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July 2012 Read: The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
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Jason
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Jul 06, 2011 03:02AM

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Or get hammered on the head and stuffed in a deep freeze.



As for this particular story, I cannot remember it well enough to comment.

I forgot that one. The Colour Out of Space is, perhaps, my favorite by Lovecraft!

It is said that by the end of his life he wasn't as racist as he was when he was younger. That he was able to grow, even if a only little, shows to me that he was just a product of his time period, and that if he were alive today, he'd probably hate racism.



I have some relatives where racism was passed down through each generation, but this doesn't mean they're not good people.

I really like the part that comes next, when Ward locks himself up in his attic room with his occult books. His parents hear weird voices, among other things, coming from up there until until the day comes when Ward is asked to move out and his mother is forced to go away for the safety of her sanity.
This part also plays a big part in the story and is important to remember.

That's the part I'm at right now. I don't know why, I laughed out loud when Charles mother
left and they said to write her only positive
letters. Maybe because I could use a postive
letter. Remember writing letters or having a pen pal?
Sorry, got off track.
Being that this is my first Lovecraft I have to say, I'm really liking it. It reminds me of a Dark Shadows episode.

I also miss writing letters! All those years of beautiful penmanship gone to waste.

Writing letters was something else Lovecraft did and did well. He wrote so many letters it would be impossible to print them all. I think there is somewhere between 75,000 and 100,000 letters he wrote to various correspondences, family, fellow writers, etc

If you thought Charles Ward was strange at all before, it's about to pick up! And then we find out what was going on behind closed doors...



Like the part where the Dr finds the creature in the hole in the ground, the first image that came to mind was something out of Full Metal Alchemist. that just gave me the giggles.

I am with you on this one.

Writing letters was something else Lovecraft did and did well. He wrote so many let..."
That's amazing! That's why it's sad people don't write letters any more. Those thousands of letters would be interesting to read.

I definitely will!



Every once in a while you'll find one of these letters for sale on ebay. They go for thousands of dollars. And to think the man died in poverty. LOL


I would agree with that. There is a big difference between societal racism and cultural jokes on race told by comedians, IMO.

An obsession with chubby Italian men? Don't we all. ;)

I don't know. He was a product of his time, but he was also nuts, lol, and just seemed to have a fear of the unknown, which is obviously one of the recurring themes in his work.
I have gotten to the point that I am able to take the racism in Lovecraft's stories with a grain of salt and move on. It's not to say that I condone such attitudes, but for the most part, the bulk of Lovecraft's stories do not dwell on racism.


I realized that jokes that put down a group of people are not necessary and has hostile undertones. I can have fun with other type of jokes, and it's not going to take anything away from my life.

I can heartily recommend it! Regrettably, I had to leave the dig a couple of weeks before it was completed (plane to catch) so I only got to trowel through some grave soil, find a coffin nail or two and identify a narrow trench that had been dug in the seventeenth century to delineate the edge of a grave plot. However, I'm not sure if the others got to escape the dig once they reached human remains....
11811 wrote: "Jason wrote: "That's an interesting story, Greg! I'd love to excavate a seventeenth-century graveyard with fellow horror and Lovecraft fans, too!"
We should organize a HA field trip!"
Cool idea! Know any graveyards just demanding to be dug up? :P
Nora wrote: "I'll help dig up graves as long as I can keep anything of value that I find. Ooo, grave robbing ftw! ;p"
:O Grave-robbing! Perish the thought! We would be doing it for the science, of course! Wouldn't we? :P

It's sometimes possible to work for a week or more as a volunteer digger and... if you like crap in particular, look out for coprolites and the contents of cess or latrine pits! :P Check with your local museum or antiquarian society to see if they know of any digs happening in your area.

Eileen wrote: "I also miss writing letters! All those years of beautiful penmanship gone to waste."
Well there's nothing stopping you both from doing it again! :P

It's sometimes possible to work for a week or more as a volunteer digger and... if you like crap in particular, look ou..."
Do they really take volunteers for digs? Do you need any formal education for such? This would be a fascinating thing to do, and not just a graveyard.


It's sometimes possible to work for a week or more as a volunteer digger and... if you like crap in particul..."
Some excavations are run as community projects so even schoolchildren can participate in them (hence no prior knowledge is needed), but many digs are run by contractors in advance of development and for contractual or other reasons they might not be able to hire volunteers. But you never know... so it's worth checking out. Jason, the dig I worked on in Montréal was on a Parks Canada site but it was a contract dig - there were no volunteers. However, about a block away there was another dig going on where volunteers were actively sought after.

So... are you going to write that story? :P

maybe Jason can write it? :)

maybe Jason can write it? :)"
What about a bunch of HA members writing it together in a Lovecraftian style (sans the racism perhaps)?

sounds like I really gotta start reading Case of Dexter Ward, to get the feeling for the style
I wasn't even aware Lovecraft was a racist

sounds like I really gotta start reading Case of Dexter Ward, to get the feeling for the style
I wasn't even aware Lovecraft was a racist"
He was also a bit of a snob! But as some other people have said, it's possible to overlook his racist viewpoint as a product of the era. And I must get offline and get back to reading Storm Front so I can get to Dexter Ward! LOL

Racism has been brought up with every online conversation I've ever had about Lovecraft.

Lovecraft was a master of suspense and the macabre/weird so his stories are (to me) always fun to read but, like you Jason, I would sometimes wince at some of his throwaway racist comments. Of course, his theme of human-piscine admixture in some stories could be seen as a metaphor for 'miscegenation' as well as his distate for low income people as much as non-whites.
Books mentioned in this topic
H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life (other topics)H.P. Lovecraft: A Life (other topics)
Naomi's Room (other topics)
The Woman in White (other topics)
Storm Front (other topics)
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