I absolutely love HP Lovecraft; I gave a bit of background to my adoration when I reviewed one of his short stories during an ill-fated challenge to read 100 short stories in a year, and that still stands. He got to me young and I haven’t even tried tear myself away from the eldritch world of Cthulhu and the Elder Ones.
At the Mountains of Madness is probably my favourite Lovecraft novella and I was excited when the Book God pointed out that a graphic novel of said tale had been published and of course I had to get it. Rather good it is too, capturing the horror of the ill-fated Miskatonic University expedition of 1930 without being too gruesome.
At the same time I came across a short e-book called Ice Cores, a set of essays on ATMOM which look at the influences on Lovecraft which may have had an impact on his writing of the novella , as well as the context in which he was writing, and a bit on the story’s publication history. The author links fascination with the polar regions right back to Frankenstein, some of Poe’s stories (Arthur Gordon Pym for one) and in turn some works that Lovecraft himself influenced. An interesting diversion, though much of what he covers is necessarily speculation. Gets you thinking though.
All of this makes up a tiny bit for my disappointment that, for the moment at least, it doesn’t seem the movie version of ATMOM planned by Guillermo del Toro and set to star Tom Cruise will be made. Let’s hope that changes soon; I would love to see what he might do with this atmospheric tale.
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February 24, 2013 at 1:39 pm
Tomcat
YES! So great to find a book blogger who’s also a Lovecraft, er.. lover.
My fave (so far… the guy wrote a lot!) is ‘The Colour out of Space’ which, despite its very thinly-veiled racism, is incredibly vertiginous and weird and innovative.
Awesome post. 🙂
February 24, 2013 at 2:40 pm
brideofthebookgod
I fell in love with him when I got my hands on an American paperback book of his stories when I was 11 in some kind of school book swap thing. My Mum would not have let me get it if she’d seen the very lurid cover beforehand. I remember the first one I read was The Shadow over Innsmouth and I was hooked!