All posts by greydogtales

John Linwood Grant writes occult detective and dark fantasy stories, in between running his beloved lurchers and baking far too many kinds of bread. Apart from that, he enjoys growing unusual fruit and reading rejection slips. He is six foot tall, ageing at an alarming rate, and has his own beard.

STILL SHOUTING, KILLING, REVELLING AND REPEATING

I’ve said before that I would probably never have written any Lovecraftian or Mythosian stories had I not come across Scott R Jones’ Martian Migraine Press in 2015, and read his own book When the Stars Are Right. After that, I was intrigued – and tempted. In 2016 Scott accepted the first such tale I ever wrote, without any idea of who I was, and the whole thing sort of ambled on from there.

So it seems fitting that we have another first today, the only time we’ve covered the same book twice on the website in any detail – the absolutely excellent Shout, Kill, Revel, Repeat by Jones, reviewed this time by guest author Justin Burnett of Silent Motorist Media…

(Our own perspective on Shout, Kill, Revel, Repeat was posted in July: http://greydogtales.com/blog/shout-kill-revel-repeat-what-would-scott-r-jones-do/ )


Shout, Kill, Revel, Repeat: a Review

by Justin A. Burnett

 

“He’s good, this Huxley of the Old Ones, this Prophet of Diabolical Singularity. Reading Jones is like slipping into a dream…”

Lovecraftian fiction has me bent two ways. On the one hand, it implies a wearied narrative structure: Protag stumbles across an esoteric mystery purloined craftily amidst the mundane and generally indicated only by the presence of quirky characters with fishy auras. Protag teases the edges of said mystery until either her mind or existence (often both) unravels. That’s my uncharitable bent.

But then, if the rows of Lovecraftian anthologies and collections on my bookshelf indicate a Hyde to my over-critical Jekyll, it’s because Lovecraftian fiction is simultaneously rich with variety within its formal structures and prone to opening chasms of the heart resembling its concurrent space and time variety.

But let’s not mention Lovecraft more than necessary, or you’ll get the wrong idea. For Lovecraftian, Scott R. Jones is not. He prefers the term R’lyehian. If he means operating within the Lovecraftian Mythos (at its widest) sans the absurdity of treating it with Roman dogmatism, then call the distinction apt.

It’s also a worthy starting point in considering Jones’ 2020 collection, Shout, Kill, Revel, Repeat. I’m far from a Lovecraft expert (much less so than Jones himself), so trying to trace each iteration of the Mythos winding through this collection is useless. It’s also beside the point. It’s nice to recognize bits of Ramsey Campbell and Frank Belknap Long along the way, but what’s nicer is watching Jones “abuse” the tradition.

I’ve always wanted to read a Lovecraftian collection set after the end. What’s it like, writhing in the tentacles of the novus ordo seclorum? When the sun sets forever and the fungus fills the horizon with impossible colors, what then? SKRP is the sharp edge designed for this very itch.

Many of Jones’ strongest stories reside in this rough, gore-drenched landscape of the weirder-than-weird apocalypse. There are plenty orifical portals to close, crippled sanities to maintain, and all the mind-bending tech you could possibly want to get the doing done. It’s a playground, really. A happy place for deranged imaginations prone to stretching the extremes inherent in weird fiction to snapping.

And Jones wields a prose to match, an angular, jarring thing that doesn’t coddle the reader with downy description. It’s overloaded with a universe that only Jones knows fully, bursting at the seams in places where you can glimpse the hallucinogenic machines of world-building beyond. It’s sharp. Hostile. But this is a fiction collection, not a pillow.

I can barely pick favorites. ‘The Abraxas Protocol’ is as crazy as a werewolf tale can get. In fact, forget werewolves. Remember how I keep bringing up (however reluctantly and loaded with disclaimers) Lovecraft? Well…

And what about ‘The Amnesiac’s Lament’, smacking of VanderMeer’s Dead Astronauts in the best of ways, blending mind and matter in a way that injures the very notion of Point of View?

There’s even a story about coffee.

Yes, Jones wields quite the sense of humor between the permeable boundaries of his multiple dimensions. Nevertheless, you won’t escape his darkness, the sense of a universe bent ever to violence against its involuntary inhabitants. If there’s a challenge to reading this collection, it’s the sting of his worldview.

But let me avoid another possible mischaracterization: Jones is not without tenderness. ‘Book of Hours’ is a heartbreaker about a couple who would do anything to bring back their dead boy. And they do it… every bloody thing. What they find, as you’d expect, isn’t what they sought. In this one, like others in the collection, transcendence looms in the burning horizon, a dark one filled with agonies and joys, but transcendence nonetheless.

Joel Lane, in This Spectacular Darkness, makes a useful distinction between “ontological horror” and “existential horror.” The former is anti-humanistic, Lovecraftian, centered around the erasure of humanity. The latter, associated with popular writers like Stephen King, is interested in utilizing horror to examine the human dimension: loss, desire, those truly squishy terrors that terrified Lovecraft. Jones writes himself into the borderlands of this divide. The human is never far, particularly insofar as she seeks the perennial need lying buried beneath the mask of the given: escape, atonement, whatever-you-call-it.

He’s good, this Huxley of the Old Ones, this Prophet of Diabolical Singularity. Reading Jones is like slipping into a dream: It’s strange, horrifying, and you awake with a fresh new vocabulary of ideas and images you wouldn’t have found in the dreary daytime. Not many writers can do that. It’s no surprise that Ramsey Campbell calls him “a genuine master of horror.”

I heartily recommend Shout, Kill, Revel, Repeat. Indeed, I’m looking forward to a re-read.



Justin’s Silent Motorist Media small press can be found here:

https://silentmotorist.media

And SMM’s latest book is The Nightside Codex, which we hope to finish and review here soon:

the nightside codex – amazon



A selection of John Linwood Grant’s Lovecraftian fiction will be included in his second collection, Where All is Night, and Starless, due out mid-2021 from Trepidatio/JournalStone.

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Folklore in Focus: The Tailor of Bremen

Given that Thanksgiving is now being celebrated across the colonies (except by those who don’t celebrate it), and in view of the fact that we’ve been very quiet here recently, today we are proud to present another classic European folktale concerning the Christmas Wasp.

Like many other such tales, this one was collected by Professor Ernst Stellmacher, author of Insekten-Archäologie für Frauen (1873), some time in the 1860s, and probably carries a heartwarming message for children everywhere…

THE TAILOR OF BREMEN

There once was a poor tailor who lived in the town of Bremen, along with his wife and seven children. Originally he had intended to live in Düsseldorf, but he was so poor that he couldn’t afford the extra letters, especially with the severe tax on umlauts at the time. There – in Bremen, not in Düsseldorf, you can forget about the geography stuff now – this simple, honest tailor made marvellous suits for the rich merchants of the town, and beautiful gowns for their wives, who all sported inexplicable duelling scars (the reason for that won’t come up, either – you do understand what ‘inexplicable’ means, right?)

It was often said around town that the tailor’s clothes were some of the finest in the land – and it was also said that being simple and honest was how you stayed poor in those days, especially if rich merchants kept ‘forgetting’ to pay their bills. This being so, the family augmented what little the tailor made through his wife’s spinning, which occasionally attracted the interest of passing travellers.

“Ach! Why is that old woman round and round going? Wunderbar!” they would cry, and throw a few pfennigs into the children’s open mouths.

Despite this, one December day the tailor found that they had no money left to buy even a loaf of bread. So he left his house and walked down to the church to pray that God might ease his poverty, but he was unable to get in for the crowds of Calvinists, Lutherans, Anabaptists and other dissenters busy nailing proclamations to the church doors. What was he to do? Just then, a finely-scarred merchant’s wife saw the little tailor crouching by the church entrance, and took pity on him.

“This very morning,” she said, “I had a vision of the Blessed Emma of Stiepel, who is, as you know, the patron saint of Bremen – and not of that stupid Düsseldorf place. She came to me while I was ironing the children, and said that I would be granted a fine meadow, which I should give to the poorest people of the town.”

“A vision!” said the tailor. “But…”

The merchant’s wife nodded. “Ja, I thought that was a dumb idea as well. What should they do with a meadow? Eat it? So instead, I made a pact with the Devil, and he gave me hundreds of golden thalers, on each of which can be seen the image of the sacred Weihnachtswespe (or ‘Christmas Wasp’, for any foreigners reading this). These coins I give to you, that you and your family might prosper!”

At which she opened her silk gown, and out flew not coins, but a large swarm of irascible insects, mad as hell at being confined in the dress by a delusional merchant’s wife who had just spent three solid days and nights in her husband’s wine cellar, knocking back the hock and Glühwein.

wasp-426979_960_720

And darting and stinging, the wasps drove both the poor tailor and the drunken merchant’s wife down the street, never to be seen again…

As for the tailor’s wife and children, they too were visited by the Blessed Emma of Stiepel, but – being neither drunk nor simple – they took up the offer of a meadow, applied for planning permission, and went into real estate, eventually owning half of Bremen. And some of the nicer parts of  Düsseldorf.

Thus even today, those who have been fooled by a suspiciously generous gift, or who have done badly in a transaction with a merchant, refer to themselves as having been ‘stung’… or something like that.

N.B. For those who like to know real stuff, Emma of Stiepel was born somewhere between 975-980 and died 3 December 1038, being known for her good works. More details tracing the myth of the Christmas Wasp can be found here: http://greydogtales.com/blog/folklore-origins-christmas-wasp/

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WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON – THE SECRET INDEX

Want to know more about William Hope Hodgson and his weird fiction, or about Carnacki the Ghost Finder? Then look no further. Five years ago this October we ran a month-long celebration of Hope Hodgson, and since then we’ve dipped back many times into his maritime fiction, his poetry, his weird novels, and of course his occult detective Carnacki the Ghost Finder. Plus we’ve looked at a whole range of pastiches and projects drawing on elements of WHH’s work, and included many audiovisual links.

We have tons of new weird and detective fiction stuff to mention some time soon, but being in an Octobral mood, we realised that searching for WHH or Carnacki on our site throws up far too many results, including dozens of incidental mentions, so five years on, we thought we’d pull together an index of all the key pieces instead.

N.B. A lot of our early work was done alongside our late and dear friend Sam Gafford, an authority on the subject, who used to maintain his own more scholarly site on Hope Hodgson, and we’re pleased to see that Sam is well-represented below.

As it happens, while we were doing this, we saw that Willie Meikle mentions his work on Carnacki, and his forthcoming Carnacki collection Starry Wisdom & Other Stories, in a recent podcast interview with Charles Christian (Willie comes on around 14:30 minutes in).

weird tales radio show

Starry Wisdom & Other Stories can be pre-ordered now:

dark regions pre-order

Also at the end of this post: A list of some of the Author/Horror sites taking part in the annual October Frights Blog Hop. We, alas, didn’t have time to take part this year, but do flick through the many and varied options they offer – excerpts, horror trivia, promotions and all sorts…

THE INDEX

One or two of the older external links to media may be dead, although we’re trying to replace/refresh those as we go. Internal links should all be active.

THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 1: HODGSON AND CARNACKI

The nature of Carnacki himself, and Tim Prasil on Carnacki and fictional occult detectives.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-1-hodgson-and-carnacki/

hope hodgson
art by sebastiancabrol
THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 1.5: CARNACKI AND MORE

A little about the original tales, and the inspiration for the Last Edwardian story cycle.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-1-5-carnacki-and-more/

THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 2: THE VOICE OF HORROR

Samples of audio adaptations, and interview with audio artist Morgan Scorpion.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-2-the-voice-of-horror/

THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 2.5

Art by Sebastian Cabrol, plus odds and sods of Hodgsoniana.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-2-5/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: THE INHERITORS

Interview with Willie Meikle, plus mention of other writers pursuing Hodgsonian fiction.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-the-inheritors/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, MONTRESOR

An original Carnacki tale by Patrick J Allen, mention of Brandon Barrows’ Carnacki tales, and some French and German Carnackis.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-for-the-love-of-god-montresor/

THE INHERITORS contd.

Interview with John C Wright re his Night Land stories.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-inheritors-3-john-c-wright/

THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 9: AN EDITOR CALLS

Critical commentaries on WHH, and the essay ‘A Concluding Oink’ about the hog motif in Hope Hodgson’s work.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-9-an-editor-calls/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: HE’S ALIVE, JIM

Essays – ‘The Strange Case of the Books in the Night’ by Sam Gafford and ‘The House of Zarnak’ by James Bojaciuk.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-10-hes-alive-jim/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: CRITICAL VOICES

Interview with Sam Gafford on the nature of Hope Hodgson’s work.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-11-critical-voices/

THE WRITER ON THE BORDERLAND 12: ALL HALLOWS EXHAUSTION

Sundry trivia and end of the festival month comments.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-writer-on-the-borderland-12-all-hallows-exhaustion/

CARNACKI LIVES

Interview with produce Scott Handcock on Big Finish’s superb audio production of Carnacki.

http://greydo gtales.com/blog/carnacki-lives/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON & THE SEA DOGS

Presentation by Dr Alexander Hay on the maritime elements in WHH’s work.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-and-the-sea-dogs/

CARNACKI :THE SECOND GREAT DETECTIVE

More on Carnacki pastiches, and the fact that there are more stories written in homage to Carnacki the Ghost Finder than there are of any Victorian or Edwardian detective save Sherlock Holmes.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/carnacki-the-second-great-detective/

MR HYDE, MR POE & MR CARNACKI

Interview with artist M S Corley and samples of his fantastic Carnacki illustrations.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/mr-hyde-mr-poe-and-mr-carnacki-an-interview-with-m-s-corley/

THE WOMAN WHO DREW WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON

Article on the artist Florence Briscoe, who illustrated Carnacki at the time.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-woman-who-drew-william-hope-hodgson/

gateway of the monster

THE MANY IDENTITIES OF MR CARNACKI

Some classic cover art, books by Willie Meikle and Josh Reynolds.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-many-identities-of-mr-carnacki/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON DISCUSSED

Sam Gafford on the continuing popularity of WHH.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/roots-weird-william-hope-hodgson-discussed/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON – ONE HUNDRED YEARS PASSED

The centenary of WHH’s death.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-hundred-years-passed/

THE LAND OF LONESOMENESS

Sam Gafford’s powerful and moving fiction covering WHH’s last days. A must read.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/the-land-of-lonesomeness/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: THE UNUTTERED WORD

Poet Frank Coffman on the poetry of WHH, plus a selection of the actual poems.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-unuttered-word/

WILLIAM HOPE HODGSON: ESSEX-BORN MASTER OF HORROR

Author Peter Tremayne’s rare 1977 magazine article on WHH and his life, reprinted in full.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/william-hope-hodgson-essex-born-master-horror/

HOPE HODGSON & THE HAUNTED EAR

Updated audio-links to loads of WHH adaptations, and Sam Edwards on Hope Hodgson’s writing.

http://greydogtales.com/blog/hope-hodgson-and-the-haunted-ear/


Sam Gafford’s old site, holding many gems of WHH information, is still accessible here:

https://williamhopehodgson.wordpress.com/



OCTOBER FRIGHTS BLOG HOP

Sites taking part in this event:

Are You Afraid of the Dark?

Night to Dawn Magazine & Books LLC

Hawk’s Happenings

Heidi Angell

Curiosities

James McDonald

Always Another Chapter

Spreading the Writer’s Word

Yours in Storytelling

Carmilla Voiez

Hello Romance

GirlZombieAuthors

Frighten Me

M’habla’s!

Angela Yuriko Smith

Brain Matter

NLCARTERWRITES.COM

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Johnny Mains and Our Lady of Hate

The stories presented in Our Lady of Hate are drawn from a decade of work by a hitherto un-noted British female writer, Catherine Lord, whose stories were placed in various (mostly small) publications between 1892 and 1901, the year of the author’s death. In his introduction, editor Johnny Mains describes the collection as ‘pure literary entertainment’, which seems an appropriate phrase. It is a book to be read on a rainy day, with English tea and a fireside to hand.

johnny mains

Be warned that there is nothing truly monstrous or unusual within, yet Lord’s stories are well-written, often entertaining, and occasionally more wry than expected. Sometimes she even manages to surprise, though many of the pieces are simply windows into that classic Victorian story-world of orphans, small inheritances, early widowhood, death in childbirth, and unrequited love; of uncles variously beneficent or curmudgeonly, of turreted rooms and outdated values.

As for the supernatural, it is present, but far more often as an undercurrent than anything – hints of frightful incidents and influences which may turn out to be rather mundane. Lord suggests more than she details, only very occasionally launching the reader into actual otherworldly waters. Thus rambling manor houses, dark moorlands and sad deaths are often exactly what they seem, without any malign spiritual hand behind them, despite characters’ fears – upon which she frequently plays. More people fear ghosts in here than encounter them. And there is a certain pleasure in trying to anticipate ‘solutions’ to odd events or circumstances, but don’t expect many unrefuted spirits.

Of the twenty one stories within, we most enjoyed:

‘The Fell-Thorpe Ghost’ – an ‘Is there or isn’t there?’ tale.

‘A Singular Experience’ – a little meditation on a man’s scary situation.

‘Loyale Je Serais’ – because it just doesn’t go where you expect.

‘Our Lady of Hate’ – though more for the imagery than the plot.

‘My Uncle’s Pictures’ – an amusing tale of family and fraud.

Quite what Lord herself thought, in any social or psychological sense, remains as obscure as the writer has been until now. She is far more the product of mid-Victorian sensibilities than of the relative social tumult which was building at the turn of the century. There is no incipient struggle for suffrage, or acid commentary on the struggle between the sexes and a changing society – relationships may be ‘perfect matches’, tragic, unrequited love affairs, dutiful inevitabilities, or simply ill-judged. She seems, in essence, in favour of what you might expect – a loving relationship between a man and a woman within the boundaries of ‘normal’ society standards. There are decent step-mothers, faithful men, misguided lovers and even an alcoholic wife thrown in, but little demonising.

johnny mains

Johnny Mains has done an excellent job of locating and gathering together Lord’s output, and a service to readers, like ourselves, who are fascinated by the late Victorian and Edwardian literary period. Which is to be expected, of course, given his previous editorial work on more explicitly supernatural tales of the time – and the introduction to Our Lady of Hate also gives a fine feel of what it was like to track down and identify these obscure stories, a consummate piece of detection.

Our Lady of Hate (Noose & Gibbet Publishing) is due out December 2020, and pre-orders can be placed by emailing johnnymains@outlook.com Copies are £20 + £3 postage (£10 overseas postage because of rising international charges).

For those who seek directly supernatural stories from other, mostly forgotten, female authors, we do recommend Johnny Mains’ anthologies, available in print and Kindle:

A Suggestion of Ghosts: Supernatural Fiction by Women 1854-1900 (Black Shuck Books)

johnny mainsa suggestion of ghosts

An Obscurity of Ghosts: Further Tales of the Supernatural by Women, 1876 – 1903 (Black Shuck Books)

an obscurity of ghosts

Also available in Kindle now is Mains’ Back from the Dead: The Legacy of the Pan Book of Horror Stories:

The Pan Book of Horror Stories ran for 30 volumes between 1959 and 1989, entertaining and terrifying thousands of readers in equal measure. In this tribute to the classic horror series, award-winning editor and historian Johnny Mains has commissioned new pieces from some of Pan’s most respected authors, printed here alongside selected stories from the original volumes.

johnny mainsback from the dead

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