ellen_datlow (
ellen_datlow) wrote2008-04-05 01:37 pm
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A Book of Unspeakable Things: Works inspired by H. P. Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book
A Book of Unspeakable Things: Works inspired by H. P. Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book was created for a French exposition commemorating the 70th anniversary of Lovecraft’s death and edited by Patrick J. Gyger. The introduction talks about Lovecraft as a “science fiction writer” and describes how this Commonplace Book, kept from 1919 and 1934, recorded ideas that the author planned to use in developing his later fiction.
Twenty, one-page pieces of text and one hundred pieces of art were commissioned. The book contains most of those commissioned (the text is in both French and English). The first half of the book consists of pieces by Lucius Shepard, Jeffrey Ford, James Morrow, Norman Spinrad, Ian Watson, Terry Bisson, Paul Di Filippo, Christopher Priest, and several French writers. The second half is filled with eighty-nine pieces of Lovecraftian inspired art by John Couthart, H. R. Giger, and other artists whose names are unfamiliar to me. All in all, a wonderful artifact
Thank you so much, Jeff, for acquiring this copy for me. It's yummy.
I misspoke, it is available for sale-someone I know bought one:
Maison d'Ailleurs
This is what the person told me:
Yes. I had to email a query about ordering, but I got a quick response. I
think it came to about US$50, including airmail shipping, and I was able to pay via paypal.
You can contact them at: maison@ailleurs.ch
Twenty, one-page pieces of text and one hundred pieces of art were commissioned. The book contains most of those commissioned (the text is in both French and English). The first half of the book consists of pieces by Lucius Shepard, Jeffrey Ford, James Morrow, Norman Spinrad, Ian Watson, Terry Bisson, Paul Di Filippo, Christopher Priest, and several French writers. The second half is filled with eighty-nine pieces of Lovecraftian inspired art by John Couthart, H. R. Giger, and other artists whose names are unfamiliar to me. All in all, a wonderful artifact
Thank you so much, Jeff, for acquiring this copy for me. It's yummy.
I misspoke, it is available for sale-someone I know bought one:
Maison d'Ailleurs
This is what the person told me:
Yes. I had to email a query about ordering, but I got a quick response. I
think it came to about US$50, including airmail shipping, and I was able to pay via paypal.
You can contact them at: maison@ailleurs.ch
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The book does sound yummy though :)
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For those who may- like me- be curious:
Some other info on the book is here (http://houseofelsewhere.net/uk/index.php?pageNum_news_rqu=4&totalRows_news_rqu=45), and I'm hoping an email to the PR office is going to produce a copy of this for my own shelves, if only by way of me getting a friend in Lucerne to visit and pick it up for me.
Thanks for calling my attention to this! I've waved the YBF&H anthologies around at friends a great deal, over the years, because the editors of it always seem to point me at stuff I wanted to read that I never knew existed- this is the first time I've had a chance to thank you for it.
Re: For those who may- like me- be curious:
Re: For those who may- like me- be curious:
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Related to this is The Commonplace Book Project (http://www.illuminatedlantern.com/if/games/lovecraft/). It's similar to the Book of Unspeakable Things, but it features (free) interactive fiction based on Lovecraft's Commonplace Book.
Unspeakable book
(Anonymous) - 2008-04-06 10:09 (UTC) - ExpandRe: Unspeakable book
Re: Unspeakable book
(Anonymous) - 2008-04-06 14:28 (UTC) - Expand