@@Quietriot369Didn’t that actually depress him a great deal? He was already sick but then he got the news of Robert’s suicide; one can imagine the poor man hanging his head and covering his eyes with a shaky hand. He had his faults but god, the man needed a hug
@@TheCorrodedMan Robert E. Howard loved his mother dearly. On June 8th, 1936, his mother, who was ill with tuberculosis, slipped into a coma. Unable to bear the thought of losing her, and riddled with suicidal thoughts since a very young age, Howard took his own life on June 11th.
"The most merciful thing in the universe is man's inability to correlate all of it's contents. We live on an island of ignorance amid black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far." H P Lovecraft.
@@cptnhknx7303 erm, we've hardly travelled that far. 50 years on from the moon landing and we're still fretting over going back, never mind the trip to Mars.
The most ironic thing about Lovecraft's work is the themes of abandonment to an uncaring system/universe, and alienation that he was so good at due to his life. Those same feelings that fostered his most toxic beliefs are also what made him so accessible to those who are marginalized. Lovecraft's work is work I greatly enjoy, I have deep empathy for the man so destroyed by his environment and own prejudices, and his legacy is one to be admired. The horror and aesthetic far outpacing the vitriol.
I think as a loner myself who was originally raised Christian but lost that faith since everything seemed to indicate that there was no caring god, that's part of what intrigues me about Lovecraft's deities. Humans and Earth are such a microscopically tiny thing in the grand scale of the universe, so if there theoretically were entities out there like Azathoth, I doubt they would bear any resemblance to both the image and minds of humans, and sure as hell wouldn't give us any more than a passing glance.
@Jake Songster Man, shut the hell up. Dude came here to state his appreciation for Lovecraft and you’re gonna deride him for it? Piss off, leave your politics elsewhere.
It is strange to think that people today hate on him for his wrong views, but he was able to show what it's like in his head, and gain empathy from others. Latter in life he would get better, not by much, but progress is progress and I will always applaud a man willing to better himself. Those who cannot see the beauty and tragedy in that are either ignorant due to similar circumstances, or willingly ignorant to spin thier propaganda were it does not belong. One must be willing to accept each other sins and all, to hold one to absolute virtue denies thier humanity.
Fun Fact: One of the pen pals Lovecraft regularly kept in touch with asked, in a letter, for the proper way to pronounce "Cthulhu". According to Lovecraft himself, the correct pronunciation is: ca-lul-loo, spoken in a low and guttural tone of voice. Fun Fact #2: some might notice that Lovecraft's work has some archaisms, old words or old ways of spelling words. He did this intentionally; a sort of tribute to Edgar Allen Poe, who did the same thing in his work.
fun fact: I live in Kingsport, that was originally named Rossville after a prominent family until 1918 When George Eastman and a few men with railroad money came down. It then became Kingsport, allegedly after a Port owned by a man named King--although there is no sort of monument to this Port on a river. Also. Lovecraft names a city in one of his books Kingsport 4 years after the founding of this town. The only two places in the country named Kingsport- the Lovecraft mythos and east TN.
As a writer myself, I admit it is all but impossible to ignore the way Lovecraft has influenced not just horror, but fiction as a whole. While I deal primarily in fantasy, I often look to Lovecraft for inspiration on things that are monstrous, alien, and evil. It is almost certain that Lovecraft was deeply mentally ill, or at the very least, traumatized in ways he never knew, or dealt with. However, he left a legacy that continues to shape and influence the way almost anyone who works in fiction writes. He was a complicated man, but a brilliant writer.
Cain Latrani I couldn’t agree with you more. Lovecraft was clearly way ahead of his time. His stories are so well written in the genres of Horror and Science Fiction that it’s hard to believe that he wrote them in the early 1900’s, 1920’s and up to the 1930’s. I think the average person during his time just didn’t have the immense imagination he had. His stories are dark, very complicated and compelling. He truly was an amazing writer that multiple people in pop-culture have been influenced by his work so many times over.
@FoxRNG Two books, with a third slated for re-release later this year after changing publishers. Wonder Land: Black Ice is a post industrial fantasy mystery set to AC/DC, and Bunnypocalypse: Dead Reckoning is a zombie apocalypse set exploration of mental trauma. The other one that will be back out later, War Witch: Rise, is a somewhat more classical fantasy novel the explores grief and emotional trauma. Those aside, I do also have a collection of short stories, some good, others meh, called Oddballs that definitely features a couple of pieces with heavy Lovecraft inspired concepts and imagery. While most of my work has hints and nods to his work, a couple of the shorts in Oddballs are heavily inspired by him. Thank you for asking. :D
The first Lovecraft story I ever read was The Colour Out Of Space. It was remarkable how he could conjure up an image of something that is genuinely undescribable. I've been hooked on Lovecraft stories ever since.
@@tobiasmogensenolesen5428 I generally agree, still must suck to be black and enjoy his works and then realize how he felt about them. I'd still read, but definitely would be sorta hurt.
My other half also suffers from them, he says it's like he's prisoner in his own body, unable to speak or move any part of his body. He says it feels like something is holding him down and making him unable to talk.
And, interestingly enough, children of BPD parents sometimes develop Schizoid Personality Disorder as a defense mechanism. During his life, Lovecraft had a lot of the symptoms of SPD.
11:30 "In summer 1926, a hideous creature rose out of the waters of the South Pacific... ...But enough about your mother, let's get back to Lovecraft."
@madchina hexubus Film has existed since the 1890s so that's just completely wrong. How do you think we have footage of WW1 if there were no film cameras in 1914?
@@musclestruts5032 And since our brains aren't made of gravel, we can see through that and appreciate his existence as a fellow human being and we can humbly accept he was a brilliant and imaginative horror writer. The man suffered his entire life. Let the dead rest in peace.
@@musclestruts5032 Is she even a "transphobe" though? Phobias are irrational fears and she's not scared of them. So... are we going by the new definitions where words don't mean what they actually mean? If so, what did she do that was so hateful towards trans people?
Warhammer 40K, World of Warcraft, Mass Effect, Event Horizon, the list goes on... It’s honestly a challenge to think of sci-fi and fantasy universes that don’t at least partially borrow from Lovecraft
My favourite Lovecraft quote comes from the Mountains of Madness: "After all, they were not evil things of their kind. They were the men of another age and another order of being [...] They had not been even savages-for what indeed had they done? [...] God, what intelligence and persistence! What a facing of the incredible, just as those carven kinsmen and forbears had faced things only a little less incredible! Radiates, vegetables, monstrosities, star spawn-whatever they had been, they were men!" About incomprehensible starfish creatures.
I just read At the Mountains of Madness, and I, too, was struck by his sympathy toward the starfish men. It seemed so unlike him to grasp that the Other could be Man.
With this biography I wish they included a short sentence about how obsessed he was with the Antarctic adventurers of the time. He lived through the era when it was impossible to travel there, when explorers first pushed their ships close enough to get on land, and when they finally got to fly over the frozen land. And then if he followed up Poe, it's like John Carpenter was the modern variant in movies, one of the extreme few of directors who ever managed to make good movies out of Lovecraft, like _In The Mouth of Madness,_ or ones clearly inspired, like the frozen alien awakening in Antarctica, _The Thing,_ often called his best work although, much like Lovecraft's stuff, was a failure on release. _At the Mountains of Madness_ was the best thing Lovecraft did, and it took 5 years to get someone to publish it... jeez...
Wow, just got to the part where Ghostbusters was mentioned, and she was right, dang... the comedy facade has you miss the fact that the Ghostbusters story [what little there really is] is absolutely Lovecraftian to the fullest extent. It's almost like the writers were asking themselves: "what if we do a Lovecraftian horror but have the main characters too clueless and self-absorbed to actually feel the horror of it?" Which reminds me of one of my favorite Bill Murray movies, _The Man Who Knew Too Little._ I can't figure out how that movie gets panned so much... anyway, it's Murray again doing the "too clueless to realize the situation", in this case, that he's _actually_ been mistaken for some James Bond-style super-spy. It's amazing the semi-plausible lengths they go through to keep it up (plausible for pure comedy anyway).
Very well done. While addressing his imperfections that was a great synopsis of his sad but creative life. One of so many artists who died never having found success, thinking he and his work would be forgotten. We really do owe a lot to August Derleth, he is the reason most of us know of Lovecraft.
This is my favorite quote by him: “The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.” I love this because it's most likely true. Are technology/science has gotten really far. We are about to send a satellite into space that will find exoplanets at a much rapid rate. We are constantly sending information into space about our location, and god only know what is going down in labs. Things are about to get weird. Not Lovecraft weird, but weird.
Reminds me of the story of the Tower of Babel. What man was able to accomplish because we all spoke the same language. Basically there was nothing to slow us down.
Thanks for this. I will always cherish the memory of discovering that old black hardcover book in my father's bookcase, cracking it open, and falling into a world so gorgeously horrible that I didn't come out until the book was done. 1970 and nobody I knew had read him, until I began to find references in underground comix. Distressingly a friend who writes role-playing games was recently forbidden from referencing Lovecraft because of his racism. Out goes the baby with the bathwater. I can't think how many classic writers hated women, but we read them all the same.
Wagner was a racist too, a fact often ignored by fans. Its important to remember that Lovecraft was a product if the world he grew up and lived in. Sadly racism was (and still is sad to say) prevalent in American society. While his racism is really unfortunate but we need to remember that creators are human and have human failings.
Lovecraft was the product of severe social isolation. There are kids suffering from this today. And still today, there is no treatment. Being a loser is taboo. It is the ultimate horror.
I've been that weird socially awkward loner since 9th grade. Almost thirty now and I struggle immensely with conversation and even looking someone in the eye.
I use to be very popular and I threw it all away when I realised that people are shyte. Society has a predetermined idea of what people should be and how they should act. They are conditioned by TV and pop media. I agree with lovecraft about how people act in NYC, they are pushy and rude , greedy arseholes , it's not about race it's just crass , ignorant, unrefined scum. But I can only speak for my self , but if he was really racist he wouldn't have married a Jewish girl. People love to label people , when they're all the same way and just wont admit it.
🖤💀I liked this. A few people have come to me with brief questions as to why (as a black woman) I like Lovecraft, considering the racism thing (and I like that you got straight to it here), BUT you are right: we wouldn't have alot to work with in horror of it weren't for him, or people like him. Im in love with horror, both in literature and in film, and given how he's inspired the people I look up to today (Guillermo, Ito, etc.), I respect his work and work ethic regardless. He had such a disctinctly unsettling, painful life, and I oftentimes find myself relating to those dark places and feelings he kept falling into. As most of us do. Isolation is something I personally have a fear of. Alot of his stories reflected his life, in a way, looking back. I completely recall reading about how this man wasn't necessarily an open person, so I can understand why his narrow-minded thinking, hatred, and/or various biases might develop over time, especially when one is young. It doesn't excuse it, but I do understand. Given the time period, this was normal, since everyone wasn't nearly as integrated as humans are today. This is what ultimately makes me look past this a bit, well enough to find the good in his situation; i.e. his writing. The way he gained this vast amount fame after death is probably the most ironic thing about his life as a whole. Even if they were works of fiction, Ive always had an affinity for knowledge, or the ability to dig deeper into existential belief systems and philosophy. Reading stuff like his just made it alot of more exciting and thought-provoking, and i hope the art of cosmic horror doesn't die out too soon. Wonderful video~🖤
Ravenna Lovecraft If I only appreciated art made by people I agree with, I’d be pretty bored. Socrates said that the people who read poetry understand it better than the poets themselves. As a reader we can get a deeper meaning out of a work than the author intended and not only that but multiple meanings. All of the great philosophers were probably either sexist, racist or both but that doesn’t mean we can’t push that wisdom forward and keep using it. Everyone’s mind is like a neighborhood with good and bad people in it, we all have thoughts we wish we didn’t but we must nurture the good thoughts and suppress the evil thoughts. Sorry I’m babbling... I’ve had a cold all week and can’t sleep. I’m glad you’re able to enjoy Lovecraft though. I might be too forgiving but it’s just my nature, I don’t think people have nearly as much control over their lives as most people think they do. People justify their decisions “I’m only doing this because of that” but truly it doesn’t matter how they justify it. The justification is an afterthought. They didn’t actually make the decision, they did what they always do because that’s who they are and that philosophy makes it easier for me to forgive because I don’t think people can help who and what they are.
Lovecraft may seem prejudiced or even racist on the surface, but as I'm sure you've noticed in his writings, all of the "ethnic" and "lower class" white peoples are the only ones who know what's really going on and try to warn these "scientific" and "sophisticated" white intruders who don't listen and always cause disasters with their meddling, perhaps there is a subtle message there. Lovecraft was also a product of his time where the wealthy upper class whites had a tendency to look down on everyone else and looked askance at anyone else's accomplishments. Remember, for example, that when Irish working peoples started arriving in any numbers, the New England Brahmins did not consider them "white". Ensconced in their exclusive neighborhoods, they could live as they'd always had and at least for the time being, ignore the changes taking place around them. As America began a rapid industrialization, any workers with skills from anywhere were desperately needed. As an example, the Panama Canal was mostly built with physical labor from the "black" islands of the Caribbean. While the contributions of many peoples has been ignored, things are slowly changing as new information is published and forgotten histories are remembered. Lovecraft was one of the great American writers of the 20th century and foreshadowed everything that was to follow and you can appreciate his works without agreeing with his politics, whatever may have been in his heart of hearts. Let's hope that he has found peace after so many troubles and perhaps he is smiling somewhere that we are still reading his stories.
@@josephwarra5043 also, it seems like lovecraft also realized how wrong he was about his racism and almost tried to erase his works that had to do with such slandering of minorities. he was talked out of it by the few authors that he befriended. in general he showed signs of change and i do think that deep down he may have been a good man and that he could have shown it, had he lived longer.
Can I just say this has to be one of my most favorite comment threads I've seen on here? So many individualistic intellectual thinkers. Lovecraft's socially acceptable although warped mindset has little impact on the writing created by his pain and imagination. Fantastic. And the OP mentiontioned Junji Ito. 😁
He probably had little use for Italian Americans either. But it was a totally different world and he was a product of it. You have to judge historical characters by their times and locations. Shaka was a military genius. Today some people would consider him a homicidal maniac.
The first book I read was "In the mountains of madness", and I freaking love it. It felt terrifying, unique and left that impression so particular of cosmic horror
We were just in Providence recently on a road trip and swung by his grave and a museum they have for him. Troubled people are often some of the most creative.
@@italian896 It's a neat city. I am a native of Rhode Island, and I always have a lot of fun when I go in. You will see homages to Lovecraft and Cthulhu everywhere, there is a store in the Arcade mall dedicated to him, plus a nice coffee shop across the way. And there are a lot of cool stuff that have nothing to do with Lovecraft, and it is an incredibly artsy town. There are museums, art galleries, the theatre scene is quite good, lots of street art. There's water fire in the summer, lots of awesome festivals, and in June there are crazy fun Pride celebrations. Though not this year obviously. And a building with a dude even scarier than Lovecraft.
@@sylviasammon-burns6021 There are those things in Providence,however,there's also a lot of bad neighborhoods also,gangs,drugs,homeless problems,just like every other city, Providence is a poor city,those who can move? They move .
I remember how I first encountered Lovecraft's writing. It was in middle school, I skipped classes and met a few years older girl in the schools corridor, reading Call of Cthulhu. We started talking, she left for a bit, leaving the books, and I immediately started reading. Couldn't stop. I've read Lovecraft in Polish, English, and in French since then. I don't even like horror that much, but Lovecraft's works are something very special to me, they have been for over twenty years now. I never learned what her name was...
It's okay, we all have that person who left a lasting impression on us but we never got to know them better and never saw them again as well. It's a really sad feeling.
There is so much i want to say about this man’s writing. He was my first truly favorite author and he opened my eyes to the world of the occult and the bizarre and wonderful world of aliens living right here on Earth. I really wish he could have seen what his writings had inspired. What I really enjoyed in his writing style was his exceptional, almost obsessive use of detailed descriptions. To this very day, I will always remember seeing “At the Mountains of Madness” play like a movie in my mind’s eye.
By the time he died most historians were just _so absolutely certain_ they had all of history figured out, human migration and civilization, etc. He would have a grand old time today with a lot of our discoveries that historians were wrong even about how long humans have been around, tens of thousands of years earlier in the Americas, finding 600,000 year old butchered rhinoceros in the Phillippines, that sorta thing. And it's starting to look like our universal stories of a global flood wiping humanity out probably have more basis in the actual past than in religious fiction and mythology. Even if they weren't worshiping some evil elder dogs from beyond the cosmos, whoever the people of "Atlantis" were, even if it's silly to imagine they were more advanced than we are today, we've gotten to the point where it seems more likely than not it _was_ simple fact that relatively advanced cultures were wiped out by a global flood, specifically 10800 years ago, water rising hundreds of feet in a decade as a result of comets striking the ice-covered Nothern Hemisphere (Greenland one is discovered a few years back in particular). And ofc, what people never think of, humans build their cities on the waterfront, you raise water levels a couple hundred feet aaaand..... Ah, Lovecraft would love that, that even humanity got wiped out in relatively recent history from a fairly advanced state, and it's all buried and lost to time.
Thank you for addressing Lovecraft's positives instead of just boxing him into "racist/bigot." Too often have I seen the latter, and the comments filled with misunderstanding of a truly great artist.
@@traditionalfascists3303 except that these individuals cultivate a society of distrust and judge others based on bloodline rather than merit or trait. If you're being sarcastic, I'm not defending Lovecraft's racism, only saying he was more than just this quality. Otherwise, I'll just give you the benefit of the doubt and assume your terrible position comes from a lack of interaction with individuals of other races. Let me assure you, any notion you may have of "race" or "purebloodedness" is an illusion you've convinced yourself of in order to feel more secure in your narrowminded worldview.
ZemikianUchiha You’re right I just hate Black people because I’ve never met one. I bet I’m 25% black too because I’ve never taken the time or money to research my family history. And all those things you said are true because your totally not Marxist propagandist trained teacher can never be wrong. You got me
@BaaldEagle People also don't seem to understand that you can dislike a group of people in a broad sense, while still giving *individuals* the benefit of the doubt. That's not racism, that's just being a normal human being. But in *CURRENT YEAR* that makes you Hitler incarnate I guess.
Macaroons the sequel racism when fascists use the term means preferring and protesting your own people. Not hating or exploiting other’s. Look at George Lincoln Rockwell who was allies with Malcolm X
Peter T - racist - always making ridiculous stories - Has a somewhat insane side of him - Has a dad with syphilis and economical problems - Has a pretty abusive mother - depressing life - Doesn't know how to do love - Trolls people Yeah he's kinda the definition of a 4chan regular
One of my favorite authors to ever set pen to paper. His stories came to life in my teen years, I would read them often. I still remember flipping the pages of “at the mountains of madness” feverishly as I could imagine every scene. No one painted a horrific picture with words like Lovecraft.
My Top Five HPL stories: 1. Shadows over Innsmouth (Arguably his best writing, the scene of escaping the hotel is a great action sequence) 2. The Dunwich Horror (A Perversion of Birth of Christ in a way. Quintessential weird tale) 3. The Thing on Doorstep (Massively underrated. A fascinating body-swap tale) 4. The Call of Cthulhu (Essential Lovecraft. Actually written in a very modernist way) 5. The Color out of Space (Well, Stephen King's favorite HPL tale. Read it) Honorable mentions: The Festival, The Dream in the Witch House, Rats in the Wall (Very Poe-ish) What are yours?
1. The Statement of Randolph Carter (For a tale that conveys the terror of the unknown and the unseen, this one is hard to beat) 2. The Whisperer in the Darkness (The slow buildup in this tale and the revelation at the end is unforgettable) 3. The Hound (You can see the influences of Poe and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 'The Hound of the Baskervilles on Lovecraft in this early tale but it's still a memorable little story and it introduces the dreaded Necronomicon and a creature far more terrifying than Dr Doyle's hound ever was IMHO.) 4. The Call of Cthulhu The foundation of Yogsothery, In the same way the Hobbit was the foundation for Middle Earth. Both Tolkien and Lovecraft were Universe Builders in their own way in the 20th Century.) 5. A tie between The Color out of Space or The Shadows over Innsmouth (They're both must reads, Shadows is creepy and a classic and is enough to make you swear off of eating seafood at times, But The Color is unforgettable and epitomizes cosmic horror and was Lovecraft's own favorite out of all his books, Read them both already. LOL) Honorable mentions The Temple, Herbert West Reanimator, (a fun twisted little read plus the very first zombie book ever) The Outsider, (a tale for anyone who has ever felt different from everyone else around them.) Nyarlathotep, (A tale that seems more and more relevant and prophetic to our day and age somehow concerning the influence of Lovecraft's malevolent shapeshifting trickster throughout the ages.)
Jim Tao Dagon is my favorite because it was the first one I read at my elementary school library and I was terrified by it because as a kid I thought it might be real. The way he writes in first person makes it like you’re reading a journal that someone found, I’d say equivalent to what lost tapes horror movies are like. I do love all of his stories but reading Dagon as a child greatly influenced my writing.
1. The Dunwich Horror - where it all comes together - the characterisation, the scene-setting, the occultism and breathless atmosphere, the way the action shifts from area to area in movie style and the final confrontation. The passage from the Necromomicon that Armitage reads over Wilbur's shoulder is the very essence of the whole 'cosmic horror' concept in a single paragraph and as a concept no one has ever written anything more genuinely terrifying. 2. At The Mountains of Madness - it's a massive, sprawling narrative that does take a while to get going, but when it does the payoff is incredible. The scenes where Lake's camp is discovered have been repeated a thousand times in a thousand movies, and the sense of slow descent into inexorable horror as the protagonists explore the city is overwhelming - as well as a damn good bit of alternate history and worldbuilding. 3. The Call Of Cthulhu - not just 'because', its also an excellent little group of stories bound into one, and Cthulhu himself is probably the best realised fictional monster since someone in the Middle East about 10,000 years ago looked at a lizard and thought 'What if one of those was really big and had, like, wings and stuff'? 4. The Shadow Over Innsmouth - great atmosphere, great background and the escape from the hotel is probably one of the most nail-biting action sequences ever written. 5. Between The Outsider, The Colour Out Of Space and The Temple, all for very different reasons...
Charles Dexter Ward is my favourite. Joseph Curwen and his essential saltes. Interesting film version as The Haunted palace with Vincent price. Dunwich Horror. Taut, compact little tale with a giant invisible monster and lots of whippoorwills. Dreams in the witchhouse. Cowboy builders and Brown jenkins. Bubble congeries. I love how it mixes higher mathematics, alien races and Salem era witchcraft. Shadow over Innsmouth. Hilarious ending. Whole story dripped with seaweed and stank like rotting fish. Reminded me of Southport. Dreamquest of unknown kadath. Like a guided meditation. A really beautiful surreal work. Could have come from one of the opium soaked romantics.It's been a while since I've read it but doesn't Pickman turn up at one point? Mentioned in dispatches - Mountains of Madness, Thing on the door step, Pickman's Model, Color out of Space (big influence on Annihilation), Call of Cthulhu, the unnameable. My favourite work from the Lovecraft mythos is the graphic novel/ comic book Providence by Alan Moore. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in HPL.
Hellstar Remina. Not a direct hpl story but he's such an obvious inspiration for Junji Ito that it's worth mentioning. Suffice it to say, Howard and all his mythos penpals would have loved it.
I definitely agree with you. Lovecraft most certainly influenced Heavy Metal and ROll Playing Games. Metallica has at least 3 songs that I can think of that are heavily influenced by the Cthulhu Mythos. The Death Metal Band Obituary used a painting by Michael Whelan which is clearly influenced by the Cosmic Horror Gods the Old Ones and the many formless creatures found in Lovecraft’s stories. Sepultura and Evile and many other Heavy Metal Bands have been influenced by Lovecraft.
@@archangel5627 Metallica made 3 songs about Cthulhu specifically. "Call of Ktulu" (an instrumental, but still), "The Thing That Should Not Be," and "Dream No More"
Tbh I'm a very big mega fan of Lovecraft. Have been since highschool when I first read his work from a book that had a good number of his short stories. I now own a hard cover book of every piece he's made. That being said, this video actually taught me some really neat and insightful things. Awesome video, dude! :)
@@jackgooding5808 Of course I did. The story is about a character who has lived their whole life locked away from the outside world, only to escape one day and come across what they perceive to be a happy pleasent world. They then realize that their own hideousness (which they fail to recognize at first) causes others to fear and run from them. However they end up finding some sort of morbid peace in their ultimate isolation. While not identical to Lovecrafts life, the themes of the story and the emotions it invokes seem to fit his circumstances really well.
Very nice and honest review. It's good to see an analysis on the character of Lovecraft himself that doesn't waste time stating his obvious racism every possible minute of the video. His life was a pretty sad story, maybe that's why he managed to tap into such an obscure and new genre of literature.
Yeah that's why I love this presenter (Simon). 10/10 seriously. The previous video I watched on Lovecraft was by some chick who did nothing but nag on and on about muh racism without even attempting to understand a the man's circumstances or time. Her absolute smugness was positively revolting, deliberately misconstruing a dead mans life for internet attention. No one in the comments appeared to have learned anything besides the fact that he was racist in every story he ever wrote.
For me the saddest part was agreeing to leave her lover in order to survive with his aunts. The poverty he lived in and how many deaths impacted him like a stab on his chest.
Lovecraft´s racism really IS obvious when one reads his stories, but I doubt it has been much worse than the average white person´s racism during Lovecraft´s days.
I love his books, they teleport you in to a universe that I never thought I could imagine. And you do not need to like the Author you just need to like his art
It’s been a last name for centuries. Also there’s Mr Whipple who molests toilet paper lol. And the boy who always caught him squeezing the Charmin was a young Adam Savage from MythBusters lol
I adore Lovecraft, and I love this kind of objective look at his life. The only book I own that I'd never give up is his collected works, and I have a second copy still wrapped in plastic for my son when he's old enough to appreciate it. You can -- and we all should -- reject his racism without throwing out the massive influence he had on the horror genre, and appreciating his talent at crafting really amazing stories.
Exactly how was his death surrounded by mystery? He died of intestinal cancer in 1937...or do you think that's just a cover and he actually finally completed his transformation and he now lives in the Atlantic off the coast of Providence?
I was introduced to Lovecraft by a high school teacher way back in 1975. The book he recommended to me was Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath. I loved that book and went on to collect and read a bunch of Ballantine paperbacks including The Tomb and other tales, The Doom that Came to Sarnath and Other Stories, The Lurking Fear and Other Stories, At The Mountains of Madness etc... Over the years I've occasionally gone back and read Lovecraft and always enjoyed his stories but it wasn't until the internet that I actually knew anything about his life. Right now I'm reading The Complete Cthulu Mythos Tales and discovering all over again what a fine writer he was. From that book my favorites so far are The Color Out of Space, The Whisperer in the Dark, At The Mountains of Madness and The Shadow Over Innsmouth.
As someone who lives in Rhode Island, i am so proud that one of the best Authors in the world came from my state. I love his work and have visited both his house and his grave, he is one of my greatest inspirations for writing novels.
Lol same here. I started reading his stories in high school and loved them and when I went to college in providence and had no idea he was from there! It made me feel proud to live in providence, and theres not too much to he proud about living there lol
I have admired Lovecraft's writing for years. I had no idea of the complexities of the man, or the racism. As you said, at least something good came out of his anger and internal poison. Thank you so much for this channel!
Hey man, I just want to let you know , your lexicon, delivery , and overall presentation are absolutely top notch, your content is absolutely engrossing and addicting. THANK you for what you do , you are an incredible orator.
Lovecraft's damage and talent reminds me of Kafka if Kafka was really into E.A. Poe and monster myths. Celephais has to be among the greatest Lovecraft works and easily among the most cinematic.
One doesn't have to love the artist to love his art. And you can like someone for their creativity without it being a tacit endorsement of all of their greater sins.
@@storm7792 that's why the son exposed his dad for being money-driven and used his son for it, also the mom of the recent fraud who attacked mj also publically said that he's a liar...good logic bro
A Rhode Island friend wrote a pamphlet biography of HP Lovecraft. He found evidence that Lovecraft briefly had a job selling tickets in movie theater on Thayer Street, usually for the midnight horror films. Imagine buying a ticket to Frankenstein from HP Lovecraft!
I've heard other versions of this: Not dead which eternal lie, stranger eons death may die'. Directly from Metallica's 'Thing That Should Not Be', on the Master of Puppets album.
Kai Thoren Fawkes Cliff Burton and James Hetfield were H.P. Lovecraft enthusiasts. I think the quote was adjusted to fit the rhythm of the song. I believe The Thing That Should Not Be is a reference to multiple stories by Lovecraft. Like Call of Ktulu, the instrumental on Ride the Lightning.
@@zer0sum642 I figured Cliff was into Lovecraft. Wasn't sure about Hetfield. Although, I believe James wrote most of the lyrics for the songs on the earlier albums. I was obsessed with Metallica in the 80s, during my high school years. Master of Puppets is the best album, but I like And Justice For All because of 'One'.
Kai Thoren Fawkes Completely agree about Master of Puppets. I was lucky enough to to see Metallica front row when I was 14-15, it was incredible. Hetfield spit beer all over me and I ripped off one of his wristbands when he came down into the crowd. I still have it in one of my guitar cases. It’s actually just a sock that had the foot cut off, lol. Not many would know that, I suppose. Good ole days...
@@zer0sum642 Remember when Metallica was touring with Guns N Roses, in '91? I was in Dallas, Texas and they played in the old Cowboys stadium, the Cotton Bowl. Yep, me and my best friend were there. There was one person between me and the stage. I was looking straight up at James. It was freaking awesome!! I was 24 that year, but I felt like a teenager at that concert. Even at nearly 53, I'll never forget that concert.
No love for Darkest of the Hillside Thickets? I also deeply, deeply need Ghost to do more Lovecraft-themed songs. So badly, considering Ghost is one of the many bands I listen to while writing up notes for my next Call of Cthulhu game...
I believe this is the best discussion of Lovecraft and his works and legacy. I mean, how can you possibly explain a guy like Howard to someone who may have possibly never heard of him before? He comes off as a nut, which....... He was, but he was so much more then that. He was also a human being who suffered, but who also created a whole new genre of literature. How many people have done that?
The thing with his wife is so sad, especially after a life of isolation and abuse to finally have found love like that and be forced away from it by circumstances is just soul-crushing, at least he turned it into some good art.
That moment when H.P. Lovecraft was the inspiration of one of the best games ever and made it one of the most creepiest, unsettling and disturbing games in the gaming industry.
I read a bunch of Lovecraft back when I was in high school. What I've always found with Lovecraft is how he is able to reach in and touch that high sensitive spot of fear we all carry around with us whether we know it's there or not. And I'm not a big believer in any religion or mythology. I'm not a believer in Cthulhu but there's much that Is mysterious and "supernatural" in life and that's what Lovecraft was able to exploit. I must admit that I always envisions Lovecraft as looking more like Poe than the bland man he actually looked like.
H.P. Lovecraft knew how to write Horror and do it well. I've read some of his other classic and I'm currently reading At The Mountains Of Madness, which I'm loving by the way. I wouldn't have gotten into Lovecraft if it wasn't for people like Guillermo del Toro and even Metal bands like Black Sabbath with the song Behind The Wall of Sleep, Metallica with the instrumental The Call of Ktulu and Massacre with the song From Beyond, which all were influenced by him. Awesome video.
I think we need an "Epic Rap Battle" featuring HPL against Poe. Can he, would he destroy his idol? Would his need to win overrule his admiration & reverence??? 🤔🤔🤔
@@mossymusa365, I'd love to see Eminem battle Akala. If you don't know who Akala is he is so intelligent he makes me feel dumb listening to the man speak.
"The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown" - H.P. Lovecraft
And that helped us to survive in primitive times 👍
Lovecraft seems to have been burdened with an overwhelming fear of mankind itself. Sad.
The greatest blessing to humankind is the inability to connect all the dots in the universe. - paraphrasing.
Thats why he hated blacks . for his fear was it true that he had black ancestry .
Indeed and rightly, so...
I love how his friend came in clutch and kept his legacy alive
Not unlike Kafkas friend saving his work from destruction after his death
Robert e Howard
Howard died before lovecraft
@@Quietriot369Didn’t that actually depress him a great deal? He was already sick but then he got the news of Robert’s suicide; one can imagine the poor man hanging his head and covering his eyes with a shaky hand. He had his faults but god, the man needed a hug
@@TheCorrodedMan Robert E. Howard loved his mother dearly. On June 8th, 1936, his mother, who was ill with tuberculosis, slipped into a coma. Unable to bear the thought of losing her, and riddled with suicidal thoughts since a very young age, Howard took his own life on June 11th.
"The most merciful thing in the universe is man's inability to correlate all of it's contents. We live on an island of ignorance amid black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far." H P Lovecraft.
He would have had many a good laugh over space exploration, had he lived that long.
@@cptnhknx7303 erm, we've hardly travelled that far. 50 years on from the moon landing and we're still fretting over going back, never mind the trip to Mars.
@@Useaname
yeh, i think that was his point
“I’m going to name my cat a racial slur.” H P Lovecraft
@@dasit1965 🤣🤣
Imagine if he was around now to see how much he his work has inspired and influenced the world of horror, fiction, sci-fi and many more
Maybe he is . . .
@@ravenlord4* Vsaucemusic play* Vsauce Michael and is hp love craft controlling everything right now
Nah he'd probably die in shock at Nuclear technology and the internet
nah he'd be killed in all the blm stuff for the cat
Meh, the SJWs would cancel him.
The most ironic thing about Lovecraft's work is the themes of abandonment to an uncaring system/universe, and alienation that he was so good at due to his life. Those same feelings that fostered his most toxic beliefs are also what made him so accessible to those who are marginalized.
Lovecraft's work is work I greatly enjoy, I have deep empathy for the man so destroyed by his environment and own prejudices, and his legacy is one to be admired. The horror and aesthetic far outpacing the vitriol.
I think as a loner myself who was originally raised Christian but lost that faith since everything seemed to indicate that there was no caring god, that's part of what intrigues me about Lovecraft's deities. Humans and Earth are such a microscopically tiny thing in the grand scale of the universe, so if there theoretically were entities out there like Azathoth, I doubt they would bear any resemblance to both the image and minds of humans, and sure as hell wouldn't give us any more than a passing glance.
@Jake Songster Man, shut the hell up. Dude came here to state his appreciation for Lovecraft and you’re gonna deride him for it? Piss off, leave your politics elsewhere.
Life imitating Art yes.
It is strange to think that people today hate on him for his wrong views, but he was able to show what it's like in his head, and gain empathy from others. Latter in life he would get better, not by much, but progress is progress and I will always applaud a man willing to better himself. Those who cannot see the beauty and tragedy in that are either ignorant due to similar circumstances, or willingly ignorant to spin thier propaganda were it does not belong. One must be willing to accept each other sins and all, to hold one to absolute virtue denies thier humanity.
"omg race-ism wahhh wahhh" *can't do a single push up*
Fun Fact: One of the pen pals Lovecraft regularly kept in touch with asked, in a letter, for the proper way to pronounce "Cthulhu". According to Lovecraft himself, the correct pronunciation is: ca-lul-loo, spoken in a low and guttural tone of voice.
Fun Fact #2: some might notice that Lovecraft's work has some archaisms, old words or old ways of spelling words. He did this intentionally; a sort of tribute to Edgar Allen Poe, who did the same thing in his work.
fun fact: I live in Kingsport, that was originally named Rossville after a prominent family until 1918 When George Eastman and a few men with railroad money came down. It then became Kingsport, allegedly after a Port owned by a man named King--although there is no sort of monument to this Port on a river. Also. Lovecraft names a city in one of his books Kingsport 4 years after the founding of this town. The only two places in the country named Kingsport- the Lovecraft mythos and east TN.
This guy is so interesting. I wonder if he ever had any animals like, a cat or what he would name his animals
@@fathercornelis9198 i named an egg Klansman
@@fathercornelis9198 dude are you serious, where did you hear that?
@@brandonhill4197 I'm serious dude google it
As a writer myself, I admit it is all but impossible to ignore the way Lovecraft has influenced not just horror, but fiction as a whole. While I deal primarily in fantasy, I often look to Lovecraft for inspiration on things that are monstrous, alien, and evil. It is almost certain that Lovecraft was deeply mentally ill, or at the very least, traumatized in ways he never knew, or dealt with. However, he left a legacy that continues to shape and influence the way almost anyone who works in fiction writes.
He was a complicated man, but a brilliant writer.
Cain Latrani I couldn’t agree with you more. Lovecraft was clearly way ahead of his time. His stories are so well written in the genres of Horror and Science Fiction that it’s hard to believe that he wrote them in the early 1900’s, 1920’s and up to the 1930’s. I think the average person during his time just didn’t have the immense imagination he had. His stories are dark, very complicated and compelling. He truly was an amazing writer that multiple people in pop-culture have been influenced by his work so many times over.
@FoxRNG Two books, with a third slated for re-release later this year after changing publishers. Wonder Land: Black Ice is a post industrial fantasy mystery set to AC/DC, and Bunnypocalypse: Dead Reckoning is a zombie apocalypse set exploration of mental trauma. The other one that will be back out later, War Witch: Rise, is a somewhat more classical fantasy novel the explores grief and emotional trauma.
Those aside, I do also have a collection of short stories, some good, others meh, called Oddballs that definitely features a couple of pieces with heavy Lovecraft inspired concepts and imagery. While most of my work has hints and nods to his work, a couple of the shorts in Oddballs are heavily inspired by him.
Thank you for asking. :D
You should read The Dream Cycle of Randolph Carter. I think Tolkien took a lot of inspiration from it.
cat
Cat
Cat
cat
Meow
@@perfectogaming5240 you ruined it
The first Lovecraft story I ever read was The Colour Out Of Space.
It was remarkable how he could conjure up an image of something that is genuinely undescribable.
I've been hooked on Lovecraft stories ever since.
Seven Proxies I read that recently it was pretty damn good
It was also the first story I read by Lovecraft. I fell in love with his worka after.
For me it was the Lurking Fear!
He based the story on Fitz O'Brian's "What Was It?" written in the late 19th Century.
If you can find it, it is truly creepy.
That's my favourite.
Lovecraft always looks like he's hiding a bird in his mouth
🤣
He's waiting for his drugs to dissolve.
🤣
I feel like he might have scars from the mumps or something but that's just pure speculation.
They’ll never find my pigeons....
Summary: Sad boy gives everybody big spook.
Racist
This comment is gold 🤣
Me make talk like caveman, *points and grunts* you, listen.
Racist sad boy gives everybody a big spook
cher *honest.
Despite controversy, Lovecraft is and will always be a genre forming legend of Horror. Hell his work IS a genre.
A legend. May have died penniless but his impact on culture is colossal. RIP from Providence.
Nice to see a fellow Rhode Islander that can appreciate his work.
Awesome Sauce Another one right here ✋
Love Lovecraft. Depressing to hear inferior intellects tearing him apart with
absurd anachronistic criticisms.
@@thomaszaccone3960 ignorance is bliss. They don’t care about the cultural impact he had. Racism are his legacy to them….
@@tobiasmogensenolesen5428 I generally agree, still must suck to be black and enjoy his works and then realize how he felt about them. I'd still read, but definitely would be sorta hurt.
He shitposted himself into a job. Nice.
The God Emperor of Mankind absolutely heroic.
he shitposted, with style~
I read that with the TTS Emperor’s voice.
The emperor protects
The God Emperor of Mankind
Suffer not the alien to live
Sounds like he suffered from sleep paralysis, I've had the same "faceless visitors" unfortunately it's terrifying
It is really terrifying and hard to explain to someone who has not experienced it firsthand. Take care
Same here. Even worse when they have no faces, but sharp teeth.
gousmc1983 aye me too mate
i've had sleep paralysis, but only where i couldn't move, never saw anything scary. Can't even imagine what it's like.
My other half also suffers from them, he says it's like he's prisoner in his own body, unable to speak or move any part of his body. He says it feels like something is holding him down and making him unable to talk.
The combination of "you're grotesque!" and "never leave my side!" sounds like his mother had BPD
The mom got syphillis from his dad... Her Brain was probably damaged
Bpd is something that develops due to circumstance and experiences. Can confirm, I have it.
And, interestingly enough, children of BPD parents sometimes develop Schizoid Personality Disorder as a defense mechanism. During his life, Lovecraft had a lot of the symptoms of SPD.
you literally know 2 things she said and already propose a diagnosis. dare i say it might not be well educated.
@@patty-pat-pat Yeah
11:30 "In summer 1926, a hideous creature rose out of the waters of the South Pacific...
...But enough about your mother, let's get back to Lovecraft."
This is the funniest commentary 🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Got em
Savage!
:pogchamp:
Fun fact: Lovecraft also created the very first ever documented "Found Footage" horror, it was found in one of his unfinished projects.
@madchina hexubus Film has existed since the 1890s so that's just completely wrong. How do you think we have footage of WW1 if there were no film cameras in 1914?
@madchina hexubus Film cameras were first invented in 1888 so yes it was very much possible, idiot.
madchina hexubus nice one lol, I love blatant RUclips ignorance
That sounds awesome can I find it ?
He invented the genre with "The Outsider" just makes sense he'd put it to film.
He paid the prize for absolute greatness. Obscurity in his life time.
But posthumously immortality as well.
no, he chose to be a weirdo
Says the loser
And post humorous slander, where almost 2 million viewers watch his grave get pissed upon.
@sircole4549he is great
People who know nothing about Lovecraft: interesting
Lovecraft fans : *lol say his cats name*
His MOTHER'S cat. Who incidentally had a very common name for cats in those times.
Journalists: "J.K. Rowling is a transphobe"
J.K. Rowling Fans: "NOOOOOOOO! CANCEL HER"
Journalists: "H.P. Lovecraft was a racist."
H.P. Lovecraft Fans: "Yes. We've always known that."
@@musclestruts5032 And since our brains aren't made of gravel, we can see through that and appreciate his existence as a fellow human being and we can humbly accept he was a brilliant and imaginative horror writer. The man suffered his entire life. Let the dead rest in peace.
@@musclestruts5032 Is she even a "transphobe" though? Phobias are irrational fears and she's not scared of them. So... are we going by the new definitions where words don't mean what they actually mean?
If so, what did she do that was so hateful towards trans people?
Random Person bro is just a meme chill
Warhammer 40K, World of Warcraft, Mass Effect, Event Horizon, the list goes on...
It’s honestly a challenge to think of sci-fi and fantasy universes that don’t at least partially borrow from Lovecraft
And of course the Call of Cthulhu roleplaying game, which did a lot to popularise Lovecraft in the first place.
Well you forgot blood-borne sorry to love crowds work
Frank Herbert's Dune has done much the same thing
Bloodborne baby
D&D (mind Flayers)
Simon, you are a heavenly man. I've been waiting for this for ages.
My favourite Lovecraft quote comes from the Mountains of Madness: "After all, they were not evil things of their kind. They were the men of another age and another order of being [...] They had not been even savages-for what indeed had they done? [...] God, what intelligence and persistence! What a facing of the incredible, just as those carven kinsmen and forbears had faced things only a little less incredible! Radiates, vegetables, monstrosities, star spawn-whatever they had been, they were men!" About incomprehensible starfish creatures.
That was his mightiest step forward into universal understanding. Pity he didn't live long enough to carry that forward.
I just read At the Mountains of Madness, and I, too, was struck by his sympathy toward the starfish men. It seemed so unlike him to grasp that the Other could be Man.
With this biography I wish they included a short sentence about how obsessed he was with the Antarctic adventurers of the time. He lived through the era when it was impossible to travel there, when explorers first pushed their ships close enough to get on land, and when they finally got to fly over the frozen land. And then if he followed up Poe, it's like John Carpenter was the modern variant in movies, one of the extreme few of directors who ever managed to make good movies out of Lovecraft, like _In The Mouth of Madness,_ or ones clearly inspired, like the frozen alien awakening in Antarctica, _The Thing,_ often called his best work although, much like Lovecraft's stuff, was a failure on release.
_At the Mountains of Madness_ was the best thing Lovecraft did, and it took 5 years to get someone to publish it... jeez...
Wow, just got to the part where Ghostbusters was mentioned, and she was right, dang... the comedy facade has you miss the fact that the Ghostbusters story [what little there really is] is absolutely Lovecraftian to the fullest extent. It's almost like the writers were asking themselves: "what if we do a Lovecraftian horror but have the main characters too clueless and self-absorbed to actually feel the horror of it?"
Which reminds me of one of my favorite Bill Murray movies, _The Man Who Knew Too Little._ I can't figure out how that movie gets panned so much... anyway, it's Murray again doing the "too clueless to realize the situation", in this case, that he's _actually_ been mistaken for some James Bond-style super-spy. It's amazing the semi-plausible lengths they go through to keep it up (plausible for pure comedy anyway).
@@TransRoofKorean I loved that movie as a child
Very well done. While addressing his imperfections that was a great synopsis of his sad but creative life. One of so many artists who died never having found success, thinking he and his work would be forgotten. We really do owe a lot to August Derleth, he is the reason most of us know of Lovecraft.
This is my favorite quote by him:
“The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.”
I love this because it's most likely true. Are technology/science has gotten really far. We are about to send a satellite into space that will find exoplanets at a much rapid rate. We are constantly sending information into space about our location, and god only know what is going down in labs. Things are about to get weird. Not Lovecraft weird, but weird.
Reminds me of the story of the Tower of Babel. What man was able to accomplish because we all spoke the same language. Basically there was nothing to slow us down.
racism isnt born out of ignorance, it grows from knowledge....or something like that
Thanks for this. I will always cherish the memory of discovering that old black hardcover book in my father's bookcase, cracking it open, and falling into a world so gorgeously horrible that I didn't come out until the book was done. 1970 and nobody I knew had read him, until I began to find references in underground comix. Distressingly a friend who writes role-playing games was recently forbidden from referencing Lovecraft because of his racism. Out goes the baby with the bathwater. I can't think how many classic writers hated women, but we read them all the same.
Necronominon.
Wagner was a racist too, a fact often ignored by fans. Its important to remember that Lovecraft was a product if the world he grew up and lived in. Sadly racism was (and still is sad to say) prevalent in American society. While his racism is really unfortunate but we need to remember that creators are human and have human failings.
Lovecraft was the product of severe social isolation. There are kids suffering from this today. And still today, there is no treatment. Being a loser is taboo. It is the ultimate horror.
I've been that weird socially awkward loner since 9th grade. Almost thirty now and I struggle immensely with conversation and even looking someone in the eye.
Downside of being a social species, we group together and collectively forget about outsiders.
@@Wolf21973 Let's be friends.
I use to be very popular and I threw it all away when I realised that people are shyte. Society has a predetermined idea of what people should be and how they should act. They are conditioned by TV and pop media. I agree with lovecraft about how people act in NYC, they are pushy and rude , greedy arseholes , it's not about race it's just crass , ignorant, unrefined scum. But I can only speak for my self , but if he was really racist he wouldn't have married a Jewish girl. People love to label people , when they're all the same way and just wont admit it.
@@duantorruellas716 To be fair, that's only your perception of them.
HP Lovecraft was a man who needed a hug, some proper mental care and an invite to a cookout.
Exactly.
Racists don't deserve cookouts.
Nah, he only needed to change his cats name
Lovecraft probably would have really enjoyed a cookout.
Ok incel
🖤💀I liked this. A few people have come to me with brief questions as to why (as a black woman) I like Lovecraft, considering the racism thing (and I like that you got straight to it here), BUT you are right: we wouldn't have alot to work with in horror of it weren't for him, or people like him. Im in love with horror, both in literature and in film, and given how he's inspired the people I look up to today (Guillermo, Ito, etc.), I respect his work and work ethic regardless. He had such a disctinctly unsettling, painful life, and I oftentimes find myself relating to those dark places and feelings he kept falling into. As most of us do. Isolation is something I personally have a fear of.
Alot of his stories reflected his life, in a way, looking back.
I completely recall reading about how this man wasn't necessarily an open person, so I can understand why his narrow-minded thinking, hatred, and/or various biases might develop over time, especially when one is young.
It doesn't excuse it, but I do understand. Given the time period, this was normal, since everyone wasn't nearly as integrated as humans are today.
This is what ultimately makes me look past this a bit, well enough to find the good in his situation; i.e. his writing.
The way he gained this vast amount fame after death is probably the most ironic thing about his life as a whole.
Even if they were works of fiction, Ive always had an affinity for knowledge, or the ability to dig deeper into existential belief systems and philosophy. Reading stuff like his just made it alot of more exciting and thought-provoking, and i hope the art of cosmic horror doesn't die out too soon.
Wonderful video~🖤
Ravenna Lovecraft If I only appreciated art made by people I agree with, I’d be pretty bored. Socrates said that the people who read poetry understand it better than the poets themselves. As a reader we can get a deeper meaning out of a work than the author intended and not only that but multiple meanings. All of the great philosophers were probably either sexist, racist or both but that doesn’t mean we can’t push that wisdom forward and keep using it.
Everyone’s mind is like a neighborhood with good and bad people in it, we all have thoughts we wish we didn’t but we must nurture the good thoughts and suppress the evil thoughts. Sorry I’m babbling... I’ve had a cold all week and can’t sleep. I’m glad you’re able to enjoy Lovecraft though.
I might be too forgiving but it’s just my nature, I don’t think people have nearly as much control over their lives as most people think they do. People justify their decisions “I’m only doing this because of that” but truly it doesn’t matter how they justify it. The justification is an afterthought. They didn’t actually make the decision, they did what they always do because that’s who they are and that philosophy makes it easier for me to forgive because I don’t think people can help who and what they are.
Lovecraft may seem prejudiced or even racist on the surface, but as I'm sure you've noticed in his writings, all of the "ethnic" and "lower class" white peoples are the only ones who know what's really going on and try to warn these "scientific" and "sophisticated" white intruders who don't listen and always cause disasters with their meddling, perhaps there is a subtle message there. Lovecraft was also a product of his time where the wealthy upper class whites had a tendency to look down on everyone else and looked askance at anyone else's accomplishments. Remember, for example, that when Irish working peoples started arriving in any numbers, the New England Brahmins did not consider them "white". Ensconced in their exclusive neighborhoods, they could live as they'd always had and at least for the time being, ignore the changes taking place around them.
As America began a rapid industrialization, any workers with skills from anywhere were desperately needed. As an example, the Panama Canal was mostly built with physical labor from the "black" islands of the Caribbean. While the contributions of many peoples has been ignored, things are slowly changing as new information is published and forgotten histories are remembered.
Lovecraft was one of the great American writers of the 20th century and foreshadowed everything that was to follow and you can appreciate his works without agreeing with his politics, whatever may have been in his heart of hearts. Let's hope that he has found peace after so many troubles and perhaps he is smiling somewhere that we are still reading his stories.
@@josephwarra5043 also, it seems like lovecraft also realized how wrong he was about his racism and almost tried to erase his works that had to do with such slandering of minorities. he was talked out of it by the few authors that he befriended. in general he showed signs of change and i do think that deep down he may have been a good man and that he could have shown it, had he lived longer.
Can I just say this has to be one of my most favorite comment threads I've seen on here? So many individualistic intellectual thinkers. Lovecraft's socially acceptable although warped mindset has little impact on the writing created by his pain and imagination. Fantastic.
And the OP mentiontioned Junji Ito. 😁
He probably had little use for Italian Americans either. But it was a totally different world and he was a product of it. You have to judge historical characters by their times and locations.
Shaka was a military genius. Today some people would consider him a homicidal maniac.
The first book I read was "In the mountains of madness", and I freaking love it. It felt terrifying, unique and left that impression so particular of cosmic horror
Same here
We were just in Providence recently on a road trip and swung by his grave and a museum they have for him. Troubled people are often some of the most creative.
starbtle that’s true
How is providence?
@@italian896 It's a neat city. I am a native of Rhode Island, and I always have a lot of fun when I go in. You will see homages to Lovecraft and Cthulhu everywhere, there is a store in the Arcade mall dedicated to him, plus a nice coffee shop across the way. And there are a lot of cool stuff that have nothing to do with Lovecraft, and it is an incredibly artsy town. There are museums, art galleries, the theatre scene is quite good, lots of street art. There's water fire in the summer, lots of awesome festivals, and in June there are crazy fun Pride celebrations. Though not this year obviously. And a building with a dude even scarier than Lovecraft.
@@sylviasammon-burns6021
There are those things in Providence,however,there's also a lot of bad neighborhoods also,gangs,drugs,homeless problems,just like every other city, Providence is a poor city,those who can move? They move .
Misery gave us the best writers, yet every one of them would trade their legacy for a peaceful life.
I remember how I first encountered Lovecraft's writing. It was in middle school, I skipped classes and met a few years older girl in the schools corridor, reading Call of Cthulhu. We started talking, she left for a bit, leaving the books, and I immediately started reading. Couldn't stop. I've read Lovecraft in Polish, English, and in French since then. I don't even like horror that much, but Lovecraft's works are something very special to me, they have been for over twenty years now. I never learned what her name was...
Asenath, perhaps...
@@discordian100Well she did have black hair and was rather short, so who knows. As long as it wasn't Keziah.
🤣🤣🤣@@tomasz9429
It's okay, we all have that person who left a lasting impression on us but we never got to know them better and never saw them again as well. It's a really sad feeling.
There is so much i want to say about this man’s writing. He was my first truly favorite author and he opened my eyes to the world of the occult and the bizarre and wonderful world of aliens living right here on Earth. I really wish he could have seen what his writings had inspired. What I really enjoyed in his writing style was his exceptional, almost obsessive use of detailed descriptions. To this very day, I will always remember seeing “At the Mountains of Madness” play like a movie in my mind’s eye.
By the time he died most historians were just _so absolutely certain_ they had all of history figured out, human migration and civilization, etc. He would have a grand old time today with a lot of our discoveries that historians were wrong even about how long humans have been around, tens of thousands of years earlier in the Americas, finding 600,000 year old butchered rhinoceros in the Phillippines, that sorta thing. And it's starting to look like our universal stories of a global flood wiping humanity out probably have more basis in the actual past than in religious fiction and mythology.
Even if they weren't worshiping some evil elder dogs from beyond the cosmos, whoever the people of "Atlantis" were, even if it's silly to imagine they were more advanced than we are today, we've gotten to the point where it seems more likely than not it _was_ simple fact that relatively advanced cultures were wiped out by a global flood, specifically 10800 years ago, water rising hundreds of feet in a decade as a result of comets striking the ice-covered Nothern Hemisphere (Greenland one is discovered a few years back in particular). And ofc, what people never think of, humans build their cities on the waterfront, you raise water levels a couple hundred feet aaaand.....
Ah, Lovecraft would love that, that even humanity got wiped out in relatively recent history from a fairly advanced state, and it's all buried and lost to time.
Thank you for addressing Lovecraft's positives instead of just boxing him into "racist/bigot." Too often have I seen the latter, and the comments filled with misunderstanding of a truly great artist.
Not that there’s anything wrong with being a racist
@@traditionalfascists3303 except that these individuals cultivate a society of distrust and judge others based on bloodline rather than merit or trait. If you're being sarcastic, I'm not defending Lovecraft's racism, only saying he was more than just this quality. Otherwise, I'll just give you the benefit of the doubt and assume your terrible position comes from a lack of interaction with individuals of other races.
Let me assure you, any notion you may have of "race" or "purebloodedness" is an illusion you've convinced yourself of in order to feel more secure in your narrowminded worldview.
ZemikianUchiha You’re right I just hate Black people because I’ve never met one. I bet I’m 25% black too because I’ve never taken the time or money to research my family history. And all those things you said are true because your totally not Marxist propagandist trained teacher can never be wrong. You got me
@BaaldEagle People also don't seem to understand that you can dislike a group of people in a broad sense, while still giving *individuals* the benefit of the doubt.
That's not racism, that's just being a normal human being. But in *CURRENT YEAR* that makes you Hitler incarnate I guess.
Macaroons the sequel racism when fascists use the term means preferring and protesting your own people. Not hating or exploiting other’s. Look at George Lincoln Rockwell who was allies with Malcolm X
HP Lovecraft is basically a 4Chan regular
Except even more autistic and depressed and scared of strangers
He was born in the wrong time I guess.
@@MLBlue30 without him there will be no 4chan regular
Peter T
- racist
- always making ridiculous stories
- Has a somewhat insane side of him
- Has a dad with syphilis and economical problems
- Has a pretty abusive mother
- depressing life
- Doesn't know how to do love
- Trolls people
Yeah he's kinda the definition of a 4chan regular
I thought the same thing! 😆
One of my favorite authors to ever set pen to paper. His stories came to life in my teen years, I would read them often. I still remember flipping the pages of “at the mountains of madness” feverishly as I could imagine every scene. No one painted a horrific picture with words like Lovecraft.
My Top Five HPL stories:
1. Shadows over Innsmouth (Arguably his best writing, the scene of escaping the hotel is a great action sequence)
2. The Dunwich Horror (A Perversion of Birth of Christ in a way. Quintessential weird tale)
3. The Thing on Doorstep (Massively underrated. A fascinating body-swap tale)
4. The Call of Cthulhu (Essential Lovecraft. Actually written in a very modernist way)
5. The Color out of Space (Well, Stephen King's favorite HPL tale. Read it)
Honorable mentions: The Festival, The Dream in the Witch House, Rats in the Wall (Very Poe-ish)
What are yours?
1. The Statement of Randolph Carter (For a tale that conveys the terror of the unknown and the unseen, this one is hard to beat)
2. The Whisperer in the Darkness (The slow buildup in this tale and the revelation at the end is unforgettable)
3. The Hound (You can see the influences of Poe and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 'The Hound of the Baskervilles on Lovecraft in this early tale but it's still a memorable little story and it introduces the dreaded Necronomicon and a creature far more terrifying than Dr Doyle's hound ever was IMHO.)
4. The Call of Cthulhu The foundation of Yogsothery, In the same way the Hobbit was the foundation for Middle Earth. Both Tolkien and Lovecraft were Universe Builders in their own way in the 20th Century.)
5. A tie between The Color out of Space or The Shadows over Innsmouth (They're both must reads, Shadows is creepy and a classic and is enough to make you swear off of eating seafood at times, But The Color is unforgettable and epitomizes cosmic horror and was Lovecraft's own favorite out of all his books, Read them both already. LOL)
Honorable mentions The Temple, Herbert West Reanimator, (a fun twisted little read plus the very first zombie book ever)
The Outsider, (a tale for anyone who has ever felt different from everyone else around them.)
Nyarlathotep, (A tale that seems more and more relevant and prophetic to our day and age somehow concerning the influence of Lovecraft's malevolent shapeshifting trickster throughout the ages.)
Jim Tao Dagon is my favorite because it was the first one I read at my elementary school library and I was terrified by it because as a kid I thought it might be real. The way he writes in first person makes it like you’re reading a journal that someone found, I’d say equivalent to what lost tapes horror movies are like. I do love all of his stories but reading Dagon as a child greatly influenced my writing.
1. The Dunwich Horror - where it all comes together - the characterisation, the scene-setting, the occultism and breathless atmosphere, the way the action shifts from area to area in movie style and the final confrontation. The passage from the Necromomicon that Armitage reads over Wilbur's shoulder is the very essence of the whole 'cosmic horror' concept in a single paragraph and as a concept no one has ever written anything more genuinely terrifying.
2. At The Mountains of Madness - it's a massive, sprawling narrative that does take a while to get going, but when it does the payoff is incredible. The scenes where Lake's camp is discovered have been repeated a thousand times in a thousand movies, and the sense of slow descent into inexorable horror as the protagonists explore the city is overwhelming - as well as a damn good bit of alternate history and worldbuilding.
3. The Call Of Cthulhu - not just 'because', its also an excellent little group of stories bound into one, and Cthulhu himself is probably the best realised fictional monster since someone in the Middle East about 10,000 years ago looked at a lizard and thought 'What if one of those was really big and had, like, wings and stuff'?
4. The Shadow Over Innsmouth - great atmosphere, great background and the escape from the hotel is probably one of the most nail-biting action sequences ever written.
5. Between The Outsider, The Colour Out Of Space and The Temple, all for very different reasons...
Charles Dexter Ward is my favourite. Joseph Curwen and his essential saltes. Interesting film version as The Haunted palace with Vincent price.
Dunwich Horror. Taut, compact little tale with a giant invisible monster and lots of whippoorwills.
Dreams in the witchhouse. Cowboy builders and Brown jenkins. Bubble congeries. I love how it mixes higher mathematics, alien races and Salem era witchcraft.
Shadow over Innsmouth. Hilarious ending. Whole story dripped with seaweed and stank like rotting fish. Reminded me of Southport.
Dreamquest of unknown kadath. Like a guided meditation. A really beautiful surreal work. Could have come from one of the opium soaked romantics.It's been a while since I've read it but doesn't Pickman turn up at one point?
Mentioned in dispatches - Mountains of Madness, Thing on the door step, Pickman's Model, Color out of Space (big influence on Annihilation), Call of Cthulhu, the unnameable.
My favourite work from the Lovecraft mythos is the graphic novel/ comic book Providence by Alan Moore. I would highly recommend it to anyone interested in HPL.
Hellstar Remina. Not a direct hpl story but he's such an obvious inspiration for Junji Ito that it's worth mentioning. Suffice it to say, Howard and all his mythos penpals would have loved it.
One thing that wasn't mentioned in this video, was lovecraft's influence on role playing games as well as heavy metal.
I definitely agree with you. Lovecraft most certainly influenced Heavy Metal and ROll Playing Games. Metallica has at least 3 songs that I can think of that are heavily influenced by the Cthulhu Mythos. The Death Metal Band Obituary used a painting by Michael Whelan which is clearly influenced by the Cosmic Horror Gods the Old Ones and the many formless creatures found in Lovecraft’s stories. Sepultura and Evile and many other Heavy Metal Bands have been influenced by Lovecraft.
@@archangel5627 death metal bands LOVE chtulhu mythos :)
@@liltito1519 Yup they sure do!👍🏻🤘🏻
@@archangel5627 Metallica made 3 songs about Cthulhu specifically. "Call of Ktulu" (an instrumental, but still), "The Thing That Should Not Be," and "Dream No More"
Great point!!!
The abyss called to him so he became it.
ljupce trninkov he’s in it now and for eternity, sadly.
Pretty sure hes writing so he good lol, away from everything
@@dougroberts9821 was he a satanist?
@@BigSi-xw6wv No, he just had depression.
@@fernandosolorzano2668 He’s no longer here. How can he be writing?
It's amazing how every aspect of his life explains the horror in his writings.
True
They say write what you know best.
“Gloriously mustachioed Whipple Van Buren Phillips”
🧐 what a title.
Don't know if this guy was gloriously mustachioed, but he was just as gloriously named:. Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
"Father of Horror"? Nah. "Gloriously mustachioed Whipple van Buren Philips"? Yes please.
"The Whip" to his friends.
He and Robert E. Howard wrote each other enough that their combined letters fill two volumes called A Means to Freedom. Dry but fascinating read.
Tbh I'm a very big mega fan of Lovecraft. Have been since highschool when I first read his work from a book that had a good number of his short stories. I now own a hard cover book of every piece he's made. That being said, this video actually taught me some really neat and insightful things. Awesome video, dude! :)
The opening paragraph of " The Call of Cthulhu" hooked me. Absolute classic!!👻
"The Outsider", one of Lovecrafts shorts stories published in Weird Tales, sudently makes a whole lot more sense.
TheJOBeffect How? Did you read the story?
@@jackgooding5808 Of course I did. The story is about a character who has lived their whole life locked away from the outside world, only to escape one day and come across what they perceive to be a happy pleasent world. They then realize that their own hideousness (which they fail to recognize at first) causes others to fear and run from them. However they end up finding some sort of morbid peace in their ultimate isolation. While not identical to Lovecrafts life, the themes of the story and the emotions it invokes seem to fit his circumstances really well.
@@TheJOBeffect
It really is a reflection of his own life!
I really enjoyed this. I've been reading Lovecraft's work since the 1970's. It was great to learn more about him. Thank you.
What do you think about his story's as far as movies?..i loved from beyond. .color out of space. .Re animator etc.
@OriginalYithian awesome ill check that out thanks 👍
Very nice and honest review.
It's good to see an analysis on the character of Lovecraft himself that doesn't waste time stating his obvious racism every possible minute of the video.
His life was a pretty sad story, maybe that's why he managed to tap into such an obscure and new genre of literature.
Yeah that's why I love this presenter (Simon). 10/10 seriously. The previous video I watched on Lovecraft was by some chick who did nothing but nag on and on about muh racism without even attempting to understand a the man's circumstances or time.
Her absolute smugness was positively revolting, deliberately misconstruing a dead mans life for internet attention.
No one in the comments appeared to have learned anything besides the fact that he was racist in every story he ever wrote.
For me the saddest part was agreeing to leave her lover in order to survive with his aunts. The poverty he lived in and how many deaths impacted him like a stab on his chest.
Lovecraft´s racism really IS obvious when one reads his stories, but I doubt it has been much worse than the average white person´s racism during Lovecraft´s days.
Like to know time in human history when there was no racism a 100 years from now wonder how they will be judging us.
@@NKA23 I mean, it was. I love Lovecraft's works, but the man was an incredibly racist even for the time.
In my opinion, he’s the greatest horror writer of all time.
He practically invented eldritch/Cosmic horror
@@gizmoatlas lovecraftian horror. His work became an adjective, that is the peak of success.
I agree. His name literally became a genre of writing
Stephen King thinks so...
I absolutely agree! I actually own his complete works. Well, at least the ones I could find.
Aww! 5:56.
I've never seen a photo of Lovecraft smiling!
I never see anyone smiling in those old photographs!
I just can't unsee how Lovecraft looks uncannily similar to Mark Zuckerberg.
Both of them have created eldritch abominations after all, so yeah.
They're both lizards
Lol
Take a look at Michael Phelps side by side . . .
Lovecraft was anti semitic and would have taken offense with that comparison.
Put glasses on him and he's Woodrow Wilson as well.
The master of Cosmic Horror.
Is that mustache real?
now that is TRUE HORROR! @@dehydratedculture9126
@@rusalkin hahaha
The creator of Cosmic Horror*
Master? Wasn’t he the father, the sire, if the genera?
His love of cats was another funny side note to him. He named all the strays Plymouth and made them part of a fictional club, Kappa Alpha Tau.
I love his books, they teleport you in to a universe that I never thought I could imagine. And you do not need to like the Author you just need to like his art
spoken like a true racist trump supporter
The weirdest part for me is someone thought Whipple was a expectable name for a human being.
It’s been a last name for centuries. Also there’s Mr Whipple who molests toilet paper lol. And the boy who always caught him squeezing the Charmin was a young Adam Savage from MythBusters lol
When you come from a rich family like that you get some pretentious first names
That is funny. Especially when you think of the doozies that Dickens came up with. Uriah Heep, Pickwick etc.
@@nateworthy530 Names come go in and out of fashion. For example, Lavinia was a popular name in the 19th century, but now, you rarely see it.
It’s a perfectly cromulent name.
Sonia Greene/Lovecraft must have had the patience of a saint.
probably...
I adore Lovecraft, and I love this kind of objective look at his life. The only book I own that I'd never give up is his collected works, and I have a second copy still wrapped in plastic for my son when he's old enough to appreciate it. You can -- and we all should -- reject his racism without throwing out the massive influence he had on the horror genre, and appreciating his talent at crafting really amazing stories.
Anyone who blames Lovecraft for his racism is an ignorant fool dog whistling for validation.
Edgar Allen Poe would be another excellent figure to do a Biographics episode of!
Yeeees
Need to do Elgar Allen Poe. His life was fascinating with his death surrounded in mystery.
I second this!
There's a theory that he died of rabies
Exactly how was his death surrounded by mystery? He died of intestinal cancer in 1937...or do you think that's just a cover and he actually finally completed his transformation and he now lives in the Atlantic off the coast of Providence?
@@wtrdawnlord He's talking about Poe, not Lovecraft.
@@MarkCactus59 HOMOPHOBE!
I was introduced to Lovecraft by a high school teacher way back in 1975. The book he recommended to me was Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath. I loved that book and went on to collect and read a bunch of Ballantine paperbacks including The Tomb and other tales, The Doom that Came to Sarnath and Other Stories, The Lurking Fear and Other Stories, At The Mountains of Madness etc... Over the years I've occasionally gone back and read Lovecraft and always enjoyed his stories but it wasn't until the internet that I actually knew anything about his life. Right now I'm reading The Complete Cthulu Mythos Tales and discovering all over again what a fine writer he was. From that book my favorites so far are The Color Out of Space, The Whisperer in the Dark, At The Mountains of Madness and The Shadow Over Innsmouth.
I read a few of his works several times and each time you can get a feel for how emotionally disturbed he was deep down. A man of little pretenses.
As someone who lives in Rhode Island, i am so proud that one of the best Authors in the world came from my state. I love his work and have visited both his house and his grave, he is one of my greatest inspirations for writing novels.
Awesome Sauce the best author*
@@hl8808 _one_ of the best _authors_
Lol same here. I started reading his stories in high school and loved them and when I went to college in providence and had no idea he was from there! It made me feel proud to live in providence, and theres not too much to he proud about living there lol
I have admired Lovecraft's writing for years. I had no idea of the complexities of the man, or the racism. As you said, at least something good came out of his anger and internal poison. Thank you so much for this channel!
This guy's life reminds me of A Series of Unfortunate Events
Hey man, I just want to let you know , your lexicon, delivery , and overall presentation are absolutely top notch, your content is absolutely engrossing and addicting. THANK you for what you do , you are an incredible orator.
Lovecraft's damage and talent reminds me of Kafka if Kafka was really into E.A. Poe and monster myths.
Celephais has to be among the greatest Lovecraft works and easily among the most cinematic.
"The world is comical. But the real joke is on mankind." -H.P. Lovecraft
Now you must do a vid on his bestie pen-pal: Robert E. Howard.
Best timing as Conan is back on the Marvel scene as well, and doing amazing.
Wait where?
Without Lovecraft we probably wouldn’t have the masterpiece that is Bloodborne
Dude had issues, he was one bad day away from eating people lol.
I'm upset that some people dismiss him because the was a product of this time. I'm not white but I still love his work.
HPL was a racist in that he hated the whole, entire human race. sure he hated some races more than others, but he hated the human race.
@@johnrunion5357 Not really. He was particularly repulsed by Black and Jewish people (ironic considering he married a Jewish woman)
@@ufoash1066 "sure he hated some races more than others, but he hated the human race."
@@ufoash1066 he also denounced his former beliefs when he got older, but since he is white let's not offer him any forgiveness or redemption.
I imagine he was going off empirical experience if thats any consolation for you.
One doesn't have to love the artist to love his art. And you can like someone for their creativity without it being a tacit endorsement of all of their greater sins.
Like Michael Jackson
@@storm7792 he's proven innocent every time , stop messing with him
Jordan chandler wasn't the only one he paid off, any we don't know just what got "forgotten" when they they originally charged him.
@@storm7792 that's why the son exposed his dad for being money-driven and used his son for it, also the mom of the recent fraud who attacked mj also publically said that he's a liar...good logic bro
Exactly, all these figures in history have had vices of one form or another. That is why we should celebrate the positive that people leave behind.
A Rhode Island friend wrote a pamphlet biography of HP Lovecraft. He found evidence that Lovecraft briefly had a job selling tickets in movie theater on Thayer Street, usually for the midnight horror films. Imagine buying a ticket to Frankenstein from HP Lovecraft!
Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard created modern day fantasy and escapist literature genre.
@NASA F What?
I love both, two of the great ones.
It's like your in my mind I was just checking earlier this week if you have a Lovecraft video
Yeah, we knew you were looking, so...
You're
Keep thinking people can read your mind and you'll end up like a character in one of Lovecraft's books.
Sadly when he lived he even didn't had a glimpse of what the future of his art will be.
that is true for too many artists.
Van Gogh, Lovecraft, Kafka...
They all died unknown and in poverty
Yeah what a shame a racist biggot didn't get to be celebrated...
One of the best games I ever played, “Eternal Darkness” for the Nintendo GameCube, was inspired by Lovecraft.
I hope you played bloodborne then
I used to run TTRPGs of CoC and still have most of the original gaming source material.
Even listening to his biography at night gives me chills. More so than that magenta glow coming from the drinking well....
wait a minute
“West of Arkham the hills rise wild, and there are valleys with deep woods that no axe has ever cut.”
But look at the size of them tomatoes!
Glowing with MYSTERIOUS COLORS UNLIKE ANY SEEN ON EARTH
Never mind about the glow, let’s eat some of this freakishly large fruit!
"Haunting the room like one of his creations" ohhhhh that's amazing
the more we stare into the abyss, the more the abyss stares back at us
Thanks for this - great video on one of my literary heroes.
"The world is indeed comic, but the joke is on mankind."
"That is not dead which can eternal lie. And with strange aeons even death may die"
I've heard other versions of this: Not dead which eternal lie, stranger eons death may die'. Directly from Metallica's 'Thing That Should Not Be', on the Master of Puppets album.
Kai Thoren Fawkes Cliff Burton and James Hetfield were H.P. Lovecraft enthusiasts. I think the quote was adjusted to fit the rhythm of the song. I believe The Thing That Should Not Be is a reference to multiple stories by Lovecraft. Like Call of Ktulu, the instrumental
on Ride the Lightning.
@@zer0sum642 I figured Cliff was into Lovecraft. Wasn't sure about Hetfield. Although, I believe James wrote most of the lyrics for the songs on the earlier albums. I was obsessed with Metallica in the 80s, during my high school years. Master of Puppets is the best album, but I like And Justice For All because of 'One'.
Kai Thoren Fawkes Completely agree about Master of Puppets. I was lucky enough to to see Metallica front row when I was 14-15, it was incredible. Hetfield spit beer all over me and I ripped off one of his wristbands when he came down into the crowd. I still have it in one of my guitar cases. It’s actually just a sock that had the foot cut off, lol. Not many would know that, I suppose.
Good ole days...
@@zer0sum642 Remember when Metallica was touring with Guns N Roses, in '91? I was in Dallas, Texas and they played in the old Cowboys stadium, the Cotton Bowl. Yep, me and my best friend were there. There was one person between me and the stage. I was looking straight up at James. It was freaking awesome!! I was 24 that year, but I felt like a teenager at that concert. Even at nearly 53, I'll never forget that concert.
He inspired much of the darker aspects of my old D&D campaign, him, and of course Hargrave......
This is the best Lovecraft biography I've seen yet.
I've never been a big Lovecraft fan, but every time I've picked up one of his books, the way he writes scares the crap out of me.
Beyond the Wall of Sleep: You cant forget the influence on Black Sabbath!!!
also many other bands like Electric Wizard, Arkham Witch, ....
I can't forget what?
there was a band called HP Lovecraft.
This is one of my favorite Sabbath songs, and I love Sabbath. Didn't know this.
No love for Darkest of the Hillside Thickets?
I also deeply, deeply need Ghost to do more Lovecraft-themed songs. So badly, considering Ghost is one of the many bands I listen to while writing up notes for my next Call of Cthulhu game...
I believe this is the best discussion of Lovecraft and his works and legacy. I mean, how can you possibly explain a guy like Howard to someone who may have possibly never heard of him before?
He comes off as a nut, which....... He was, but he was so much more then that. He was also a human being who suffered, but who also created a whole new genre of literature.
How many people have done that?
The thing with his wife is so sad, especially after a life of isolation and abuse to finally have found love like that and be forced away from it by circumstances is just soul-crushing, at least he turned it into some good art.
That moment when H.P. Lovecraft was the inspiration of one of the best games ever and made it one of the most creepiest, unsettling and disturbing games in the gaming industry.
“Boo”
-H.P. Lovecraft.
True Poetry, Pure Genius
That's too far
*Dies of fear*
"OHEMJEE GUY'S IT'S A CURVED SHAPE" - lovecraft probably idk
A A H H
I read a bunch of Lovecraft back when I was in high school. What I've always found with Lovecraft is how he is able to reach in and touch that high sensitive spot of fear we all carry around with us whether we know it's there or not. And I'm not a big believer in any religion or mythology. I'm not a believer in Cthulhu but there's much that Is mysterious and "supernatural" in life and that's what Lovecraft was able to exploit. I must admit that I always envisions Lovecraft as looking more like Poe than the bland man he actually looked like.
H.P. Lovecraft knew how to write Horror and do it well. I've read some of his other classic and I'm currently reading At The Mountains Of Madness, which I'm loving by the way. I wouldn't have gotten into Lovecraft if it wasn't for people like Guillermo del Toro and even Metal bands like Black Sabbath with the song Behind The Wall of Sleep, Metallica with the instrumental The Call of Ktulu and Massacre with the song From Beyond, which all were influenced by him. Awesome video.
8:13 he look like he's about to burst into tears
"poor, lacking in friends" -my life
Have you thought of taking up writing 🤔
You'll be famous in a hundred years!
I'm not that poor and only have like 2 real friends
Relatable. My situation is choice tho not force. No friends....no issues its quite peaceful tbh
This was the best bio I’ve seen in a very long time. Well done!
"MEETHOS" *immediately says mythos like a normal human*
Blood borne is the reason I discovered HP lovecraft..
What an incredible fantasy...
You should have talked about his cat, Ni-
His cat. Talked about his cat
Bigger Man
African Man
@@foodmachinebroke1021 stomach cancer
Sicker can.
The DamBusters also had a Labrador called nibber
In all fairness, Mr Whistler, this was a beautiful tale through time - thank you.
04:57
"...attacking jackson's lack of talent... and each time, he did it in rhyme."
Origin of rap dis
I think we need an "Epic Rap Battle" featuring HPL against Poe. Can he, would he destroy his idol? Would his need to win overrule his admiration & reverence??? 🤔🤔🤔
@@mossymusa365, I'd love to see Eminem battle Akala. If you don't know who Akala is he is so intelligent he makes me feel dumb listening to the man speak.
Also, I want to express my thanks to those behind the scenes at Biographics, great material and writing. You all make Simon sound very good!
HorrorBabble has the whole collection of classics in this genre. Great stuff.