By S.T. Joshi
Dust Jacket Text
H.P. Lovecraft has come to be recognised as the leading author of supernatural fiction in the
twentieth century. But how did a man who died in poverty, with no book of his stories published in
his lifetime, become such an icon in horror literature? S.T. Joshi, the leading authority on
Lovecraft, has traced in detail the course of Lovecrafts life, spent largely in Providence,
Rhode Island, and has shown how Lovecraft was engaged in the political, economic, social, and
intellectual currents of his time, and how his developing thought informed his fiction and other
writings. Lovecrafts reaction to World War I, the Jazz Age, and the Depression, as well as to
literary modernism and scientific advance, markedly affected his thought and work, so that by the
end of his life he had become both a mechanistic materialist and a cosmic
regionalist who looked to his New England heritage as a bulwark against the meaningless of a
godless cosmos that Lovecraft depicted, with poetic grandeur, in his work.
S.T. Joshi is a freelance writer and editor living in New York. He is the author of The Weird
Tale (1990), Ramsey Campbell and Modern Horror Fiction (Liverpool University Press,
2001), and many other volumes.
Bibliographic Information
A Dreamer and a Visionary: H.P. Lovecraft in his Time. By S.T. Joshi. Liverpool, UK:
Liverpool University; 2001; ISBN 0-85323-936-3 (hardcover), 0-85323-946-0 (paperback).
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