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In addition to his classics of horror fiction, it is estimated that Lovecraft wrote 100,000 letters — or roughly 15 every day of his adult life — ranging from one-page diaries to seventy-page diatribes. Perhaps 20,000 of those letters have survived, in the hands of private collectors and at the John Hay Library in Providence.

In each episode of this podcast, we'll read one of these letters (or part of it) and then discuss it. In his letters HPL reveals an amazing breadth of knowledge of philosophy, science, history, literature, art and many other subjects, and forcefully asserts some highly considered opinions (some of which can be upsetting).

And of course his letters offer a fascinating window into his personal life and times. Although we've been working with Lovecraftian material for over 30 years, we still find interesting new things in his letters, and while we don't claim to be experts we look forward to sharing them with a wider audience.

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  • Episode 25
  • Posted April 12, 2020

Things That Go Bump in the Night

In one of the last letters he would ever write, HPL tells young correspondent Harry Otto Fischer about things he's afraid of. He also provides his etymological interpretation of the meaning of the title Necronomicon.

This letter was written in February of 1937. Music by Troy Sterling Nies. Our thanks to Hippocampus Press for their Letters to C.L. Moore and Others.

Necronomicon ArticleClick on the image at left to read Andrew's contribution to the Greek etymology question from Strange Eons.