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Monster Movie Month: At the Movies with H.P. Lovecraft

Howard Philips Lovecraft, known as H.P. Lovecraft, was a writer of weird fiction- tales with a supernatural bent- and a defining influence on the horror genre. He was born on August 20, 1890, and died at age 46 on March 15, 1937.

Lovecraft is best known for his invention of the Cthulu mythos- a cycle of loosely-related stories that concerned the “Great Old Ones,” beings from outer space who took up residence on Earth to cause total destruction. After Lovecraft’s death other authors, including August Derleth and Robert E. Howard, took up writing stories using the Cthulu mythos, and writers continue to use and find inspiration in his ideas and mythos today . The subgenre of Lovecraftian horror uses the concept of cosmicism. According to Wikipedia, that can be defined as “the sense that ordinary life is a thin shell over a reality which is so alien and abstract in comparison that merely contemplating it would damage the sanity of the ordinary person”.

The Cthulu mythos and Lovecraftian horror have taken hold in popular culture in interesting ways. There’s a roleplaying game, Call of Cthulhu; a band called H.P. Lovecraft; and a zillion products for your favorite cultists, including a cuddly plush Cthulu, perfect for baby showers(and yes, I did receive not one, but two of these at mine). And, of course, there are movies.

Click here to see a review and suggested read-alikes for the newest Lovecraft-inspired movie, Cabin in the Woods, and check out this one-sheet readers advisory handout for the newest Lovecraft-inspired movie, from reviewer Benjamin Franz.

For a list of Lovecraft-inspired and Lovecraftian movies, check out this page from the H.P.Lovecraft Archives or this filmography from IMdb.

If you’re interested in building your Lovecraft collection, take a moment to visit Jamie Blackman’s H.P. Lovecraft Collection Development Guide at MonsterLibrarian.com, and check out our Cthulu Mythos page for reviews of works of Lovecraftian horror.

 

Getting Lost In The Classics

Over the past few days I’ve found that one thing just leads to another when it comes to the classics. One book I’ve been reading, Alan Jacobs’ The Pleasures of Reading in an Age of Distraction, led me to reconsider a reread of some of the books I read many years ago, in the hope that I’d find something different, and maybe something more, than I did when I was twelve, or sixteen. Quite frankly, I thought maybe I needed the break. Some of the characters and situations I’ve been encountering in genre fiction recently have been really annoying, and it’s hard to enjoy a book when you want to shake the characters, or, alternatively, the author. I remembered loving Dickens, so I found myself a copy of Oliver Twist (which is free on Kindle, another benefit of many of the classics). And even with background knowledge of Dickens, I might very well have been stopped by his style and vocabulary in the first few pages if I hadn’t been determined to read it. I might add that Dickens’ dislike of the British workhouse system and treatment of the poor results in such heavy-handed sarcasm that anyone who didn’t understand what he was trying to do would be completely baffled. So I get it. It can require guidance to read one of these books, and persistence. It’s not necessarily easy to get into the flow. When Kelly Gallagher writes about teaching reading in a critical sense in his book Readicide, this is what he’s talking about. Some books are worth the effort. You CAN get into the story, but you need help to get through it.

What reading the classics SHOULDN’T mean is that they’re taught in isolation from context, or taught as a means to an end. As I was looking through my library’s catalog to see if it happened to own Tales of Mystery and Imagination, the Poe book with the terrifying illustrations that I wrote about previously, I discovered that while they didn’t own that particular collection, they did own the Kaplan SAT version. WHAT? I guess it’s one way to learn vocabulary, but what a turnoff.  You don’t need Poe to learn vocabulary. And that’s not the reason to read him.

There are so many versions of Poe’s work, including student editions like this one, which unobtrusively provides help with words kids might not know, with a focus on the STORIES, graphic novels like this one, and awesomely illustrated ones like this, all of which give their readers compelling reasons to master Poe’s language and style without getting beaten over the head with the test practice opportunities his work may provide. You can memorize words and their definitions all day long if you want but you might as well just memorize the dictionary in that case- for understanding (which you’ll need for those analogy questions) and for enjoyment, wide and deep reading are what’s necessary.

You might need a push and a little guidance from someone else to get going, but promoting Poe as vocabulary practice for the SAT? That’s not how they’ll grab you. Once you get past the first words and start to feel the terror in the beating of your heart, you won’t rest in peace until the tale is done.

Thank a School Librarian Today!

I missed saying anything about National School Library Month in April, which is sad, since I am a school librarian (if not a practicing one). The PTO here makes a big deal about Teacher Appreciation Week, which was in the beginning of May, and classroom teachers get appreciated that week, but somehow, when I taught (and you have to be a licensed teacher to be a school librarian) the school librarian wasn’t usually remembered (except for a few extremely special kids, who I will never forget). And I fell a little behind there too.

So now, here, we are headed into the last week of school. Yes, I know the rest of the world is in school until sometime in June, but here, school is out on Thursday. So my opportunity to say anything to my son’s school librarian this year is coming to an end very soon.

At the beginning of the year, the kids at my son’s school were supposed to choose from a selection of age-appropriate books for kindergarten. My son, used to picking out his own books, wanted the shelves where the monsters were and went bananas. I know because I got a call at home. We talked for awhile, and concluded that reading all kinds of books, with and without monsters, was the way to go. And he started to bring all kinds of books home, some with monsters, some without. I see this as a good thing- reading should widen the world beyond just one topic, and there are so many other things to read about in addition to monsters! He began to bring home some longer books, and was allowed to keep them for more than the allotted week while he studied them intensely. And then he discovered the Crestwood Books movie monster books. Either he was really burrowing for something or she found them for him, because they’re in a nondescript, if very durable, school library binding, and not the original attention-drawing, orange covers. Many libraries weed their collections frequently to keep the collections current and to remove items that are falling apart and I am thankful that she kept these for my son to discover. Even though I had to tell him we couldn’t read them at bedtime because the pictures were too scary. Even though his grandmother told me the books were “gross”. He has loved them so much! And he has had the opportunity to discover them, learn from them, create new drawings and stories, and read the books again and again because she kept them and put them in his hands.

Now, he was already an enthusiastic reader, and a pretty good one, considering that he is a kindergartener. But imagine the fire the right book can light in a child who doesn’t like to read or who struggles with it. The book, or the idea within, that lights that fire, doesn’t always come from the hands of a librarian. But it can.

So take a moment to thank your school librarian and say how much you appreciate her (or him). It doesn’t happen enough, and while your child might not say anything much at home, you can never underestimate the impact a school librarian can make.

Thank you, every single one.