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Horror Discuss horror writers and their works


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Old 10th November 2005, 09:35 PM   #1 (permalink)
eye of shiva
 
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Wink essay on HP lovecraft

I just need your opinions
well I'm making a paper about Lovecraft as a cultfigure and I need some info about what makes him so popular even after all these years
if you could just give your opinions on my questions I'll be for ever thankfull

1. what is it about his writing that intrests people after all the horror movies nowadays... is it the atmosphere he's creating?
2. would you say there's a diffrence between Poe and Lovecraft's style...iff yes what?
3 what is for you the element which atracts you in his works?


thanks and if you have more info about him(or perhaps you guys know the mailing adres of Cradle of Filth) your most welcome to give me that

XxXxX BLOODY KISSES
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Old 10th November 2005, 10:44 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Re: essay on HP lovecraft

Quote:
Originally Posted by eye of shiva
1. what is it about his writing that intrests people after all the horror movies nowadays... is it the atmosphere he's creating?
Focus on brooding atmosphere - which allows the horror to remain veiled and thus more frightful, because it isn;t easily faced. In my opinion.

Quote:
2. would you say there's a diffrence between Poe and Lovecraft's style...iff yes what?
Absolutely - Poe was a very accomplished technical writer - some of his short stories seem written to be little more than explorations of literary devices, and he was very good at this. He also wrote far less horror than his reputation sometimes suggests.

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3 what is for you the element which atracts you in his works?
Lovecraft was a visionary ahead of his time, and very skillfully crafted his works on the timeless horrors of the self facing the dark and unknown.

A variable writer...but when he was good, he was brilliant.
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Old 18th March 2006, 03:04 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Re: essay on HP lovecraft

I still think it's the Mythos, which exploits the feeling we carry from childhood that there are secrets and mysteries we don't understand, and better not try to find out about!
In life, we hope for something more, something hyper-real, and usually find out there's nothing.
The unfortunate discover it's quite real.
IA Cthulhu!
IA ho-ho, and a bottle of Tikkoun Elixer!
(a wee point of nomenclature, here, since we know that the Elixer is actually Holy Water, an elixer is defined as a solution in alcohol, a solution in water is an infusion or solution..... Don't let it spoil a good story!
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Old 9th May 2006, 10:42 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Re: essay on HP lovecraft

I note there haven't been many responses to the questions, which rather surprises me (perhaps they sent messages directly). In answer to your queries (if you're still doing any work on HPL; it seems that those who do never really get away from it for long):

Imprimis: It varies. For some, it's the sheer perfervidness of the language, the rich textures and what some have called his "adjectivitis"; for others, it's the bleak vision; for some, it's his blending of real and fantasy, that is, his use of historical fact or actual legend/folklore blended with his own unique additions (e.g., the vampirism mentioned in both "The Shunned House" and "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward" as having taken place in Rhode Island is quite real, and an Exeter community really did exhume a body and burn its heart to prevent further such nocturnal visits as late as the 1890s; see Clauson's "These Plantations" and Charles M. Skinner's "Myths and Legends of Our Own Land"); for others it's the beauty underlying the horror. For some, it's the precision in dealing with often very subtle variations of fear, awe, dread, the mysterium tremendum, what have you. So, as said, it depends on the reader.

Secundus: The differences in Poe's style and Lovecraft's is that Poe was mostly concerned with the psychology of his characters and was much more under the influence of the late Gothics/early Romantics, whereas Lovecraft, for all his being influenced by Poe, was much more influenced by the essayists and poets of the 17th-18th centuries (Dryden, Pope, Johnson, Addison, Steele, Gibbon, Gray, etc.) and later Lord Dunsany and Arthur Machen, though he distilled his own unique style from the various influences.

Tertius: For me, it has largely become a blending of the philosophy underlying his work, the beauty of the vision and the often exquisite use of language, which I appreciate the more I read of his work; not only his stories, but his poetry and essays (which take some adjusting to). He makes one think, and ponder what it is he's saying, formulate one's own ideas much more clearly, and in general opens up vistas one might not have experienced otherwise. It is through my interest in Lovecraft that I've come to appreciate so many other writers and artists I might not otherwise have even known existed. I can always find something new and intriguing in Lovecraft; while the reasons his work still enthralls me may change (I'm no longer interested in the minutiae of the mythos, generally speaking, for instance), I'm always getting new levels of appreciation from his work. Some writers are capable of this almost infinitely; others are not. Lovecraft, I'd argue, is one of the richest because of his vast erudition and his intensely textured style.

Hope this helps. Best wishes on your pursuits.
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