home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- "Temple of Set Reading List:
- Category 7 - H.P. Lovecraft" (3/6/86CE)
- Reprinted from: _The Crystal Tablet of Set_
- (c) Temple of Set 1989 CE
- Weirdbase file version by TS permission
-
- by Michael A. Aquino, Ipsissimus VI* Temple of Set
- Electronic mail: MCI-Mail 278-4041
-
- The novels and short stories of Howard Phillips Lovecraft are famed for
- their horrific imagery. To the Setian, however, their importance lies in
- their success in capturing emotion, motives, and patterns of behavior long
- suppressed to near-extinction by conventional civilization. These qualities
- may be effectively employed in Black Magical operations. Collectively the
- Lovecraft writings illustrate the concept of "genetic memory", also a key
- magical principle. [See also #6L and #6N.]
-
- 7A. _Lovecraft: A Biography_ by L. Sprague de Camp. NY: Doubleday & Co.,
- 1975 (paperback edition available). (TS-3) MA: "This is the definitive
- biography and psychological profile of HPL, with detailed analyses of the
- philosophical principles he incorporated into his writings. In contrast to
- the sanitized image portrayed by August Derleth, de Camp covers all aspects
- of HPL's personality, socially-acceptable and otherwise. Consequently this
- biography has been criticized by some HPL fans who want to see their idol
- exemplify and reinforce their own social ideologies. Its objectivity,
- candor, and thoroughness nevertheless make it indispensible for a correct
- understanding of HPL the man, the writer, and the philosopher."
-
- 7B. _The Dunwich Horror & Others_ / _Dagon & Other Macabre Tales_ / _The
- Mountains of Madness & Others_ / _Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos_ (four
- volumes) by H.P. Lovecraft. Sauk City, Wisconsin: Arkham House, 1963+. (TS-
- 3) (OT-1) MA: "The first three volumes contain the bulk of HPL's principal
- works, and the fourth contains both HPL material and selected stories by the
- most prominent writers of the 'Lovecraft Circle'. The magical philosophies
- and techniques illustrated herein were experimented with by the Church of
- Satan and are currently applied effectively by the Temple of Set."
-
- 7C. _The King in Yellow_ by Robert W. Chambers. NY: F. Tennyson Neely, 1895
- (Dover paperback available). (CS-5) (TS-5) AL: "First on my list, as it is
- the work of a writer of cheap romances who became daemonically possessed
- after being involved in espionage work of a delicate nature, the
- implications of which are still cycling. Chambers, in his literary emergence
- from the Impressionists of his day, cast a die for Lovecraft, Orwell,
- Huxley, and many others. Yes, the reading of _The King in Yellow_ in its
- entirety CAN drive one mad, if one realizes the insidiousness of the thing."
- MA: "This is the book at the core of HPL's mythos and the model for his
- fictional _Necronomicon_. It constitutes the beginning of a type of Black
- Magic unknown prior to this century - at least in traditional esoteric
- circles. It may be read by the non-Initiate with consequences no worse than
- confusion, but to the Adept this book is exceedingly dangerous if
- misapplied."
-
- 7D. _The Necronomicon_ by George Hay (Ed.). London: Neville Spearman, 1978.
- (TS-3) MA: "The fame of HPL's fictional _Necronomicon_ inevitably inspired
- other authors to produce books purporting to actually be that terrible tome.
- Some are good-humored tributes; some appear to be deliberately fraudulent.
- This Hay version, which is both a collection of commentaries and a
- 'translation' of the _Necronomicon_, is both the most entertaining and the
- most scholarly of the good-humored types. Included are essays by Colin
- Wilson (#4A, #7E, etc.) and David Langford (#21D), with 'translation' by
- Robert Turner [from the 'John Dee Edition' - which was invented by Frank
- Belknap Long for one of his Cthulhu-mythos stories!]."
-
- 7E. _The Mind Parasites_ by Colin Wilson. NY: Bantam Books #F-3905, 1967.
- (TS-3) MA: "When Wilson criticized HPL in _The Strength to Dream_, August
- Derleth challenged him to write a better HPL-style novel. Wilson's response
- was this book, the writing of which increased his respect for HPL and caused
- him to embark on his own series of related novels and short stories. This
- Bantam edition contains a preface by Wilson explaining this. Other novels in
- the series include #19A and _The Space Vampires_ (sequel to _Parasites_ -
- later made into the science-fiction movie _Lifeforce_ - which in my opinion
- is more interesting than the _Space Vampires_ novel)."
-
- 7F. _Selected Letters of H.P. Lovecraft, Volume V_. Sauk City: Arkham House,
- 1976. (TS-4) MA: "The fifth and final volume in this _Letters_ series, this
- one is recommended because it encompasses the period 1934-37, when HPL's
- personal philosophy had reached its greatest maturity and complexity. Many
- of the letters are far more revealing of his thought than are even the most
- ambitious of his stories. Arkham House [and various paperback licensees]
- make a deliberate effort to keep the #7B books more or less continuously in
- print, but other Arkham works, such as the HPL Letters series, tend to be
- limited editions, infrequently reprinted if at all. Hence if you are
- interested in specialized Arkham works and see what you want in a used or
- specialty bookstore, you are advised to snap it up without delay if the
- price is reasonable."
-
- 7G. _Lovecraft at Last_ by HPL and Willis Conover. Arlington, Virginia:
- Carrollton/Clark, 1975. (TS-4) MA: "This is a beautifully presented and
- bound account of HPL's correspondence with Conover, containing some unusual
- insights into the Cthulhu mythos and some rare photographs of HPL himself.
- Many HPL letters are included in both photo-facsimile and typeface -
- including one in which HPL recounts the history of his mythical
- _Necronomicon_ in great detail, to include its inspiration by #7C."
-
- 7H. _The Man Who Lived in Inner Space_ by Arnold Federbush. NY: Bantam Books
- #Q8794, 1973. (TS-5) MA: "In this beautiful, ethereal, occasionally chilling
- novel, a man whose body and lifestyle are shattered by the surface world and
- its inhabitants becomes more and more enchanted by the sea, first watching
- it, then studying it, then living near it, then living in a permanently-
- submerged habitat, then finally adapting his body to an amphibian existence.
- HPL treated a related theme in his _The Shadow Over Innsmouth_, but the only
- horror to be found in Federbush's account comes from the savagery of the
- surface world and its inhabitants. This is not a superficial novel, but one
- which looks carefully into human anatomy and oceanography. A powerful
- 'genetic memory' statement, it ranks with #7C and #22G as a magical text. An
- excellent non-fictional bibliography is appended for those who wish to
- pursue this area further."
-
-