Tuesday, January 7, 2025

January 7, 2025

 Happy New Year Everyone!

I hope that all of you will pick up a copy of my recent book,  Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft: White Fragility in the Weird Tales!

Lovecraft lost his privileged lifestyle in his teen years, when he and his mother were forced to move out of their  Providence Rhode Island mansion and live instead in rented rooms located just blocks from their former house. 

This was the most traumatic event in Lovecraft’s life and his racial hatred against non-whites intensified, for he could see that he and his mother weren’t as privileged or superior to these so-called inferior races as he had believed.

This event, also, triggered a pattern of loss and failure that characterized Lovecraft’s life from that moment onwards: whenever he found himself facing a “crisis,” he would freeze up and be unable to act—thus, whatever he was trying to accomplish usually ended up in failure. 

The pattern of loss and failure is evident not only in the various personal crises that Lovecraft found himself having to face in his adult life, but we see this same pattern of behavior reflected in the lives and careers of the fictional protagonists in his major works.

You can read all about Lovecraft’s personal traumas and the psychological & psychosomatic problems that plagued him in Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft!  

All of these traumas and problems laid the foundation for most of his greatest tales, especially “The Rats in the Walls,” The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” and “The Dreams in the Witch-House."

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/horror-as-racism-in-h-p-lovecraft-9798765107690/

JLS 

Monday, December 23, 2024

December 24, 2024

Greetings Everyone!

It's Christmas Eve!

A magical night, when the boundaries between this world and the other worlds are thin and insubstantial.  A night when the living can communicate with the dead.  A night for those who want to see a ghost!

Christmas Eve, in particular, is the best night of the year for reading ghost stories.  There is, of course, A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens: the scene near the end with the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, "draped and hooded", floating "like a mist along the ground" is deliciously nerve-wracking.

My favorite ghost stories are "Jerry Bundler," by W. W. Jacobs; "How Fear Departed From the Long Gallery," by E. F. Benson; and "The Crown Derby Plate," by Marjorie Bowen.

Be sure to check them out!  

JLS



Saturday, December 14, 2024

December 14, 2024

Greetings Everyone!

My new book, Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft: White Fragility in the Weird Tales, was recently published by Bloomsbury! I hope that all of you will pick up a copy!

Lovecraft scholar Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, in his essay “Tekeli-li: Poe, Lovecraft, and the Suspicion of Sameness” (2017) poses these questions: “If the affective power of a text is derived from retrograde sociopolitical points of view, to what extent is the reader who enjoys the works implicated in approving of and disseminating those opinions?  How, in short, should we read—and teach—racist texts?”

After reading Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft, the reader should be in a better position to answer these questions, and though a few readers might find the answers easy, the majority, I think, will find them even more difficult. 

 JLS

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/horror-as-racism-in-h-p-lovecraft-9798765107690/




Monday, November 25, 2024

November 25, 2024

Greetings Everyone!

My new book, Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft: White Fragility in the Weird Tales, was recently published by Bloomsbury!  I hope that all of you will pick up a copy!

Paul Rolland, Lovecraft scholar and author, writes: “The deficiencies of the man do not....debase the quality of his best work.  If anything, they invest it with a twisted passion that is missing from his more fantastic fiction."

"Twisted passion” is the perfect phrase to describe Lovecraft’s work, especially the racist works.  One could argue, in fact, that this twisted  passion enhanced Lovecraft's  hybrid, degenerative monster tales, making them much more frightening and investing them with raging, nearly psychotic emotion.

You may agree with this, or not.  But my book is, at the very least, an attempt to study and understand exactly how passionate and twisted Lovecraft really was.

So, please check it out!

JLS

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/horror-as-racism-in-h-p-lovecraft-9798765107690/

 


Sunday, November 10, 2024

November 10, 2024

Greetings Everyone!

My new book, Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft: White Fragility in the Weird Tales, was recently published by Bloomsbury. I hope that all of you will pick up a copy; you can order it online from the publishers and, of course, from Amazon and other online booksellers around the world.  The book is also available in bookstores here in the states as well as overseas.

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/horror-as-racism-in-h-p-lovecraft-9798765107690/

Horror as Racism in H. P. Lovecraft is the first, full-length study that addresses the topic of Lovecraft's racial hatred.  The book will show for the first time the full extent of Lovecraft’s racism, which ranges from the early works—the hybrid, degenerative monsters tales, as I refer to them, to the later, mature works—the great tales, as they are sometimes called, where Lovecraft’s extra-terrestrial alien races—all of them cosmic slave masters—square off against their own manufactured slave races and, in certain cases, human slaves as well.

The book, in particular, studies how Lovecraft uses his racial hatred creatively by developing racist images and narratives to advocate for his xenophobic, political beliefs: western civilization is in decline due to unrestrained immigration, miscegenation and hybridism; and, slavery is not only endemic, but justifiable among superior civilizations, especially the white, Anglo-Saxon civilizations.

There is no writer in the English language, and certainly, no writer of comparable magnitude to Lovecraft, who even attempts to do such a thing.  It is, quite literally, an unprecedented phenomenon.

So, please check it out!  

John L. Steadman 

Friday, November 1, 2024

November 1, 2024

 Greetings Everyone!

It's November, the last month of autumn before the dark days of winter!

Now is the season to read Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft,  writers who capture perfectly the horrors that lurk beyond the boundaries of space and time.

Hervey Allen describes one of Poe’s greatest poems in his biography Israfel: The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe.

“In “Ulalume,” Poe personified the constellations, reading into them an allegory of his soul’s predicament...there was a white, frosty starlight caught in these lines; a terror of the great caverns of space, haunted by the beasts of the zodiac; an element of irresponsible cosmic will in the fatal hour marked by the star-dials...a demon landscape lit by the star-glimmering, miraculous crescent of the goddess of passion.” 

Poe’s fictional works are filled with this  “white, frosty” terror.  H. P. Lovecraft’s work, also, expresses the same kind of terror.

JLS

https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/horror-as-racism-in-h-p-lovecraft-9798765107690/


Thursday, October 31, 2024