Howard Phillips Lovecraft is a horror fictional writer who was very important and widely known in the twentieth century. He is considered one of the greatest fictional horror writers and he has been a hero and a villain who has influenced many people in positive and negative aspects. Howard Phillips Lovecraft was born in the late 1800s in Rhode Island and he is mostly known because of his horror fictional writings. During his infancy he could not attend school regularly because he was sick very often and that made him struggle every day. He was raised by his mother and in his teenage years he suffered a severe sickness which stopped him from finishing high school. In the early 1900s, years later after his incident, he was getting better, …show more content…
He enjoyed writing fictional horror writings and he was different from everyone else because he had a unique style of writing that nobody else had which attracted almost everyone. He used old-fashioned spelling and he terrified each person who read his works. The people who viewed him as a hero and a positive influence was regular people who liked reading and other authors were also interested in his work. They noticed that what he does not only terrifies a person, but it also disturbs the person’s mind by making that person think and feel a sense of darkness and creepiness while they are reading. Not only he influenced people and authors but also musicians and artists to combine his literature with their music or their art …show more content…
Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 1990. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed February 16, 2018). Engle, John. "Cults of Lovecraft.” The Impact of H.P. Lovecraft 's Fiction on Contemporary Occult Practices, Vol. 33 Issue 1 (2014): 85-98 (accessed February 16, 2018). Eberhart, Karen. “Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online,” Howard P. Lovecraft Collection. (accessed February 2, 2018). https://library.brown.edu/riamco/render.php?eadid=US-RPB-mslovecraft&view=biography. Hunt, Shannon. “The Magazine of The National Endowment for The Humanities,” Muse of the Shadowy Realms. (accessed February 2, 2018.)
The piece “Images of America”_ Scotlandville is an awesome, and distinctive book written by Rachel L Emanuel, Ruby Jean Simms, and Charles Vincent. It allows the readers to expand their knowledge on the history of Scotlandville, Louisiana which is unknown to a lot of people. The authors use pictures and passages to reveal their message. It was quite entertaining and easy to understand because one could visualize what was occurring as they read.
The tale of Arne Johnson’s possession revolves around a real-life case that captured widespread attention and became known as the “Devil Made Me Do It” case. This gripping incident unfolded in the United States during the 1980s and involved Arne Cheyenne Johnson, his girlfriend Debbie Glatzel, and the Glatzel family. The chain of events leading to the possession commenced with David Glatzel, Debbie’s younger brother, who purportedly started encountering peculiar phenomena, including unsettling visions and abnormal behavior. Convinced that David was tormented by demonic entities, the Glatzel family sought assistance from Ed and Lorraine Warren, a renowned couple specializing in paranormal investigations involving hauntings, possessions,
The Online Literature Library. Web. 19 Jan. 2016. Shelley, Mary W, and Marilyn Butler.
Consequently, there have been many fooled by “Alice’s” story and not only readers of this diary. Beatrice Sparks a Mormon youth counselor and therapist has gone on to fabricate plenty more “diaries, and “journals” in her time. From Alice to Jay a boy who got lost in the occult, Annie a teen mother, Nancy dying of AIDs, and many more stories purporting to be the true stories of these children 's lives. There have been real life consequences from the writings of Jay’s Journal, which she used bits of a real patient 's journal to create. The family of the troubled boy have come out saying that their son was never influenced, or apart of the occult among the encounters of his actual journal.
For Annie Dillard there’s no area of knowledge without its accompanying urge of wonder; she has an appreciation of recognition and perfusion of the world, and as well a bonus for communicating disbelief. I believe she is very different to most people. When we look at the world around us we only see a portion of what is actually there, but on the other hand, she constantly absorbs every detail of the place and experience around her. But her unique skill lies in taking what she has seen, experienced and written about with fierce prose. In her book, :The Abundance,” Dillard writes about subjects in wide-range and diverse as solar eclipses, the family jokes, the bundle of energy that is the weasel, as well as essays on skin, and tsunamis.
Martha Ward’s book “Voodoo Queen: The Spirited Lives of Marie Laveau” aims to dissect the complicated identity of the 19th-century voodoo priestess and her daughter of the same name. This book is the first study of the powerful religious leaders in a way that dismantles the common narrative of voodoo equating evil. During her examination of the Laveau legacy, Ward skillfully presents primary and secondary sources, as well as oral testimonies (1935-1943) from the Federal Writers’ Project of the Works Progress Administration. With a combination of archives that has considerable depth and breadth, Ward is able to analyze one of the most dynamic heritages in American Voodoo.
“The Beast in the Cave”, a short story written by notorious horror author, H.P. Lovecraft, chills readers to the bone as they drink in the rich imagery created by Lovecraft’s twisted mind. As the audience is immersed into the narrator’s world, a dark, claustrophobic cave, they feel the same horror and panic as the main character. How are they going to get out of that cave? What is that mysterious sound coming closer to them? Are they going to die in there?
He was one to build on the idea of horror and expand the concept of it. Many of Poe’s works are still available today, and his poems are still some of the most famous around. Not only is Poe’s works some of the best anyone has ever seen, the message he leaves everyone with is astonishing. His tragic early life was the main cause of his affection for horror.
During that time, people held deep fears of the unknown, demonic, and supernatural. One particular aspect of the text that may strike us as surprising, strange, and even bizarre is the belief
“He had come like a thief in the night. And one by one dropped the revellers in the blood-bedewed halls of their revel, and died each in the despairing posture of his fall” (Poe). Edgar Allan Poe was an American author and poet during the 1800’s (anb). He is known for his gothic style of writing, and tragic tales. Poe has written famous pieces such as The Raven (1845), The Black Cat (1843), and The Tell Tale Heart(1843).
America is well known as the land of the free and the home opportunity. Although it is said everyone is equal in every way, that has not always been the case. Langston Hughes is a poet who tried to emphasize the idea of equality among all human beings. Hughes underlined the basis of the American Dream with what is and what should be in the societal era he lived in. In hindsight he believed his poems helped others realize the injustices that all minorities had to face during this era.
Hurston’s book explains the rituals and the beliefs in order to educate the public who are depicting voodoo in an inaccurate fashion. However, she also tries to stay on the academic side in her point of view, as to not become too tied up in the
Decadent in social and cultural dualisms, and existing amidst the struggle between idealized conduct and corrupted morals and lifestyles, this literature creates atmosphere necessary for the imaginative conception of the spirits and demons that haunt beyond the
Douglas’s use of “ritual magic,” gives the readers a glimpse of how furtive the excerpt
He looked like the face of death, from what many people called him, without a nose and scary, luminescent eyes that glowed in the dark. When he was young he ran away from home and joined the circus. During this time away in the circus he was able to learn his trade of being a version of Jean Eugene Robert - Houdin, the world’s best magician of the time, which helped him in always being in control at the Opera house later on. He learned the art of ventriloquy, which helped him trick his victims into thinking they were hearing voices in their heads. And he also loved the art of manipulation, which allowed him the geniusness of getting people to do what he wanted them too, otherwise he would use the art of murder to punish anyone who