Series of five advertising articles written in 1925 (general title coined by R.H.Barlow). First published in
The five articles are as follows: “Beauty in Crystal” (on the Corning Glass Works, Corning, N.Y.); “The Charm of Fine Woodwork” (on the Curtis Companies, Clifton, IA); “Personality in Clocks” (on the Colonial Manufacturing Company, Zealand, MI); “A Real Colonial Heritage” (on the Erskine-Danforth Corporation, New York, N.Y.); and “A True Home of Literature” (on the Alexander Hamilton Book Shop, Paterson, N.J.). The articles were written in early 1925 for a trade magazine conceived by one Yesley (a friend of Arthur Leeds): authors would write the advertising copy (based on press notices or advertising matter supplied by the company) and have it published in the magazine; salesmen would then take the issue to the companies in question and urge them to buy a quantity of the magazines for advertising purposes, whereupon the author would get 10% of the net sales. But the venture never materialized, so far as can be ascertained, and HPL’s articles apparently were never published. HPL clearly sought out “high-toned” establishments to write about, and his articles— seemingly stiff and formal—are presumably meant to suggest the aristocratic quality of the products manufactured or sold by the companies about which he is writing.
Commonplace Book.
Notes (5,000 words); written between late 1919/early 1920 and 1935. First published in
No “book” at all, HPL’s commonplace book was merely a sheaf of long, narrow, folded sheets of paper, on which he jotted ideas for stories. In January 1920, he wrote to Rheinhart Kleiner, “I have lately…been collecting ideas and images for subsequent use in fiction. For the first time in my life, I am keeping a ‘com
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monplace-book’—if that term can be applied to a repository of gruesome and fantastick thought” (
Few entries in the book are story plots per se; most are merely notes to jog the memory or spur the imagination. Consider these sample entries from c. 1920: “Transposition of identity.” “Man followed by invisible
In 1938, the Futile Press published HPL’s notebook, derived from a manuscript in the possession of R.H.Barlow and augmented by later notes HPL kept on a typed copy made for him by Barlow. See “Notes on Weird Fiction” concerning the related material published with these notes. In
Comptons.
In “The Curse of Yig” and “The Mound,” Sally (“Grandma”), married to Joe, mother of Clyde, is a first-generation pioneer, “a veritable mine of anecdote and folklore.” She is the source of the story about their neighbors, the Davises, in “The Curse of Yig,” and it is she who discovers Walker Davis’s body.
“Confession of Unfaith, A.”
Essay (2,170 words); probably written in late 1921. First published in the