tenth edition of this book, printed in October of 1924. The first edition was published in June of the same year, re-printed twice more in the same month, two times more in July, three times more in August and again in September. Yes, this book was the Fifty Shades of Grey of its time, but a better read across the board than that dreck.

In playing “Call of Cthulhu” one of the things that appeals to me about the game is the ability to research the period in which it is set, specifically the 1920s. To that end, I enjoy reading the literature of the time, in order to get a sense of the zeitgeist. It’s possible to play the game with a blanket sense of what was going on then – jazz; Prohibition (in the US); the Charleston – but to really delve into the tenor of the times, it pays to go beyond the surface details and understand the era. Reading the literature of the times helps to convey that.

Historical accounts will only get you so far, apart from the nuts and bolts of what was going on at the time. This information is essential for context, of course, but it’s the day-to-day stuff that really breathes life into the roleplaying. What’s needed is social history, and the novels and short stories of the time tend to spring from this material rather than the grand themes. If for example, you read a modern book which is set in Britain during the time period, you can usually tell straight away because it will focus on the news of the day rather than the small attitudes and ideas: they will go on about the imposition of Income Tax and striking miners, rather than the upper class contempt for the police, or the proper use of calling cards.

For most people, this depth of knowledge is probably not necessary, but for those who want to get it right, and who believe that what you get out of something depends upon what you put in, it’s the icing that is the finishing touch upon the cake of your roleplaying efforts.

It’s like trying to explain to teenagers today what the world was like without the Internet. Yes, someone out there is probably going to write a roleplaying game set in the 80s, because it’s so archaic and far removed from everyday life. Sheesh!

Given that the core activity of “Call of Cthulhu” is investigation, it pays to read up on the mystery writers who were at work during the period. The obvious place to start is with the Great Dames of detective fiction – specifically, Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers and Margery Allingham (Ngaio Marsh joined them later in the 40s). Diving in to their books will give a definite sense of the time and place. Little things will jump out at you, things like the fact that there was a bound timetable of train stops called the ABC, which most households had access to, or that there were several post office deliveries each day, as well as morning and evening editions of the newspapers. One of Christie’s best books – A Murder is Announced - has, as a major clue, the fact that, after someone cashed your bank-cheque, the bank mailed the cheque back to you so that you could check it off in your bank-book. That particular book was written in 1950, but it was a practise that was going on for years before that as a matter of course.

The other sources of information about social conduct are the comedies of manners that were written in the period. For these, you can do no better that pick up a copy of something by P.G. Wodehouse. These are light, easily digested, and fun, so that the research time spent is hardly onerous. Another great writer is E.F. Benson and his ‘Mapp and Lucia’ novels, that cast a scathing light on small town life among the English gentry. And then there’s Hector Hugh ("Saki”) Munro, who wrote humorous short stories like Wodehouse but penned them in acid. The benefit of literature is that it mostly transcends the time in which it was written, being set in a ‘no time’ somewhat contemporaneous of its date of release. Therefore, if it’s not a book written in 1925, but a few years either side, it will serve you regardless.

In terms of the rest of the literary offerings of the time, they were mostly part of the Modernist movement of writing that tried to move literature away from the Realist writing of the Victorian period. Writers like Gustave Flaubert and Emile Zola, who were extremely popular both in the original French and in (heavily censored) translation, were now seen to be ‘old hat’ and lifeless, and something else was needed to shake things up. Writers like Virginia Woolf and T.S. Eliot rushed in to serve this demand – Mrs Dalloway and “The Hollow Men” both appeared in 1925 to cause excitement and consternation in equal measure.

In the wake of the Great War, people were looking for reasons to move on in a world that seemed robbed of purpose. The options seemed to be either, find oblivion in constant partying, or shoot yourself in despair. Wodehouse, Benson and “Saki” are all products of, and commentaries upon, the former option (along with Evelyn Waugh and F. Scott Fitzgerald), while Woolf’s Bloomsbury Set and many American writers -  John Dos Passos, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein - seemed to be advocates for the latter. In an interesting twist, The Green Hat straddles the divide between both modes.

Michael Arlen (real name Dikran Kouyoumdjian) was an Armenian immigrant to Britain, born in Bulgaria. After writing The Green Hat, he was swept up into a world of fame and wealth, hobnobbing with the glitterati and frequently travelling to Europe and the US. He was well-known in London for swanning around in a yellow Rolls Royce.

All this being said, The Green Hat is not without its flaws: the language is jocular and occasionally, the fact that English is Arlen’s second language shows through. The likeness to other contemporary writers such as “Saki” and Dornford Yates is striking and often treads the same wry, sarcastic tone. Arlen’s narrator makes incredibly acute and scornful observations on the situations surrounding him, but, nevertheless, is well anchored within those scenes and part of them. There is a cynical world-weariness conveyed through much of the description, but this point of view partakes as much of the poisoned chalice as those around him.

There are whole passages that glow with gorgeous effect. Descriptions of night rides through Paris or parties in London are laden with heavily narcotic language, providing strange dreamlike sequences. These are both a strength of the novel and its detriment, as often the language actually clouds the action. To be fair, what is transpiring in the novel is more than a little dark and sordid, so Arlen was probably trying to infer what was going on rather than simply telling, if only to slide it beneath the radar of the censors. Take this as an example:

“Gently, gently, gently as the phantom of myself, for was I not being better than myself? I would replace the emerald on the third finger of her right hand. I would, when hair that was not my own was pressed against my ear, and fingers that were not my own took the cigarette from my mouth, and teeth that were not my own bit my lip, and where the red elephants marched to an unknown destination stirred by breasts full of shadows, and a voice as clear and strong as daylight said: ‘But enough of this hell!’”

This is the culmination of the scene wherein the narrator meets for the first time Iris Strong, the wearer of the green hat. She is, as is pointed out repeatedly in the book, a fallen woman; someone who defies society’s rules and lives according to her own ideals and desires. We are told that she was married once to Boy Fenwick, who killed himself on his wedding night rather destroy the “purity” of his and Iris’s virginal state (this turns out to be a lie); we learn that her second husband, Hector Strong, died during the War, probably driven to recklessness by the fact that their child did not survive long. Iris, now twice-widowed and wealthy, has no illusions about marriage, and sees herself as a “house of men” and destroyer of all that is good in their lives, somehow the perverter of their connubial ideals.

Arrayed about her are other male figures, including the narrator, who are attracted by her outsider status, her beauty and her wealth. Compounding matters are the enigmatic details of her and her twin brother’s parentage – another ruined marriage which left Iris and Gerald in the care of guardians. Early on, we meet Gerald, a hopeless drunk and would-be author, who is arrested for soliciting in a public park after hours: the shame of this act, which the Press gleefully reports, drives him to suicide. The narrator discovers the body but doesn’t tell Iris what’s happened; on the same night, she encounters a childhood friend – Napier – and they sleep together, despite the fact that he is going to be married in three day’s time. Unknown to him, she falls pregnant, and flees to the Continent to give birth alone.

Jumping forward some months, the narrator is in Paris with his sister and, meeting an old acquaintance at the Ritz Hotel, he learns that Iris is in a nursing home on the outskirts of the city. Concerned for her wellbeing, he takes a taxi out to see her by night and discovers that she is close to death, suffering from septicaemia as a result of a miscarriage, or an attempt to terminate the pregnancy, we’re not told. In the midst of this tragic moment Napier enters, thinking that Iris is merely “run-down”, and the discovery of her condition threatens to destroy his ten-month-old marriage.

Given the foregoing, it’s easy to see why the book was banned in parts of the US, and why Hollywood versions of the story were rigorously re-named to distance the movies from their source material. Concepts such as adultery, suicide, sexual freedom and homosexuality, not to mention intimate medical details of the birthing process, were far too strong for some markets to deal with. Nevertheless, the book sold out repeatedly and was the go-to read for chic literarians.

“Paris rises in a cloud of chill darkness, the rain falls like whips of ice, the street lamps loiter on vague bitter errands, confused strings of light, a stealthy idiot wind glories in being corrupted by corners. The platforms of the omnibuses are packed tight with small men whose overcoats are too short for them, the brims of their felt hats too narrow, their trousers turned up too high, their eyes too dark, their face too pale. The jargon of the traffic on the rue di Rivoli, as it squabbles for every step between the deserted pavement beneath the railings of the Tuileries and the reeking pavement under the long archway lit by impudent shop-lights falling on imitation jewellery, is multiplied an hundred-fold by the shrewish air into a noise that hurts like warm water on a chill hand.”

This is the description of the narrator’s dash through Paris to find Iris at her nursing-home. The sheer exuberance of the passage almost obscures the fact that the grammar and the usage are clunky and awkward. It’s the power, more than the precision of the writing that makes it so exhilarating and enjoyable. Arlen often gets caught up on small details in his descriptions, sometimes pedantically so, but each time he does, there’s a reason for it, a subtle symbolism underscoring a pointed attitude. During the scene in the London Loyalty Club, he lingers on the number of green dresses present amongst the dancers, an attention to detail that would seem pedestrian but for the fact that, in the previous chapter, he made clear that green was fashionable that year and that, in his opinion, only the herd-like would slavishly don the colour to prove that they were in vogue.

The novel cuts back to London for its climax and no-one and nothing are spared the awful, awful conclusion. The writing in this last section is probably the weakest, with Arlen drifting literarily off into spirals of repetitive word shapes and reiterated concepts, and mostly unsuccessfully trying to juggle too many characters. However the pace established by the book’s beginning pushes the reader to the doom-laden conclusion. Many of the protagonists and antagonists have made firm decisions about whose side they’re on at this point, and their actions and dialogue often reflect quite poorly upon them, making the reader doubt their initial ideas of them as characters. There’s a kind of driving force pushing the narrative here, despite Arlen’s occasional lack of focus, as inevitable and powerful as Iris’s yellow Hispano-Suiza barrelling at high speed into the dark night…

It’s true to say that this is a flawed book; however, when it’s good, it’s really good. Some of the things it discusses would hardly raise an eyebrow nowadays, but it’s easy to see why they were so shocking back in 1924, and the delivery of those concepts, with Arlen’s occasional deliberate obtuseness, make them seem that much more sinister. If you want a solid glimpse of life – at least of a certain level of society – of the “Call of Cthulhu” classic period, it’s hard to find better.

Three Tentacled Horrors.

*****

Of course, as mentioned above, there are other books set in the same period which offer similar benefits to those wishing to set their stories in the 1920s. Below is a list of books that offer good insights and which were written around 1925 or earlier. Some of them – especially the Wodehouse books – where printed simultaneously, or later (sometimes earlier) in the US, often with altered titles; I have given those titles and dates in parentheses.

Dame Agatha Christie:
Dame Agatha kicked off her career with her first Poirot novel in 1920. Her oeuvre flip-flops between thrillers and murder mysteries, but they all offer a solid grip on the time period. If you read nothing else, read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd – it’s a classic.

The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920); The Secret Adversary (1922); The Murder on the Links (1923); The Man in the Brown Suit (1924); The Secret of Chimneys (1925); The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (1926)

Dorothy L. Sayers:
Sayers’s books are criticised occasionally for being crime novels with romantic interruptions, or vice-versa. For fans, this just means that she takes an holistic approach to revealing the society of the time. These two early books are fairly straightforward crime novels and well re-pay the interested reader.

Whose Body? (1923); Clouds of Witness (1926)

Margery Allingham:
Allingham took some time to hit her stride and these two books are probably among the weakest of her works. It took her awhile to acquire the skills to pen something as awesome as The Tiger in the Smoke (1952) but it was worth waiting for.

The White Cottage Mystery (1928); The Crime at Black Dudley (1929)

P.G. Wodehouse:
The ludicrous situations, the dialogue, the characters – these are all reasons to read Wodehouse. Many readers have favourite series – Blandings; the Jeeves novels and stories – but they’re all good. The following list doesn’t include his school series of books, which are set among prefects and students of the English public school system, since they’re fairly obscure, but the list includes some crackers, including one set in the US – Piccadilly Jim.

Love Among the Chickens (1906 & 1921); The Swoop! (aka. The Swoop! And Other Stories, 1979) (1909); Mike (1909); A Gentleman of Leisure (1910); Psmith in the City (1910); Psmith, Journalist (1915); Something Fresh (1915); Uneasy Money (1917); Piccadilly Jim (1918); A Damsel in Distress (1919); My Man Jeeves (1919); The Coming of Bill (aka. Their Mutual Child) (1920); Jill the Reckless (aka. The Little Warrior, 1920) (1921); The Clicking of Cuthbert (1922); The Girl on the Boat (aka. Three Men and a Maid, 1922); The Inimitable Jeeves (1923); The Adventures of Sally (aka. Mostly Sally, 1923) (1922); Leave it to Psmith (1923); Bill the Conqueror (1924); Carry On, Jeeves (1925); Sam the Sudden (aka. Sam in the Suburbs) (1925); The Heart of a Goof (1926); The Small Bachelor (1927)

H.H. (“Saki”) Munro:
“Saki’s” body of work is blackly funny and penned in pure venom. His short stories are perfectly crafted and hilarious and spare no-one who falls in his cross-hairs. Anything of his that you read will re-pay the effort; the only shame is that he was killed in World War One and what’s left is all there is.

The Rise of the Russian Empire (1900); Not-So Stories (1902); The Wastminster Alice (1902); Reginald (1904); Reginald in Russia (1910); The Chronicles of Clovis (1911); The Unbearable Bassington (1912); When William Came (1913); Beasts and Super-Beasts (1914); The East Wing (1914); The Toys of Peace (1919); The Square Egg and Other Sketches (1924); “The Watched Pot” (play) (1924)

E.F. Benson:
The Mapp and Lucia novels are a perfect microcosm of social nastiness as the eponymous gentlewomen studiously try to outdo each other in the social politics of their upper class circle. Benson also wrote ghost stories as well, and those are very good too.

Queen Lucia (1920); Miss Mapp (1922); Lucia in London (1927); Mapp and Lucia (1931); Lucia’s Progress (aka. The Worshipful Lucia) (1935); Trouble for Lucia (1939)

Published in 1925:
The following is a list of works published in 1925, across the world. Of particular note are Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and Dos Passos’s Manhattan Transfer, but there’s also the novelisation of Fritz Lang’s groundbreaking film “Metropolis” by Thea von Harbou. Kafka’s The Trial, although written in 1919, was also published in English this year. Baroness Orczy pumped out two more potboilers in her ongoing and eclectic oeuvre, confirming her status as the female H. Rider Haggard. In all, this was a great year for readers!

Sherwood Anderson – Dark Laughter; James Boyd – Drums; Louis Bromfield – Possession; Willa Cather – The Professor’s House; Blaise Cendrars – Sutter’s Gold; Ivy Compton-Burnett – Pastors and Masters; John Dos Passos – Manhattan Transfer; Theodore Dreiser – An American Tragedy; F. Scott Firtzgerald – The Great Gatsby; Ford Madox Ford – No More Parades; AndrĂ© Gide – Les Faux-monnayeurs; Thea von Harbou – Metropolis; Ernest Hemingway – In Our Time; DuBose Heyward – Porgy; Aldous Huxley – Those Barren Leaves; Franz Kafka – The Trial; Margaret Kennedy – The Constant Nymph; Sinclair Lewis – Arrowsmith; Anita Loos – Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; W. Somerset Maugham – The Painted Veil; Liam O’Flaherty – The Informer; Baroness Orczy – The Miser of Maida Vale & A Question of Temptation; Marcel Proust – Albertine disparue; Henry Handel Richardson – The Way Home; Romain Rolland – Le jeu de l'amour et de la mort; Gertrude Stein – The Making of Americans; James Stevens – Paul Bunyan; Carl van Vechten – Firecrackers: A Realistic Novel; Hugh Walpole – Portrait of a Man with Red Hair; Edith Wharton – The Mother’s Recompense; William Carlos Williams – In the American Grain; Elinor Wylie – The Venetian Glass Nephew