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Pulptime

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In these pages, H.P. Lovecraft lives again and Sherlock Holmes stalks New York in 1925, looking for a set of mysterious documents stolen by New York gangster Jan Martense. A visit with Harry Houdini, a séance with ah beautiful medium, a trek through the New York sewer system – and way lay beyond – make a fascinating tale, as told through the words of young Weird Tales writer Frank Belknap Long, Jr., Lovecraft’s best friend. A Lovecraft scholar, Cannon has utilized his knowledge of the many volumes of Lovecraft’s letters to reconstruct some of the events of his New York life and to simulate his actual conversations. (His friends have said that HPL spoke just as he wrote!) As for what the documents are, and whether they were recorved – read on! Illustrated by Fabian

94 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1984

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Peter H. Cannon

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Hugo Negron.
Author 7 books29 followers
September 27, 2023
A nice take on a fictional encounter between H.P. Lovecraft (one of my favorite authors) and Sherlock Holmes (one of my favorite fictional heroes), as if narrated by one of Lovecraft's closest friends, Frank Belknap Long, Jr. The story itself feels like a classic Holmes tale, although here we have a 70+ year old Holmes with Lovecraft serving as his foil. There are some fun guests along for the ride, both real and non, from Harry Houdini, a certain investigator from H.P. Lovecraft's tale The Horror at Red Hook (an enjoyable surprise!), and the villainous mastermind of the piece named after a certain head of a particular family living atop Tempest Mountain from the short story, The Lurking Fear. I won't go too much into the surprise revelation at the end between Holmes and Lovecraft - Holme's admitting he had a brief liaison in 1889 with a woman whose husband was a traveling salesperson during a previous assignment in America - but 1889? Traveling salesperson? Could it be...?

Although the story is solid with some great atmosphere and action sequences, and the final confrontation with the villain is done well, I have to admit my slight disappointment lies with what COULD have been. The actual mystery to this tale turns out to be a rather surprising revelation regarding Sherlock Holmes - a revelation that strikes a reader of Holmes as going somewhat against the grain with regards to his personality as classically presented. In fact, Holmes suffers poorly here, getting pummeled not once but twice by thugs, poor chap. With the inclusion of H.P. Lovecraft, I had hoped we would have had some of his Cthulhu horrors as a basis for this story. To have seen a Sherlock Holmes, man of logic, dealing with insane cultists and horrific creatures from other dimensions that H.P. Lovecraft would have been familiar with, or perhaps shocked to discover were actually real from his own writings, would have made for an exciting blend from both of their worlds. Unfortunately, that was not the case, as this story has nothing to do at all with any Lovecraftian themes. In fact, from the story's perspective, Lovecraft's role could have been replaced/re-imagined by any other character; he was basically a living roadmap that Holmes needed in a place that he was unfamiliar with.

What this story IS about, I think, is more of a warm retrospect to Lovecraft and his friendship with Long - any fan of Lovecraft will fully enjoy his portrayal here, which pulls in certain aspects of his real life, his eccentricities, mannerisms, and archaic speech. His friendship with Long (his recurring references to Long as Sonny, Belknapius, etc.), the introduction of the Kalems (a real-life informal literary group that both Lovecraft and Long were members of), and even Lovecraft's and Long's hilarious chance confrontation with a somewhat adversarial associate, the poet Hart Crane, makes one hope Lovecraft and Long truly had such adventures. An ongoing series of Kalem adventures would have been an especially fun read had it been made.

Its not the story I was hoping to read, and not a strong Sherlock Holmesian tale by far, but a very strong Lovecraft-as-a-person story, and one that I wished could have continued beyond this tale.
Profile Image for Alberto López Aroca.
Author 71 books60 followers
May 26, 2013
“Oh, I´m afraid Watson has seen fit to take yet another wife of late, his fourth or fith, I belive”.

Sherlock Holmes, 1925



Un texto en verdad excepcional, y que demanda su inmediata publicación en nuestro país por méritos propios: en abril de 1925, Sherlock Holmes se encuentra en New York, tras la pista de ciertos documentos robados por una especie de gángster-coleccionista. Para resolver el caso, el detective (ya entrado en años) recurre a la ayuda de dos caballeros excepcionales, Howard Phillips Lovecraft, el famoso Maestro del Horror Cósmico de Providence, y Frank Belknap Long, íntimo (y joven) amigo de Lovecraft, y autor de relatos fantásticos y de terror, como el justamente célebre Los Sabuesos de Tíndalos.

El texto tiene cierto puntillo cuasi canónico (no haremos el chiste fácil referido al apellido del autor), y en ciertos aspectos, es tan despiadado con Holmes —y con Lovecraft—, que suena a historia real, lo sea o no.

En contra de lo que podría parecer, no se trata de un enfrentamiento de Holmes y los Mitos de Cthulhu, aunque el trasfondo de esta breve novela (94 páginas) recrea uno de los relatos más interesantes de Lovecraft, El Horror de Red Hook, que resultó ser una especie de experimento, a caballo entre los relatos del Agente de la Continental de Dashiell Hammett, y los cuentos más macabros del gentleman de Providence.

Weirdbook Press, veterana editorial fundada en 1968 para publicar la revista Weirdbook Magazine (creo que se llamaba así), acogió este texto que, a priori, es obra de P.H. (Peter Hughes) Cannon, estudioso de la obra de Lovecraft, y que al parecer, también ha escrito algunos esquivos ensayos que relacionan a los dos Maestros: en este momento, estoy rastreando los trabajos de Cannon. Tengamos paciencia.

Decíamos que el texto es obra del señor Cannon “a priori”... pues resulta que la narración viene contada y firmada por un joven Frank Belknap Long, testigo de los hechos. Para terminar de sembrar la duda, el volumen viene precedido por un prólogo del mismo Long, esta vez el auténtico... y sólo para dejarnos con la misma incógnita. En cualquier caso, nos parece (junto con Roger Johnson) que el texto fue tan notable como para llamar la atención del anciano Belknap Long. Como colofón, un epílogo de un puntilloso Robert Bloch, que se limita a cuestionar el cameo de Harry Houdini en esta historia (una aparición, por otra parte, muy importante, pues cuadra perfectamente con las aseveraciones del señor Val Andrews —editor de textos de Watson— en Sherlock Holmes and the Houdini Birthright, que transcurre en 1922, con una pausa de varios años, y finaliza en 1927).







Las numerosas ilustraciones de Stephen E. Fabian, en blanco, negro y gris (ver la cubierta y contracubierta, por ejemplo), no son en verdad brillantes, pero poseen un no sé qué procedente del mundo del pulp americano, al tiempo que un aire a lo Sidney Paget, que las hace terriblemente encantadoras. Sólo por la parte gráfica, ya merece la pena que veamos este volumen en nuestro país.

Creo que Peter Cannon ha participado con un par de pastiches más en alguna de las antologías que realiza el señor Marvin Kaye, pero hasta la fecha, no he podido hacerme con ellas (ni siquiera estoy seguro de que sean el mismo Peter Cannon, aunque supongo que sí): The Adventure of the Noble Husband en The Confidential Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (1998), y Holmes and the Loss of the British Barque Sophy Anderson en Resurrected Holmes (1996) [En este último caso, sí que estamos hablando del mismo señor Cannon]. No sé si estos dos relatos tienen algo que ver con Lovecraft... en fin, habrá que averiguarlo.

Hay, además, un booklet que contiene un “episodio perdido” de Pulptime, acompañado de un pastiche sobre Drácula. Promete.

Repito: merece mucho la pena, y es toda una delicia, en muchos aspectos, ver a Holmes convertido en el vecino neoyorquino de Lovecraft.

(A precios un tanto excesivos en Amazon.com —sobre los veinte dólares—, y en Ebay sale a la venta de cuando en cuando. Yo conseguí un ejemplar firmado por Cannon y Fabian, que andaba perdido por Inglaterra. Tuve suerte).



(Noviember de 2005)

http://sherlockholmes.lacoctelera.net...
Profile Image for Erimia.
11 reviews13 followers
December 15, 2022
New York period Lovecraft meets aged Sharlock Holmes. Hijinks predictably ensue. A cute calm story which is probably good for removing unpleasant aftertaste of Lee's books (that's how it worked for me, anyway.) What bugged me was that the plot felt too thin for a mystery, and the author seemingly treated the anti-immigrant sentiment of The Horror at Red Hook too uncritically. Lovecraft's characterization was okay, Cannon is better at it than most, but in this book it relied on quoting too much.
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