Monday, July 31, 2023

Weird Tales, May 1923-Part Three

Six authors about whom I know little or nothing at all, all of whom had stories in Weird Tales in May 1923:

William P. Barron (Dates unknown)--I found a newspaper item that mentions a Dr. William P. Barron who was president of the Free Lance Club of writers in Washington, D.C., in 1930 and 1931. If he's our man, then I believe he was the same William P. Barron (1877-1946) who hailed from Bonham, Texas, and served in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during World War I. His story, called "Jungle Beasts," is another example of a found manuscript as the basis for a story. One of the readers of the manuscript is a medical doctor working in an insane asylum.

M. Humphreys (Dates unknown)-"The Floor Above" by M. Humphreys is a diary story, a story that begins with a summons from a friend, and a rooming-house story. H.P. Lovecraft liked "The Floor Above," but good luck finding any evidence of that on this vaunted Internet. The status of Humphreys' tale as one of Lovecraft's favorites seems to be based entirely on a single sentence in Lovecraft's letter to "The Eyrie," printed in October 1923:

"I lately read the May WEIRD TALES, and congratulate you on Mr. Humphrey's 'The Floor Above.' [for a moment I had a shiver which the author didn’t intend—I thought he was going to use an idea which I am planning to use myself!! But it wasn't so, after all], which is a close second to my favorite, 'Beyond the Door'."

(The brackets are in the original. "Beyond the Door," by J. Paul Suter, was in the April 1923 issue of Weird Tales.) As for the identity of M. Humphreys, it would be hard to discover one without having a first name.

Herman Sisk (Dates unknown)--There was a Herman Sisk who lived in Los Angeles, California, and wrote plays and other works. I suspect he was the same Herman Sisk who wrote "The Purple Heart," a short short story about a haunted cabin.

F.K. Moss (Dates unknown)--F.K. Moss' story is called "The Death Cell." There is a framing device again, in this case an introduction by one character followed by a manuscript by another. And now I have to say that reading or simply glancing through these early issues of Weird Tales becomes pretty tiresome, with the same kinds of stories, themes, motifs, devices, and settings, very often with the same kind of writing style, over and over again. You wonder where was the imagination. But then you have to admit to yourself that Weird Tales--and in a larger sense, weird fiction--was just beginning in 1923. It would take awhile before things got good.

F. Walter Wilson (Dates unknown)--I found a reference to an F. Walter Wilson who was a newspaperman in Boston and who may have had a connection to Quebec. The story "The Thunder Voice" is set in Quebec, and so we have another story of Canada. There is also a  found manuscript in the story. The blurb reads: "The Story of a Hairy Monster." That's an intriguing thing for those interested in cryptozoology. The hairy monster of the story might be a gorilla or a wild-man or possibly a Bigfoot creature before it was so named. I'm not sure.

William Merrit (Dates unknown)--William Merrit is going to be hard to find in any online search because of the similarity of his name to that of William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), a well-known painter from Indiana. Merritt's story is called "The Finale," but it's not the last story in the May 1923 issue of Weird Tales. That position goes to . . .

"The Closed Cabinet" by _____ _____, a very long short story written by an anonymous author and reproduced in the tiniest of fonts, all to make it fit, I guess, in the smaller number of pages in the May issue than in the previous two of Weird Tales.

William F. Heitman's illustration for "The Floor Above" by M. Humphreys in Weird Tales, May 1923.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, July 28, 2023

Weird Tales, May 1923-Part Two

By my count, there were a dozen authors who were new in Weird Tales in the issue of May 1923. Half are known. The other half are not, at least to me. First are the six known authors.

A.G. Birch (1883-1972)--A.G. Birch was Albert G. "Al" Birch, a reporter, photographer, editor, and publicity manager at the Denver Post. He was also in publicity with Famous Players-Lasky and Paramount. His story was "The Moon Terror," a two-part serial and the lead story in that May issue. And because it was the lead story, it was also the first illustrated story to appear in Weird Tales. The illustration was of course by William F. Heitman (1878-1945).

I'll have more on Birch and "The Moon Terror" later in this series. You can also read about both at the following URL:

https://archive.org/details/BirchA.G.TheMoonTerrorAndOtherStories1927/page/n191/mode/2up

Kenneth Duane Whipple (1894-1974)--Kenneth Duane Whipple was a reporter for the Claremont Eagle in Claremont, New Hampshire. There were scads of Whipples in New England during the Colonial and Early National periods, subsequently in other parts of the country. H.P. Lovecraft's maternal grandfather bore the name Whipple as his Christian name. He was Whipple Van Buren Phillips (1833-1904), and he was named, presumably, after his paternal grandmother, Esther Whipple Phillips (1767-1842). Her father was Captain Benedict Whipple (1739-1819). The point of all this is that Kenneth Duane Whipple and H.P. Lovecraft may very well have been related, though distantly. In our family, we have Whipples, too. I wonder if we could be related to Lovecraft as well.

Whipple's story, "The Secret Fear," is described in the blurb as "A 'Creepy' Detective Story." The narrator is a newspaper reporter, just like the author. There is talk of an escaped gorilla. (Another gorilla.) There are also Irishmen, including a beat cop named Corcoran, the dead man Terence McFadden, and police captain Dolan. (The police commissioner in The Spirit comic strip is also named Dolan.) The victim's Irishness pertains because he was superstitious: it was his secret fear that killed him.

Vincent Starrett (1886-1974)--Charles Vincent Emerson Starrett was born above a bookshop in Toronto, Canada. Like Saul Bellow (1915-2005), Starrett moved with his family from Canada to Chicago when he was a child. Starrett was a bookman, author, poet, critic, newspaper reporter, columnist, Sherlock Holmes aficionado, and biographer of Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?). "Penelope," a comic short story about a man's upside-down day, was his first for Weird Tales. If you have ever loved a woman, you understand the pull of gravity Penelope exerts on the main character.

Bruce Grant (1893-1977)--Barely more than a page long, Bruce Grant's story, entitled "Feline," was the first "storiette" in Weird Tales. Grant was born in Wichita Falls, Texas, and worked on a cattle ranch before becoming a newspaper reporter. He was also the author of novels and nonfiction books about the American West. There is a very informative article about him entitled "Native Wichitan Compiles Reference Work on Indians" in the Wichita Falls Times, March 22, 1959, page 69. Like Ernest Hemingway, Grant killed himself with a shotgun, this in the basement of his home in Winnetka, Illinois.

Lyle Wilson Holden (1885-1960)--Lyle Wilson Holden was a poet, school teacher, and school principal in Rochester, New York. His short story "The Devil Plant" should go in the Botanical Fiction Database. For those interested in tentacles in genre fiction, the plant of the title is also known as "the octopus plant."

Mollie Frank Ellis (1880-1948)--Author, lecturer, and clubwoman Mollie Garfield Frank Ellis was born in Greencastle, Indiana, and attended DePauw University in her native city. Her story, "Case No. 27," is set in an insane asylum. Mollie lived in Indianapolis late in life and died in a sanitorium in that city.

Next: The Unknown Authors

William F. Heitman's illustration for "The Moon Terror" by A.G. Birch, the first illustration to appear in Weird Tales. In the story, the woman is described as nearly nude. That wouldn't have worked, I guess, in the popular press, and so here her nudity is concealed by a cloth. Human sacrifice and execution were common themes in Weird Tales and in other genre fiction or pulp fiction from the 1920s onward. This is the first instance in "The Unique Magazine."

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, July 24, 2023

Weird Tales, May 1923-Part One

Weird Tales, May 1923, was the first issue with interior illustrations, all by William F. Heitman, a sketch artist for the Indianapolis Star. Heitman also did the cover art. It was the first of his two covers for "The Unique Magazine."

The May issue is larger than previous issues in terms of its dimensions, but smaller in terms of its page count. Robert Weinberg called it a bedsheet-sized magazine, in other words, 8-1/2 by 11 inches, or about the same dimensions as a quarto-sized book. There are 120 interior pages and three columns of type instead of the two that appeared in the previous two issues. If you're going to read it on line, you'll have to enlarge it a lot more than what it initially appears. There are twenty-one stories in the May issue, plus ten non-fiction fillers, plus "The Eyrie." The amount of content, then, appears to be about the same as in the March issue, which has twenty-six stories, and the April issue, which has twenty-one. The cover price is the same, too, 25 cents.

Returning authors were Julian Kilman, Hamilton Craigie, William Sanford, and with the second and final part of their serial "The Whispering Thing," Laurie McClintock and Culpeper Chunn. Firsts include the first story in Weird Tales by Vincent Starrett of Chicago, as well as the first reprint, an abridged version of "The Haunted and the Haunters; or, The House and the Brain" by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, originally in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, DXXVI, August 1859.

There is one anonymously written story in the third issue of Weird Tales, "The Closed Cabinet." There are also lots of stories by little-known authors, a focus of this blog. I'll have to look into some of them. Finally, there is one story by an author known to have been a woman, "Case No. 27" by Mollie Frank Ellis of my Indiana home.

I have written before about nine of the authors in the May issue. They are:

Click on their names to read what I have written.

Next: More Authors & Stories

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Weird Tales, April 1923-Part Three

More authors from the second issue of Weird Tales:

Victor Johns (1882-1960)--I assume that Victor Johns was Victor Emanuel Philip Johns of Kansas City, but I can't say that for sure. Online information on him is nonexistent. In any case, Victor Johns wrote a story of France in Weird Tales, "The Hideous Face." It ends with all italics.

Laurie McClintock & Culpeper Chunn--Culpeper Chunn was Seymour Cunningham Chunn (1889-1927), a young man of Washington, D.C., who tried to kill himself in late 1914. He was paralyzed by his self-inflicted gunshot wound and thereafter went around in a wheelchair. After his wounding, he was committed to St. Elizabeth's Hospital in the nation's capital. Chunn co-authored "The Whispering Thing" with Laurie McClintock. It was the first story by an author known to have been an inmate.

I had thought that Chunn and McClintock might have been a husband-and-wife writing team. Once I learned that Chunn was an inmate, I considered the possibility that McClintock was his nurse or some other kind of helper. I looked for a nurse named Laurie McClintock and found one. He was Gustus Laurie McClintock (1889-1956) of Missouri, nicknamed Guy and Gus. In 1918, when he filled out his draft card, McClintock was a graduate nurse at the Kansas State Hospital, an asylum for the insane at Osawatomie. So if Guy Laurie McClintock was Chunn's co-author, did he go to Washington, D.C., or did Chunn go to Kansas? It must have been the former, although I haven't found any record for him in that city. Or maybe they wrote their collaborative stories by U.S. Mail. "The Whispering Thing" is another story of a Frenchman. France and Frenchmen seem to have been a theme in the April issue of Weird Tales.

Ted Olson (1899-1981)--Theodore B. Olson was a native of Laramie, Wyoming. "The Conquering Will" was his only story in Weird Tales and his only known work of science fiction, weird fiction, or fantasy. It's another tale told from a found manuscript, another tale of the Far North, and another tale of bodily possession by the spirit of a departed person. 

Carroll F. Michener (1885-1970)--Carroll F. Michener was Carroll Kinsey Michener of Spring Valley, Minnesota. He wrote two stories for Weird Tales, "Six Feet of Willow Green" (Apr. 1923) and "The Earth Girl" (Dec. 1924). I haven't read "Six Feet of Willow Green," but I can tell you that it's a story of the South Seas and of the Orient, also another story about snakes and snakebite. It might be worth a look.

C.E. Howard (1858-1930)--Clarence Everett Howard was a satirist and humorist, among many other things. Born in Reading, Pennsylvania, he lived a life of accomplishment in Orlando, Florida, and that's where he died in 1930. I assume that he was our man, as "The Parlor Cemetery" is called "a grisly satire," and much of the story takes the form of Southern-inflected dialogue. Howard was known as a satirist and was at one time mayor of Orlando. There is or was a school named after him.

The second issue includes:

  • The first voodoo story and the first story set in Central America: "Jungle Death" by Artemus Calloway. The story ends with a smart observation: "Voodooism loses its strength when it mixes up with white men."
  • The first story set in historical France: "The Affair of the Man in Scarlet" by Julian Kilman.
  • The first Oriental adventure: "The Forty Jars" by Ray McGillivray (Anthony M. Rud). I haven't read "The Forty Jars," but it looks promising.
  • The first story by an author known to have been born in Ireland. Though set in England, it is also the first story about Egypt. Entitled "The Hall of the Dead," the story is by Francis D. Grierson.
  • More stories of insanity, murder, infidelity; more stories that end in places of confinement, mostly, in this case, in asylums for the insane; and even another short snakebite story, "The Snake Fiend" by Farnsworth Wright.

Carroll K. Michener, from a newspaper article called "Michener, Defender of Bread, Retires" by Ralph Mason in the Minneapolis Star, July 25, 1957, page 18A.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Sunday, July 16, 2023

Weird Tales, April 1923-Part Two

Authors in the April 1923 issue of Weird Tales about whom I have not written before:

Carl Ramus, M.D. (1872-1963)--Carl Ramus' name is misspelled in the table of contents of that first issue as Carl Rasmus. His story "The Scar" was the first by a medical doctor to appear in Weird Tales. It's also the first involving the Mafia, referred to in the story as "black handers."

There aren't any supernatural elements in "The Scar." Instead it's a crime story. I'm beginning to sense that many of the stories published in early issues of Weird Tales could also have been in its companion magazine Detective Tales. Maybe they were submitted to the former but were printed in the latter as a kind of surplus or overflow. Then again, maybe they were a little too outré for Detective Tales and so ended up in Weird Tales, although that seems unlikely to me.

In any case, "The Scar" was written by a medical doctor, and a young medical doctor is its protagonist and ultimately its hero. Ramus' story reads in fact like a young, real-life doctor's fantasy of heroic action and the rescuing of a damsel in distress. There is mention in "The Scar" of an International Journal of Surgery, a title similar to that of Surgical Monthly in "The Extraordinary Experiment of Dr. Calgroni" by Joseph Faus and James Bennett Wooding. There is also mention of Rush Medical College in Chicago, where Ramus went to school, also where Anthony M. Rud studied medicine.

By the way, Carl Ramus was the brother of Sybla Ramus (1874-1963), who wrote one story for Weird Tales, the three-part serial "Coils of Darkness" in the issues of February, March, and April 1924. I never associated the two because of my reliance on Jaffery and Cook's index of Weird Tales, which, again, misspells Ramus' surname. I previously thought of him as Carl Rasmus. You can read about and see a photograph of Dr. Carl Ramus on the National Park Service website on Ellis Island by clicking here.

Paul Suter (1884-1970)--Joseph Paul Suter was a prolific author of pulp fiction. By day he worked as an accountant and in other jobs in Youngstown, Ohio. His story "Beyond the Door" is the first in Weird Tales to rely heavily on diary entries to advance the plot and our understanding of its events. Only "The Grave" by Orville R. Emerson before it has a similar kind of approach in its storytelling. However, in that story, the written narrative is more of a manuscript than a conventional diary, which has dated entries and and is usually written in a diary book. In any case, call it another case of a found object--a letter, a note, a diary, a newspaper article--used in the telling of a weird tale. There would be another diary story in "The Bodymaster" by Harold Ward.

"Beyond the Door" is an uncle story, too. Maybe we should start thinking of that as a subtype of genre fiction. Uncle Godfrey's diary begins on June 15, for us, an anniversary just passed. After a space in the diary of removed pages, it picks up again on July 16, an anniversary as of today. There is a well in the cellar of Uncle's house, its opening covered by a large stone. That makes me think of "Pickman's Model" by H.P. Lovecraft (Weird Tales, Oct. 1927), also the movie The Ring (2002), which is already two decades old, believe it or not. Readers liked "Beyond the Door." It was reprinted in Weird Tales in May 1954.

You can read more about J. Paul Suter on a blog called Pulp Flakes, in an entry called "Author profile: J Paul Suter (Newspaper article from the Cleveland Plain Dealer, 1951)," posted on May 17, 2013, here. You will find a newspaper photograph of him there as well.

Roylston Markham (1885-1950)--Roylston Miller "Roy" Markham was the author of just one story in Weird Tales and, it appears, in all of the science fiction/fantasy/weird fiction genres. Born in Michigan, he grew up in South Dakota and worked as a newspaperman in Sioux Falls and in Chicago. In later years, he called Florida home. His story "The Tortoise Shell Comb" is brief and has many of the same elements as the stories in the first issue: a first-person narrative; suggestions of a haunting or supernatural events; infidelity, murder, revenge, and insanity; a final explanation provided by someone in the know; finally, a setting where murderers are kept, though in this case it's an insane asylum rather than a prison. I wonder what Culpeper Chunn thought of that. (Tune in to the next episode of this blog for an explanation.) Markham's tale is another of American servicemen in France during the Great War.

Paul Crumpler, M.D. (1883-1966)--"A Photographic Phantasm" is the first non-fiction item with a byline to appear in Weird Tales. It was written by another medical doctor, Paul Crumpler, M.D. (1883-1966), who practiced medicine and served as coroner in Sampson County, North Carolina, for many years. His account of a ghost-photograph is just one page long. You can read more about him and see a very small photograph of him on the website Find A Grave, here.

To be continued . . .

The obituary of Roylston Miller "Roy" Markham in the Tampa Bay Times (St. Petersburg, Florida), February 7, 1950, page 7.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, July 14, 2023

Weird Tales, April 1923-Part One

The first two issues of Weird Tales are of a piece. Both are pulp-sized, or approximately 6 by 9 inches. Both contain 192 interior pages. Each has its own unique main title logo (although the logo for issues beginning in August 1925 are similar to that of the April 1923 issue). Neither has interior illustrations, only decorations used as fillers. (The first issue also has a map in Hamilton Craigie's story "The Chain.") The cover of the second issue, like that of the first, is a two-color image. The cover art for the first issue was created by Richard R. Epperly. It was his only cover for "The Unique Magazine." The cover artist for the second, R.M. Mally, returned for several more issues. In fact, half of the covers published in 1923--four out of eight--were his.

There are twenty-one stories, plus seven non-fiction fillers, plus "The Eyrie" in the issue of April 1923. Returning authors were Hamilton Craigie, Harold Ward, Farnsworth Wright, Anthony M. Rud, Julian Kilman, and, with the conclusion of the first serial in Weird Tales, Otis Adelbert Kline. Rud actually had two stories in the second issue, "A Square of Canvas" under his own byline and "The Forty Jars" as by Ray McGillivray. There was one woman author in the second issue. She was Myrtle Levy Gaylord. There was also an author named Laurie McClintock, but that person might have been a man. For some reason, I guess because of its brevity, Myrtle Levy Gaylord's story is not listed in the table of contents. No, that's not an instance of men's trying to erase or silence women, so don't even start.

As far as I can tell, there were two pseudonymous authors in the second issue, Anthony M. Rud writing as Ray McGillivray and Seymour Cunningham Chunn writing as Culpeper Chunn. There weren't any anonymous authors except for in the non-fiction fillers. It's probably still safe to assume that Otis Adelbert Kline wrote those items. The identities of most of the authors are known. The identities of certain others are questionable, but I have what I think are good candidates for each. Those authors will appear in part three of this miniseries.

I have written before about many of the authors who were in the second issue. They are, in order of their appearance in the magazine:

Click on their names for links.

Next: New Authors.

Weird Tales, April 1923, with cover art by R.M. Mally and a cover story, "The Whispering Thing," by Laurie McClintock and Culpeper Chunn.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

"Historic and Unprecedented Vermont Floods"

As I write, there is flooding in Vermont. I don't want to take anything away from real-life peril and loss, but there is flooding in Vermont in weird fiction as well. In August 1931, Weird Tales published "The Whisperer in Darkness" by H.P. Lovecraft. Once you get past Lovecraft's first introduction, there is this second:

     The whole matter began, so far as I am concerned, with the historic and unprecedented Vermont floods of November 3, 1927. [. . .]. Shortly after the flood, amidst the varied reports of hardship, suffering, and organised [sic] relief which filled the press, there appeared certain odd stories of things found floating in some of the swollen rivers [. . . ].

     The tales thus brought to my notice came mostly through newspaper cuttings; though one yarn had an oral source and was repeated to a friend of mine in a letter from his mother in Hardwick, Vermont. The type of thing described was essentially the same in all cases, though there seemed to be three separate instances involved--one connected with the Winooski River near Montpelier, another attached to the West River in Windham County beyond Newfane, and a third centring [sic] in the Passumpsic in Caledonia County above Lyndonville. Of course many of the stray items mentioned other instances, but on analysis they all seemed to boil down to these three. In each case country folk reported seeing one or more very bizarre and disturbing objects in the surging waters that poured down from the unfrequented hills [. . .].

We recently saw the place name Winooski in "The Ape-Man" by J.B.M. Clark, Jr. (Weird Tales, Mar. 1923). There is also mention in "The Whisperer in Darkness" of newspaper clippings à la Charles Fort. (Fort is a character in the movie adaptation of Lovecraft's story.) And there is mention of the Mi-Go:

No use, either, to point out the even more startlingly similar belief of the Nepalese hill tribes in the dreaded Mi-Go or "Abominable Snow-Men" who lurk hideously amidst the ice and rock pinnacles of the Himalayan summits.

I'm not sure how anything can "lurk hideously." Remind me again of how Lovecraft belongs in any canon of American literature or how he might be the equal of Edgar Allan Poe.

The Mi-Go or Abominable Snowman was also mentioned in a letter printed in the September 1945 issue of Weird Tales. The writer of that letter gave a pretty good account of evidence and supposed sightings of the creature. He referred to "The Whisperer in Darkness" in his letter and asked that others who knew about the things about which Lovecraft wrote, including the Mi-Go, write to him, and he provided his address in Sharon, Pennsylvania. His name was Paul Doerr (1927-2007). Last year (in 2022), one or more investigators publicly made a case that Doerr was the infamous Zodiac Killer. There appears to be some good circumstantial evidence that he was in fact the killer. Among Doerr's habits were clipping items from newspapers and making collages. I have written about both of those things recently as well.

I have heard about the flooding in New York and New England. I have also heard that a woman drowned while trying to flee her flooded home. Let's pray for everyone to be protected from harm, for comfort for those who have suffered losses, and for strength and courage for everyone who goes to the rescue. There has been more than enough tragic death recently. We don't need any more.

C.C. Senf's illustration for "The Whisperer in Darkness," in Weird Tales, August 1931, page 33. The story starts on page 32, and already Senf is giving away the game. Lovecraft's story got short shrift, too, because this is the only illustration in his very long work of fiction. By the way, that's a reaching hand on the right. Senf specialized in that device.

Original text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, July 10, 2023

Weird, Fate, & History

I have started reading Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler (1941). I'm still in the first section entitled "The First Hearing," and already I have found two quotes that echo some of the ideas about which I have written in this series on the 100-year anniversary of Weird Tales.

First, the omniscient narrator, who is close to the thoughts of the protagonist Rubashov, describes the state of the Party at the time of his arrest:

The Party remained dead, it could neither move nor breathe, but its hair and nails continued to grow; the leaders abroad sent galvanizing currents through its rigid body, which caused spasmodic jerks in the limbs. (Bantam Books paperback edition, p. 25)

"Galvanizing currents" is probably not an allusion to the experiments of Victor Frankenstein. Nonetheless, there is reverberation. I have a previous quote by José Ortega y Gasset from his book The Revolt of the Masses (1929; 1930):

The mass says to itself, "L'État, c'est moi," which is a complete mistake [. . .]. But the mass-man does in fact believe that he is the State, and he will tend more and more to set its machinery working on whatsoever pretext, to crush beneath it any creative minority which disturbs it [. . .].  

     The result of this tendency will be fatal. Spontaneous social action will be broken up over and over again by State intervention; no new seed will be able to fructify. Society will have to live for the State, man for the governmental machine. And as, after all, it is only a machine whose existence and maintenance depend on the vital supports around it, the State, after sucking out the very marrow of society, will be left bloodless, a skeleton, dead with that rusty death of machinery, more gruesome than the death of a living organism. (Norton, 1957, pp. 120-121)

So, in their works, both Koestler and Ortega y Gasset used the same kind of imagery, namely, that of the Party or the State as a corpse.

Second, before his arrest, Rubashov speaks to a fellow party member:

     "The Party can never be mistaken," said Rubashov. "You and I can make a mistake. Not the Party. The Party, comrade, is more than you and I and a thousand others like you and I. The Party is the embodiment of the revolutionary idea in history. History knows no scruples and no hesitation. Inert and unerring, she flows towards her goal. At every bend in her course she leaves the mud which she carries and the corpses of the drowned. History knows her way. She makes no mistakes. He who has not absolute faith in History does not belong in the Party's ranks." (p. 34)

I had never thought about it in this way, but can Marx's concept of History have been something like the early medieval concept of Weird or Wyrd, perhaps based on an earlier concept of Fate? Note that both are feminine. Note also that both have their own goals and "no scruples or hesitation." Both History and Weird carry away individual men in their onward rush. My idea is that Weird came back into consciousness, at least in British and American literature, during the early to middle part of the nineteenth century. And it was during that same period that Karl Marx began putting forth his ideas about History. So in about the 1840s, did some part of Western thought come to a fork in the road, with a nonmaterialistic or even supernaturalistic Weird on the right and Marx's materialistic and necessarily atheistic History on the left? Did artists, including writers, choose the right fork, while science-minded (or pseudoscience-minded) people chose the left? And was Marxism the only alternative to non-materialism? Was there no third way other than traditional religious belief? You might say that liberalism represented a third way, with men freed from both History and Weird or Fate. Liberalism, however, shows itself too often to be weak and bloodless. Too often it simply slides into Marxism and other diseases of the mind and spirit. Witness our current situation. In any case, if there are only two alternatives, then it's no wonder that so much science fiction is progressive, if not outright Marxist, in its orientation, for what other choice is there for authors who reject non-materialism or supernaturalism, let alone traditional religion? Put more simply, have science fiction authors chosen all-knowledge over mystery? Have they pursued rebellious or revolutionary pride and triumph over weird-fictional acceptance, defeat, or humiliation?

Original text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Friday, July 7, 2023

Fate Magazine & Weird Tales (Again)

Last year, I wrote about connections between Weird Tales and Fate magazine. You can read what I wrote by clicking here. One of the points in my first essay is that Fate was one successor to Weird Tales, possibly the primary successor--at least until the 1960s when Robert A.W. Lowndes began as editor of Magazine of Horror. As have I pointed out, weird is from the Old English, wyrd, meaning "fate." So, Weird Tales and Fate are named for and treat the same concept, namely wyrd or weird or fate.

Fate is Latinate. Clipped, monosyllabic, with two hard consonant sounds, it sounds instead like an Anglo-Saxon word. The main title logo in Weird Tales is a little fancy and has an Art Deco appearance. The designer of that logo, which is still in use, was J. Allen St. John, who did cover art for both magazines. The main title logo for Fate is less fancy. It has a stern and uncompromising look, just like the word it represents.

The logo of Fate is made up of white lettering enclosed in a red rectangle. Life magazine also had white lettering enclosed in a red rectangle. The typeface in Fate is Roman, while that in Life is Gothic. Life and fate, perhaps two sides of a coin, are there represented, as are the ancient Roman (and Latinate, fate) and the medieval Gothic (and English, life).

Fate included in its contents art by Weird Tales artists and articles by Weird Tales authors. It also had brief articles, used as fillers, about real-life events, just as in the first many issues of Weird Tales. In both magazines, the use of these fillers might have been after the example of Charles Fort. (Fort's last name and the word fate have the same number of letters and the same two hard consonant sounds.) Many of the short filler articles in Fate are about the workings of fate. Many of them are essentially contes cruels. Both Weird Tales and Fate were strongly influenced by Fort. Fate was founded by Raymond A. Palmer and Curtis Fuller, both of whom were Forteans.

The conte cruel is a type of weird tale characterized by torture, cruelty, and torment. It was named for a collection of stories by the French author Villiers de l'Isle-Adam, from 1883. Although Villiers was not in Weird Tales, he was in Lowndes' Magazine of Horror. One edition of Contes Cruels shows a man chained to a Catherine's wheel on its cover. The wheel is of course a circle, like the wheel of fortune, "fortune" being another meaning of the root word wyrd. Regarding circles, Charles Fort declared, "One measures a circle, beginning anywhere." All things seem to turn in circlesRemember that "to turn" is the root meaning of wyrd.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley

Monday, July 3, 2023

The Last of Colloids & Tentacles

A colloid is a suspension of one or more substances in another. Two thirds of the ingredients of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich are colloids. A long time ago, I knew a guy who liked banana and mayonnaise sandwiches. (They smelled like house paint.) Only one third of his ingredients--mayonnaise--is colloidal. Protoplasm is a colloid, too, so when John Corliss Cranmer's giant amoeba gulped down first his daughter-in-law, then his son, people were the meal and the colloid was the eater of the meal. But then the people were made of cells brimming with protoplasm, too, and so it was a case of one big colloidal mass eating lots of little ones--if you're a reductionist, that is.

The word colloid is from the French, originally from the Greek. It means "a substance in a gelatinous or gluey state," originally, simply, "glue." Colloid as a word and a scientific concept is from the mid-nineteenth century, as so many things in our daily lives and so many of the ideas in our busy little brains are. There are other gluey concepts in science, collagen, for example, also the subatomic particles called gluons. There are also gluey crafts and gluey art forms. The collage is the most obvious example of these.

People have made collages for a long, long time, but the collage as a work of art dates from the modern period, maybe from the eighteenth century, certainly no later than the nineteenth or early twentieth century. Georges Braque and Pablo Picasso made collages and coined the term papier collé. Those two artists, along with Juan Gris, were originators first of analytical cubism, then of synthetic cubism. In analytical cubism, the artist looks at his or her subject from many different points if view. That's why, in a work by Picasso for example, you can see both eyes in a portrait seemingly done in profile. So, no, Picasso's people are not part flounder. In synthetic cubism--I think a more playful and not so mathematically exacting variation--a work of cubistic art is synthesized by gluing together scraps and cuttings of paper, thus the collage or papier collé. I guess making collages would have been hard to do before there was a mass and popular press as a source of material.

In moving towards synthesis, or what we might call literary collage, modern authors followed modern artists, I think. The art seems to have come first--synthetic cubism was in flower, if you can call it that, in 1912-1914. Then came the literary works, "The Waste Land" by T.S. Eliot, for example, in 1922, Show Girl by J.P. McEvoy in 1928, John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy in 1930-1936. I think we can include "The Call of Cthulhu" by H.P. Lovecraft (Weird Tales, Feb. 1928) in that list, too. Several stories in the first issue of Weird Tales (Mar. 1923) include notes, clippings, diary entries, and so forth, as if the story were a scrapbook or a collage. That kind of thing would continue in future issues.

"The Call of Cthulhu" also has an analytical approach, as do other works of weird fiction that refer or allude to weird geometries, outré mathematics, and multiple dimensions. Maybe pulp fiction wasn't very far behind mainstream literature in the 1910s-1930s in its move towards modernism. But maybe the pulp fiction genres--especially science fiction--were a little bit ahead because they were in such close contact with the scientific developments of their time. Mainstream authors of the early twentieth century could disregard science. F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, and John Steinbeck didn't write science fiction. But then science and the future barged into the room and Walker Percy, Cormac McCarthy, and Margaret Atwood did and have. How times change.

There will be more on Ms. Atwood in a minute.

Dr. Frankenstein made a kind of collage using parts from different bodies, plus an Abby Normal brain. His goal was the synthesis of life from non-life. "I had worked hard for nearly two years," he wrote, "for the sole purpose of infusing life into an inanimate body." Lightning was the literal spark of life by which he would do it. And so his monster lived. A long line of proto-scientists, semi-scientists, pseudoscientists, and maybe the rarest kind, real scientists, has proposed that early in the earth's history lightning infused life in what they have called the primordial soup or primordial ooze, ooze being a species of colloid. Anthony M. Rud seems to have alluded to the primordial ooze--or jelly in H.G. Wells' formulation--in his story "Ooze" (Weird Tales, March 1923). Since the early nineteenth century, real-life scientists seem to have followed the example of Victor Frankenstein. We, the world over, recently had a deadly encounter with their Frankensteinian brand of science in the form of a lowly virus raised to the top of a Chinese/U.S. government-built Tower of Babel. They'll do it again. We can be sure of that. Next time it's likely to be worse, but that will be good for them because they can take more of what is ours in the process.

Life arising from non-life, called spontaneous generation, was debunked a long time ago. But I guess debunked things don't always stay that way. For example, there are yet again people who believe that a person can change his or her bodily form by some magical process of mind or by a series of practices they call "care," practices that the rest of us can only consider criminal, immoral, and unethical mutilations of the human body, a kind of witch-doctory or pseudo-medical falling-back on superstition, ultimately a literal diabolism. People who can supposedly transform themselves used to be called shape-shifters or skin-walkers, and they did what they did by supernatural processes. Now they go by a different name and we're supposed to believe that there is science behind it.

From the moment we ate from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, we have believed ourselves to be as gods and to hold in our hands godlike power, godlike authority, and godlike wisdom. Our punishment was expulsion from the Garden and a realization of death. The difference is that we once knew shame and walked in shame, out of the gates and into exile. Now there isn't any shame, only pride, or Pride as it is now capitalized. Now we walk in history every day, as the worst among us might say. Anyway, I guess if we're gods, we can create and mold bodies and parts of bodies, just as Dr. Frankenstein did. In creating our modern-day monster, we will fashion his/her whole body--his veins, his feet, his hands, his organs--everything, including a Frankenstein's schwanzstucker made from the flesh of her forearm--according to our own whims. It won't be real, but we will be required to call it real and her a man. It will in fact be grotesque, a monstrous simulacrum, at once a symbol and a manifestation of our reaching into hell in our efforts to reach into heaven, where we believe we are or shall be enthroned. And, no, she's not gonna be very popular because of it.

Margaret Atwood, who has been called a TERF because she knows what everybody in the whole history of the world knew until ten minutes ago, famously said, "Science fiction is rockets, chemicals and talking squids in outer space." As we know, squids are cephalopods and the bearers of tentacles. So Ms. Atwood has offended not only people who don't know what a woman is, but she has probably also offended a lot of science fiction fans with her opinions on these things. If you're an offended Star Wars fan, though, you might want to just slink away, the reason being that in the Star Wars universe, there is a literal talking squid. His title is Admiral and his name is Ackbar, and though his tentacles are small (they're more like the barbels of a catfish), he is a member of a race called the Mon Calamari, meaning, in una bella lingua of a faraway planet spinning on its axis a long, long time in the future, squid. (The noun is Italian, the possessive pronoun French.)

There are other tentacled aliens in the Star Wars universe. Oola is one. Ahsoka is another. They have tentacles coming out of their heads. The Thermians in Galaxy Quest (1999) are, in their true form, tentacled. They are one form but take another. Call them trans, I guess. Cthulhu of course has tentacles. In Frank Frazetta's interior illustration for The Chessmen of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (1922), there are tentacled heads, called Kaldanes in the story, that frighten and horrify Tara of Helium. In Gino d'Achille's  cover version, the Kaldanes are more spider-like. I believe the Kaldanes have both kinds of members, though, both tentacles and jointed legs. Maybe a Burroughs fan can let us know for sure. That reaching down through the neck to control a host body is also in The Puppet Masters by Robert A. Heinlein (1951), the Star Trek Episode "Operation -- Annihilate!" (1967), and, if I remember right, a skit on SCTV in which cabbage leaves attach themselves to the backs of people's heads. In the Star Trek episode at least, the controlling aliens are colloidal, made by the prop master from bags of fake vomit. By the way, the ninth book in Burroughs' Mars series is The Synthetic Men of Mars, originally published in 1939, and so we have another example of Frankensteinian synthesis in genre fiction.

Colloids are sometimes fun. Give a child a bottle of Elmer's Glue-All along with some construction paper and glitter and see how she entertains herself. But in science fiction, fantasy, and weird fiction, colloids are more often gross, nasty, disgusting, and revolting--when they are not creeping, crawling, encroaching, and deadly in the way shoggoths or the Blob is. We have a different reaction to tentacled creatures, owing, I think, to our hundred-thousand-year experience with them. They are real, discrete, recognizable, nameable, alive. They look back at us with the biggest eyes in nature. And the smartest of them are very smart. More than any of that, though, they seem alien in their star-shaped or radially symmetrical bodies. It's no wonder tentacled creatures became the aliens of science fiction, or more accurately, why science fiction authors, beginning with H.G. Wells, would have fashioned the tentacled creatures of earth into aliens from outer space. Maybe we have atavistic memories of when octopuses first came to our planet, raining down on us in their iron spaceships.

We were made in the image of our Creator, and so we wish to create, thus our art and literature, among so many other great and wonderful things, including most of all love, which allows us an escape into eternity. Where we make our mistake is in believing we can create or re-create the things that he first created. And so Frankensteinian scientists, engineers, and technicians are busy. They believe they can create life (or that life was created) from non-life. They believe they can alter unalterable facts about human nature, human anatomy, and human biology. They believe they can make of us something beyond human, better than human, other than human, transhuman. They're working on synthesizing new forms from fragments of previously existing ones. The coronavirus and a million dead are one result of that. The supposedly counteractive "vaccine" and a million more dead are another. They also believe they can transfer the human mind into a machine, thus surviving their own deaths.* In fact, they appear to see little difference between the ghost and the machine. One can be the other. One is the other. And so we will soon have machines taking the place of human beings. Soon after that, our machines will probably enslave or kill us. If you have never read "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison (1967), you probably should, like right now. It may give you a glimpse into our caliginous--not collagenous but caliginous--future. Anyway, thanks, scientists, but ultimately, thanks, all of us, for we have all done this. Scientists--others, too--are only at the vanguard of our limitless depravity in our fallen state. We fall. The asymptotic curve of our pursuit of perfection--of a perfect and limitless depravity--moves forever upwards.

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*Having eaten the forbidden fruit, they believe that the knowledge they have thereby gained will reopen the gates and allow them back into the Garden.

"To Tara's horror, the headless body moved, took the hideous head in its hands and set it on its shoulders." Illustration by Frank Frazetta from The Chessmen of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Text copyright 2023 Terence E. Hanley