ALL PULP PAGES

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

ALL PULP SITE SPOTLIGHT-The works of CLARK A. SMITH!

ALL PULP is glad to announce that periodically it will be turning attention to particular sites of interest to Pulp fans.  Now, ALL PULP already does that through interviews, reviews, news, etc, but this little feature will be aimed at one specific site that hasn't been covered yet on these pages to raise awareness amongst pulpsters and for ALL PULP to explore for further attention, like interviews, etc.  Our first Site Spotlight today shines on -THE ELDRITCH DARK-The Sanctum of Clark Ashton Smith. 
http://www.eldritchdark.com/

From the site's introduction-


Clark Ashton Smith (1893-1961), perhaps best known today for his association with H.P Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos, is in his own right a unique master of fantasy, horror and science-fiction. Highly imaginative, his genre-spanning visions of worlds beyond, combined with his profound understanding of the English language, have inspired an ever -increasing legion of fans and admirers.

For most of his life, he lived in physical and intellectual isolation in Auburn, California (USA). Predominantly self-educated with no formal education after grammar school, Smith wore out his local library and delved so deeply into the dictionary that his richly embellished, yet precise, prose leaves one with the sense that they are in the company of a true master of language.

Though Smith primarily considered himself a poet, having turned to prose for the meager financial sum it rewarded, his prose might best be appreciated as a "fleshed" out poetry. In this light, plot and characters are subservient to the milieu of work: a setting of cold quiet reality, which, mixed with the erotic and the exotic, places his work within its own unique, phantasmagoric genre. While he also experimented in painting, sculpture, and translation, it is in his written work that his legacy persists.

During his lifetime, Smith's work appeared commonly in the pulps alongside other masters such H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, August Derleth, and E. Hoffmann Price and like many great artists, recognition and appreciation have come posthumously. In recent decades though, a resurgence of interest in his works has lead to numerous reprintings as well as scholarly critiques.

The Eldritch Dark is a site to facilitate both scholars and fans in their appreciation and study of Clark Ashton Smith and his works.