About this item
Highlights
- In 1975, the young Lovecraft scholar Peter Cannon met the elderly Frank Belknap Long, one of H. P. Lovecraft's closest friends.
- Author(s): Peter Cannon
- 282 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Literary Figures
Description
About the Book
"Through this collection of five essays and eight fictional excerpts, H.P. Lovecraft scholar and PW senior reviews editor Cannon (The Lovecraft Chronicles) provides a window into his relationship with the late Frank Belknap Long, a science fiction and horror writer who was close friends with Lovecraft and an early collaborator in the construction of the Cthulhu Mythos. The short memoir pieces chronicle early interactions between Cannon and Belknap at speculative fiction conventions, recount the dynamics between Belknap and others in tightly knit Lovecraftian scholarship circles, and offer intimate (occasionally uncomfortably so) portraits of Belknap's domestic life with his wife, Lyda"--Book Synopsis
In 1975, the young Lovecraft scholar Peter Cannon met the elderly Frank Belknap Long, one of H. P. Lovecraft's closest friends. Over the next two decades, until Long's death in 1994, Cannon himself became a close friend of Long, and in the memoir Long Memories he has painted an unforgettable portrait of the aging writer living an impoverished existence in New York City with his wife Lyda. Cannon recounts how other members of the Lovecraft circle in the city, including S. T. Joshi, Robert M. Price, and Stefan Dziemianowicz, also encountered Long, and how some of them transported him and his wife to Providence, R.I., for their unexpected appearance at the H. P. Lovecraft Centennial Conference in 1990.
Cannon has written numerous other works relating to Long. Perhaps the most entertaining is the novella Pulptime, in which Lovecraft, Long, and other members of the Kalem Club team up with Sherlock Holmes in an adventure that fuses detection and nameless horror. In other stories, such as "The Letters of Halpin Chalmers" and "The Hound of the Partidgevilles," Cannon makes further riffs on Long's work and also engages in his penchant for genial parody and satire.
This book gathers Cannon's fictional and nonfictional writings about Frank Belknap Long, presenting an affectionate but critical portrait of a man whose long life was punctuated both with tragedy and with notable achievements in life and letters.