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July 2012 Read: The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
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message 201:
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Sean
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Jul 13, 2011 07:19AM

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Glad I could help? lol.
Thank you for not deciding my observation was invalid due to my not liking the novel. :)


Meant to comment on this before - I have Houellebecq's book but haven't read it yet. Sounds like it's worth the read so I'll try to tackle it later in the summer.
Having finished Storm Front, I can now tackle The Case of Charles Dexter Ward. :)

Well said, Michael!

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It's not about liking or disliking the story, the comment I made but about being suprised over people being suprised by the end. I have been suprised people didn't see the end coming in books I have read that I did like as well.
ETA: that I don't see the correlation between the statement I had made and my feelings about the novel. Explain? "
Yeah, I'm still waiting for that explanation.

Since racism and snobbery were brought up in this topic before, I thought it worth highlighting its appearance in a couple of cases in chapter 2 (all emphases are of course mine). On pp. 157-8 (of the anthology At the Mountains of Madness in which The Case of Charles Dexter Ward appears), we get:
'Here his only visible servants, farmers, and caretakers were a sullen pair of Narragansett Indians; the husband dumb and curiously scarred, and the wife of a very repulsive cast of countenance, probably due to a mixture of Negro blood.'
Later, on p. 158:
'...two swarthy foreigners who comprised the only manservants, the hideous indistinct mumbling of the incredibly aged French housekeeper....'
And on p. 162:
'...all his sailors were mongrel riff-raff from Martinique, St Eustatius, Havana or Port royal.'
However, if Lovecraft was indeed racist (and not merely that the narrator of the tale was), we get a statement that offers some mitigation, as it indicates some concern for what had happened to some slaves (p. 164):
'[...] but not until modern times, [...] did it occur to any person [...] to make dark comparisons between the large number of Guinea blacks he imported until 1766, and the disturbingly small number for whom he could produce bona fide bills of sale either to slave-dealers at the great bridge or to the planters of the Narragansett Country.'
Good quotations, Greg. It seems the HPL is obsessed with notions of "degeneration" and he usually associates "degeneration" with qualities of appearance very different from the white New Englander. I think he may also have a bit of fear of country folk. It's interesting to note that he was smart enough to mitigate some of these tendencies....

Thanks Michael and Jason! Yes, I agree - degeneration is very much one of his themes throughout his work whether in the sense of soembody losing his (is it ever her?) sanity or in some physical and genetic sense.


Nice! I really like the character creation, it's different from the other RPGs I play.

Nice! I really like the character creation, it's different from the other RPGs I play."
I wonder if there should be a horror RPG topic here?
I always played an anthropologist with an interest in the occult, which is a role closer to my real life (apart from the occult bit) than the characters I've played in other RPGs like D&D, Traveller, Gamma World, etc. What other games do you play, Jenny?


Nice! I really like the character creation, it's different from the other RPGs I pl..."
Greg wrote: "Jenny wrote: "Greg wrote: "I've played CoC too, Jenny! It's been a few years alas since the last time though."
Nice! I really like the character creation, it's different from the other RPGs I pl..."
Greg wrote: "Jenny wrote: "Greg wrote: "I've played CoC too, Jenny! It's been a few years alas since the last time though."
Nice! I really like the character creation, it's different from the other RPGs I pl..."
Ooh, I'll have to look into Traveller and Gamma World. What are they about? I play D&D, Abberant, All Flesh Must Be Eaten, and Hunter: The Gathering. I've played D&D and AFMBE the most though. However, I don't play enough now that my friends & I have conflicting work schedules. I miss the old days where we'd RP every week!

Does anyone else have this issue? Or maybe I'm not reading the right stories?


If you have read other things by him, Lori, and didn't like it you're probably just not meant to be a fan.
But if this was your first, for anyone else, and you didn't like it I would try another before you're certain.

Does anyone else have this issue? Or maybe I'm not reading th..."
I don't know if I'd go as far as insufferable but I don't care for his style.

That's funny you mention that! I am actually trying to read his story 'The Rats in the Walls'. I hate to admit but it's pretty much become bathroom reading material at this point. =\

Glad I could help? lol.
Thank you for not decidin..."
You did help. I enjoy reading your and
everyone elses observations about HPL. It gives me a new prospective on what I've read. So the next time I read something by HPL I might read it with a new set of eyes. If that makes any sense?

That's funny you mention that! I am actua..."
LOL Yeah, you're probably not a Lovecraft fan. Which is totally cool. :)



Personally, I felt upon reading this story (about four years ago now) that the intense detail that went into it sometimes obstructed the flow of the story. As such, I don't think it's one of his more accessible stories and I would never recommend this as a place to start with Lovecraft.
I have been realiably informed, and arrived at the same conclusion myself, that many of his stories will grow on you after careful re-readings as the significance of the seemingly unimportant details will become apparent. It's not light reading, that's for sure.

I really liked the plot, just didn't love the execution.
Also, I have to say I didn't find the book to be particularly racist of offensive in that way any more so than I would expect any work from that time to be.
Now I'm gonna go read up about Lovecraft, I'm interested.





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It's not about liking or disliking the story, the comment I made but about being suprised over people being suprised by the end. I have been suprised people didn't see the end coming in books I have read that I did like as well.
ETA: that I don't see the correlation between the statement I had made and my feelings about the novel. Explain? "
Yeah, I'm still waiting for that explanation.
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)
More...