Extollager
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2010
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- 9,229
Just reread this one, after many years. Lovecraft seeks to create an eerie "faerie"/mythological atmosphere and explores some properties of an invented realm.
I've read a lot of Tolkien, but still before me are the two Book of Lost Tales volumes, with Tolkien's early "Cottage of Lost Play." I think the idea of the latter is of a house where humans and Elves may encounter one another, and humans may learn of the history of the Elves. If I'm correct about this very early Tolkien work, then Tolkien and Lovecraft were somewhat alike, in having an early phase of fantasy-world invention in which a human may visit a strange cottage and there learn of, or even experience, the other world. Of course, HPL being HPL, the overtones are more sinister than in Tolkien.
But if there is a parallel between the two works (Cottage of Lost Play, Strange High House), then there is also a parallel in that both authors had to move beyond these early notions in order to develop the much more realized "ancient history" etc. that they set out in better-known, later work. Perhaps someone who's read the early Tolkien work can advise me as to whether this parallel that I'm wondering about is worth considering.
I was also reminded, faintly, of Clifford Simak's Way Station.
I've read a lot of Tolkien, but still before me are the two Book of Lost Tales volumes, with Tolkien's early "Cottage of Lost Play." I think the idea of the latter is of a house where humans and Elves may encounter one another, and humans may learn of the history of the Elves. If I'm correct about this very early Tolkien work, then Tolkien and Lovecraft were somewhat alike, in having an early phase of fantasy-world invention in which a human may visit a strange cottage and there learn of, or even experience, the other world. Of course, HPL being HPL, the overtones are more sinister than in Tolkien.
But if there is a parallel between the two works (Cottage of Lost Play, Strange High House), then there is also a parallel in that both authors had to move beyond these early notions in order to develop the much more realized "ancient history" etc. that they set out in better-known, later work. Perhaps someone who's read the early Tolkien work can advise me as to whether this parallel that I'm wondering about is worth considering.
I was also reminded, faintly, of Clifford Simak's Way Station.