Page:Weird Tales Volume 30 Number 02 (1937-08).djvu/127



Robert W. Lowndes, of Stamford, Connecticut, writes: "Being, in all likelihood, one of the last followers of H. P. Lovecraft's magnificent work in the fantasy field to enter into correspondence with him, it may seem somewhat strange for me to say that it is as though I had lost a beloved friend of many years' acquaintance. Yet this is the case, and those who knew him far better than I did can understand my feelings: there is consolation of a sort in the thought that if I, who knew him but through the media of two letters and a few of his tales, am grieved with the knowledge that there can be no more friendly, wise, generous, and inspiring letters from him, what must be the feelings of those who had been corresponding with him regularly over a period of years, or who knew him personally? As he himself wrote of Robert E. Howard, only a few short months ago, weird and fantastic fiction will be terribly impoverished by his passing; as E. Hoffmann Price wrote of Howard, the personal loss of H. P. Lovecraft to those who knew him, and those who corresponded with him, dwarfs all else into insignificance. How well recalled is the first Lovecraft tale I read (in my first issue of at that—October, 1931): The Strange High House in the Mist. Then, a gradual but steady increase in my little fund of tales and novelettes from his pen until he rose to undisputed supremacy in my affections. I often dreamed of meeting him some day; hoped to write to him I finally ventured a letter. What a moment it was for me when I saw a letter in return! His first paragraph assured me that I need have no hesitation in writing to him; then, after putting me at ease, he launched forth into discussion of the several points I had raised, in that friendly, acute, and understanding way which others know so much better than I do. He had the unique faculty of making a worshipper feel that what one wrote to him was as interesting as what he had to offer in reply. has printed the majority of Lovecraft's published works, I believe, but he is not well-known outside of the circle of readers and fantasy enthusiasts. Can we readers hope that eventually someone will collect all of his works and publish them in a single volume? What a treasure for the lovers of the weird

Agents Wanted TOWN Representatives—We Finance You. Men, wo¬ men, small towns. Full or spare time. Good income^ 25c brings sampie or write for free details. B. W.j Products, 20 Rosewood, Mattapan, Mass. MEXICAN CURIOS: Feather pictures, blankets, pot¬ tery. free particulars. Samples 10c stamps. APÀR- TADO 1176, MEXICO CITY. Authors9 Service MANUSCRIPTS WANTED. Books, Stories, Flays and Articles for placement in U. S. and foreign countries. Motion picture rights placed. Circular T-837 describ¬ ing UNIFIED SALES PLAN free on request. OTIS ADELBERT KLINE, Authors’ and Publishers’ Rep¬ resentative, 430 W. 34th St., New York City. Books and Periodicals THE MOON TERROR—A stupendous weird-scientific novel of Oriental intrigue to gain control of the world! Cloth-bound with handsome colored Jacket—50 cents postpaid. WEIRD TALES, 840 N. Michigan Ave.,, Chicago. FREE! Sample copy “Science and Mechanics.’* Arti¬ cles on photography, radio, auto mechanics, home¬ craft, stamps, patents, aviation, electricity, chemistry.) Next 5 issues, 25c. Address: 800 North Clark Street,, Dept. 100, Chicago. Business Opportunities “KEY to Business Opportunities” FREE. Write Goodall, 742 Market, San Francisco. Dreams Interpreted DREAMS EXPLAINED. Write yours complete one side of paper, enclosing 25 cents to: INTERPRETER OF DREAMS, P. O. Box 322, Flushing, New York. Indian Relics ENDIAN RELICS. Beadwcrk. Coins. Stamps. Mln* erals. Books. Old West Photos. Weapons. Curios.] Temple Mound Bird point 15c. Knife, ancient, Catalogue 5c. Indian Museum, Northbranch, Kansas.] Miscellaneous WHO IS THE MYSTERIOUS ‘TOO”! The solution to this baffling mystery is thrillingly told in one of 1 iie most startling stories ever written — THE MOON TERROR, in book form. Price 50c. WEIRD TALES, 840 North Michigan, Chicago, Illinois. POCKET GOODS—Adults write for descriptive circu¬ lars. Frank Shilling, 1017-T Dueber, Canton, Ohio. A Ghostly Voice from the Ether! It was as if some phantom were whispering through the ether in the language of another planet. Read	r "THE MOON TERROR" (in hook form) PRICE—50c WEIRD TALES 18 THE ORIGINAL AND LEADING WEIRD STORY MAGAZINE Subscribe to Weird Tales