Non-fiction Pulps

‘L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy’

A recent work in literary criticism I picked up is L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy by Lovecraft scholar Marcos Legaria, with a great intro by fellow Lovecraft scholar Ken Faig Jr. I was surprised this came out from Bold Venture Press, as this sort of work I would have expected from Hippocampus Press.

L'Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary LegacyThis focus on this work is the “battle,” so to speak, over who would be the one in charge of Lovecraft’s literary legacy after his death. H.P. Lovecraft (1890-1937) is the now well-known author of weird fiction and the stories usually referred to as the Cthulhu Mythos. But at the time of his death, he was known only to those who bothered to read Weird Tales and the few other pulp magazines that ran his work.

His friends and fans hoped to preserve his legacy by getting his work published in book form to a wider audience. This would soon by done by Arkham House, founded by August Derleth and Donald Wandrei.

I assumed when I got into reading Lovecraft that they were somehow given the rights to do so. However, that’s not quite the case.

Instead, Lovecraft did appoint someone to be his literary executor. But as shown in this work, through the actions of Donald and Howard Wandrei, with some involvement of Derleth and a few others, this person was basically driven away from doing the job he was asked to. This person was then-19-year-old Robert Barlow.

Robert Barlow (1918-51) was a young fan and correspondent with Lovecraft from an early age. He even hosted Lovecraft at his family’s home in DeLand, Fla., for extended stays during two summers. Barlow collaborated with Lovecraft on some stories, got into publishing, and for reasons that are hopefully clear from the work, was named by Lovecraft his literary executor. Sadly that document was not part of Lovecraft’s formal will.

Barlow seems to have followed Lovecraft’s wishes, as well as presenting many papers and documents to the John Hay Library at Brown University in Providence, R.I., that are there today. It seems clear that others were more than willing to sell off their Lovecraft documents instead of having them preserved this way.

Barlow also typed up several Lovecraft stories that then only existed in handwritten form, and Lovecraft’s handwriting is hard to read for most.

The whole story about this affair is pretty sad as many people behaved badly. They pulled in others they shouldn’t have, attacked not only Barlow but others, and led to several proposed publications never seeing the light of day. Worse, some of those are lost, as the only copies were destroyed in a fire. Barlow himself pretty much handed things over to Derleth et al and left the weird-fiction world to start a new career in academia in the area of Mexican anthropology, where he became a noted expert there, living and working in Mexico City until his death.

One has to wonder what might have been had the Wandrei brothers, along with Derleth, had not conducted themselves as you will see here.

This is a well-researched work, and I look forward to further works by this author, who is working on a biography of Barlow. If you have a passing interest in Lovecraft, check it out. It is also a cautionary tale on the issue of authors clearly setting out who will be in charge of their works upon their passing, which hasn’t always gone well with some.

In the meantime, folks may be interested in the collection Eyes of the God: Selected Writings of R.H. Barlow and Dim-Remembered Stories: A Critical Study of R.H. Barlow, both from Hippocampus Press as well as O Fortunate Floridian: H.P. Lovecraft’s Letters to R.H. Barlow from University of Tampa Press. Another work I am looking forward to is David Goudsward‘s Adventurous Liberation: H.P. Lovecraft in Florida, coming from Bold Venture Press.

3 Comments

  • The last 6 years have been heaven for me,finally seeing ‘Lovecraft steps out’, or,what he would have liked in his lifetime : to be known, appreciated, recognized & emulated even more so now , than he ever was in his tragically short life. Bring on more books,merchandising,a Saturday morning cartoon & a podcast,why not? More people recognize him now,let the world quake for his literary genius- & terror from beyond,& future,& within ! Love to Lovecraft. He led a life great authors should lead.

  • Meh, why to resurrect this hack’s dead carcass of work again? There are so many better horror writers of that era who deserve more recognition and the market is so oversaturated with all the HP Lovecrap it make me puke, it’s worse than Barbie and Pokemons. “Lovecraftian” is becoming a catchprase (and a cliche) for any wannabe creator who has anything to do with horror and wants to make money… Yuck. Hate to Lovecraft and all the Lovecraft-inspired Lovecrap out there. We really don’t need more of the same. The only thing this guy had going for him was his mythology. He was a subpar writer – that’s simply stating a fact!

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