Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Lovecraft, H. P. - Ben P. Indick (essay date 1987)
Lovecraft, H. P. - Ben P. Indick (essay date 1987)
Ben P. Indick (essay date 1987)
SOURCE: Indick, Ben P. “Lovecraft's Ladies.” In Discovering H. P. Lovecraft, edited by Darrell Schweitzer, pp. 80–84. San Bernardino, CA: The Borgo Press, 1987.
[In the following essay, Indick refutes the common assumption that Lovecraft's stories are not concerned with female characters.]
One of the commonplace stereotypes about H. P. Lovecraft is that he had very little interest in women. His marriage itself, to Sonia Greene, is dismissed as some sort of aberration. L. Sprague de Camp, in his biography, remarks on “a lack of women in his stories.”1 Indeed, Lovecraft himself writes: “There is no such thing as ‘love’ in any unified, permanent, or important sense.”2 In a letter to Frank Belknap Long, he states: “(women) are by Nature literal, prosaic and commonplace, given to dull realistick Details and practical Things, and incapable of vigorous artistick Creation...
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Criticism
- T. O. Mabbott (review date 1940)
- Punch (review date 1951)
- Peter Penzoldt (essay date 1952)
- Winfred S. Emmons, Jr. (essay date 1960)
- Darrell Schweitzer (essay date 1978)
- Donald R. Burleson (essay date 1981)
- S. T. Joshi (essay date 1982)
- Donald R. Burleson (essay date 1983)
- Michael Feingold (review date 1985)
- Arthur Jean Cox (essay date 1987)
- Ben P. Indick (essay date 1987)
- Dirk W. Mosig (essay date 1987)
- Robert Weinberg (essay date 1987)
- Donald Burleson (essay date 1991)
- Stefan Dziemianowicz (essay date 1991)
- Douglas E. Winter (review date 1997)
- Darrell Schweitzer (essay date 2001)
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