Copyright 2020 by Gary L. Pullman
Recently,
I have begun reading biographical sketches of the masters of horror
fiction. (Should you care to join me in this interesting and
entertaining pastime, Ranker
provides a good list of such authors.)
I
read, most recently, about H.
P. Lovecraft.
During
a period of poverty, he subsisted
on nothing more than a loaf of bread, a chunk of cheese and a can of
beans.
Throughout
his life, he corresponded
with a good many people, including writers he mentored through his
letters, whose ranks include August Derleth, Donald Wandrei (The
Web of Easter Island),
and Robert Bloch (Psycho).
As
a child, he believed that the gods of ancient Greek mythology were
real, while the Judaeo-Christian God was merely a myth (S. T. Joshi,
I Am
Providence),
and he later turned to astrology as his guiding light. Once
interested in anatomy (as well as chemistry), his passion for the
former ended when he encountered the puzzling topic of the human
reproductive system (Joshi).
Throughout
his early years, he suffered several bouts of depression and “nervous
breakdowns.” Perhaps he feared suffering the same fate as his
father Winfield Scott Lovecraft, who was institutionalized when
Lovecraft was a youth; it seems that Winfield had been given to doing
and saying strange things” prior to his commitment (Joshi).
He
married
Sonia Greene, whose work as a milliner earned her a good income.
After two years, their childless relationship ended, when they
separated. Lovecraft's assurance that they were divorced allowed
Sonia to marry again, but she discovered, later, that she was, in
fact, still married to Lovecraft and, as a result, was guilty of
bigamy.
Greene
wrote the short stories “The Horror at Martin's Beach” and “4O'Clock.”
He
was influenced by Edgar
Allan Poe, Arthur
Machen, Oswald
Spengler, Robert
W. Chambers, Lord
Dunsany, and Algernon
Blackwood.
According
to a variety of critics, his fiction is replete with such themes as
forbidden knowledge, otherworldly influences, innate depravity, the
rule of fate, threats to civilization, white supremacy, the
potentially negative effects of scientism, an emphasis on polytheism,
“cosmic indifference,” superstition, and an imaginary and
recurrent geography unique to his fiction. He has been criticized for
racism, homophobia, misogyny, and parochialism. His writing is not
highly regarded by literary critics, although Stephen
King, Ramsey
Campbell, Bentley
Little, Joe
R. Lansdale, Alan
Moore, F.
Paul Wilson, William
S. Burroughs, Neil
Gaiman, and others name Lovecraft as a major
influence on their own conceptions of horror fiction and their
own writing.
Although
he lived forever on the brink of absolute poverty, Lovecraft's
cosmicism
has influenced horror fiction.
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