by S.T. Joshi
This brief biography first appeared in the H.P. Lovecraft
Centennial Guidebook and appears here with S.T. Joshi’s
permission.
HOWARD
PHILLIPS LOVECRAFT was born at 9 a.m. on August 20, 1890,
at his family home at 454 (then numbered 194) Angell Street in Providence,
Rhode Island. His mother was Sarah Susan Phillips Lovecraft, who could trace
her ancestry to the arrival of George Phillips to Massachusetts in 1630. His
father was Winfield Scott Lovecraft, a traveling salesman for Gorham & Co.,
Silversmiths, of Providence. When Lovecraft was three his father suffered a
nervous breakdown in a hotel room in Chicago and was brought back to Butler
Hospital, where he remained for five years before dying on July 19, 1898.
Lovecraft was apparently informed that his father was paralyzed and comatose
during this period, but the surviving evidence suggests that this was not the
case; it is nearly certain that Lovecraft’s father died of paresis, a form
of neurosyphilis.
With the death of Lovecraft’s father,
the upbringing of the boy fell to his mother, his two aunts, and
especially his grandfather, the prominent industrialist Whipple Van Buren
Phillips. Lovecraft was a precocious youth: he was reciting poetry at age
two, reading at age three, and writing at age six or seven. His earliest
enthusiasm was for the Arabian Nights, which he read by the age of
five; it was at this time that he adapted the pseudonym of “Abdul
Alhazred,” who later became the author of the mythical
Necronomicon. The next year, however, his Arabian interests were
eclipsed by the discovery of Greek mythology, gleaned through
Bulfinch’s Age of Fable and through children’s versions
of the Iliad and Odyssey. Indeed his earliest surviving
literary work, “The Poem of Ulysses” (1897), is a paraphrase of
the Odyssey in 88 lines of internally rhyming verse. But Lovecraft
had by this time already discovered weird fiction, and his first story,
the non-extant “The Noble Eavesdropper,” may date to as early as
1896. His interest in the weird was fostered by his grandfather, who
entertained Lovecraft with off-the-cuff weird tales in the Gothic
mode.
As a boy Lovecraft was somewhat lonely and
suffered from frequent illnesses, many of them apparently psychological.
His attendance at the Slater Avenue School was sporadic, but Lovecraft was
soaking up much information through independent reading. At about the age
of eight he discovered science, first chemistry, then astronomy. He began
to produce hectographed journals, The Scientific Gazette
(1899-1907) and The Rhode Island Journal of Astronomy (1903-07),
for distribution amongst his friends. When he entered Hope Street High
School, he found both his teachers and peers congenial and encouraging,
and he developed a number of long-lasting friendships with boys of his
age. Lovecraft’s first appearance in print occurred in 1906, when he
wrote a letter on an astronomical matter to The Providence Sunday
Journal. Shortly thereafter he began writing a monthly astronomy
column for The Pawtuxet Valley Gleaner, a rural paper; he later
wrote columns for The Providence Tribune (1906-08) and The
Providence Evening News (1914-18), as well as The Asheville (N.C.)
Gazette-News (1915).
In 1904 the death of Lovecraft’s
grandfather, and the subsequent mismanagement of his property and affairs,
plunged Lovecraft’s family into severe financial difficulties.
Lovecraft and his mother were forced to move out of their lavish Victorian
home into cramped quarters at 598 Angell Street. Lovecraft was devastated
by the loss of his birthplace, and apparently contemplated suicide, as he
took long bicycle rides and looked wistfully at the watery depths of the
Barrington River. But the thrill of learning banished those thoughts. In
1908, however, just prior to his graduation from high school, he suffered
a nervous breakdown that compelled him to leave school without a diploma;
this fact, and his consequent failure to enter Brown University, were
sources of great shame to Lovecraft in later years, in spite of the fact
that he was one of the most formidable autodidacts of his time. From 1908
to 1913 Lovecraft was a virtual hermit, doing little save pursuing his
astronomical interests and his poetry writing. During this whole period
Lovecraft was thrown into an unhealthily close relationship with his
mother, who was still suffering from the trauma of her husband’s
illness and death, and who developed a pathological love-hate relationship
with her son.
Lovecraft emerged from his hermitry in a
very peculiar way. Having taken to reading the early “pulp”
magazines of the day, he became so incensed at the insipid love stories of
one Fred Jackson in The Argosy that he wrote a letter, in verse,
attacking Jackson. This letter was published in 1913, and evoked a storm
of protest from Jackson’s defenders. Lovecraft engaged in a heated
debate in the letter column of The Argosy and its associated
magazines, Lovecraft’s responses being almost always in rollicking
heroic couplets reminiscent of Dryden and Pope. This controversy was noted
by Edward F. Daas, President of the United Amateur Press Association
(UAPA), a group of amateur writers from around the country who wrote and
published their own magazines. Daas invited Lovecraft to join the UAPA,
and Lovecraft did so in early 1914. Lovecraft published thirteen issues of
his own paper, The Conservative (1915-23), as well as contributing
poetry and essays voluminously to other journals. Later Lovecraft became
President and Official Editor of the UAPA, and also served briefly as
President of the rival National Amateur Press Association (NAPA). This
entire experience may well have saved Lovecraft from a life of
unproductive reclusiveness; as he himself once said: “In 1914, when
the kindly hand of amateurdom was first extended to me, I was as close to
the state of vegetation as any animal well can be...With the advent of the
United I obtained a renewal to live; a renewed sense of existence as other
than a superfluous weight; and found a sphere in which I could feel that
my efforts were not wholly futile. For the first time I could imagine that
my clumsy gropings after art were a little more than faint cries lost in
the unlistening world.”
It was in the amateur world that Lovecraft
recommenced the writing of fiction, which he had abandoned in 1908. W.
Paul Cook and others, noting the promise shown in such early tales as
“The Beast in the Cave” (1905) and “The Alchemist”
(1908), urged Lovecraft to pick up his fictional pen again. This
Lovecraft did, writing “The Tomb” and “Dagon” in quick
succession in the summer of 1917. Thereafter Lovecraft kept up a steady if
sparse flow of fiction, although until at least 1922 poetry and essays
were still his dominant mode of literary expression. Lovecraft also
became involved in an ever-increasing network of correspondence with
friends and associates, and he eventually became one of the greatest and
most prolific letter-writers of the century.
Lovecraft’s mother, her mental and
physical condition deteriorating, suffered a nervous breakdown in 1919 and
was admitted to Butler Hospital, whence, like her husband, she would never
emerge. Her death on May 24, 1921, however was the result of a bungled
gall bladder operation. Lovecraft was shattered by the loss of his
mother, but in a few weeks had recovered enough to attend an amateur
journalism convention in Boston on July 4, 1921. It was on this occasion
that he first met the woman who would become his wife. Sonia Haft Greene
was a Russian Jew seven years Lovecraft’s senior, but the two seemed,
at least initially, to find themselves very congenial. Lovecraft visited
Sonia in her Brooklyn apartment in 1922, and the news of their marriage on
March 3, 1924, was not entirely a surprise to their friends; but it may
have been to Lovecraft’s two aunts, Lillian D. Clark and Annie E.
Phillips Gamwell, who were notified only by letter after the ceremony had
taken place. Lovecraft moved into Sonia’s apartment in Brooklyn, and
initial prospects for the couple seemed good: Lovecraft had gained a
foothold as a professional writer by the acceptance of several of his
early stories by Weird Tales, the celebrated pulp magazine founded
in 1923; Sonia had a successful hat shop on Fifth Avenue in New York.
But troubles descended upon the couple
almost immediately: the hat shop went bankrupt, Lovecraft turned down the
chance to edit a companion magazine to Weird Tales (which would
have necessitated his move to Chicago), and Sonia’s health gave way,
forcing her to spend time in a New Jersey sanitarium. Lovecraft attempted
to secure work, but few were willing to hire a thirty-four-year-old-man
with no job experience. On January 1, 1925, Sonia went to Cleveland to
take up a job there, and Lovecraft moved into a single apartment near the
seedy Brooklyn area called Red Hook.
Although Lovecraft had many friends in New
York—Frank Belknap Long, Rheinhart Kleiner, Samuel Loveman—he
became increasingly depressed by his isolation and the masses of
“foreigners” in the city. His fiction turned from the nostalgic
(“The Shunned House” (1924) is set in Providence) to the bleak
and misanthropic (“The Horror at Red Hook” and “He”
(both 1924) lay bare his feelings for New York). Finally, in early 1926,
plans were made for Lovecraft to return to the Providence he missed so
keenly. But where did Sonia fit into these plans? No one seemed to know,
least of all Lovecraft. Although he continued to profess his affection
for her, he acquiesced when his aunts barred her from coming to Providence
to start a business; their nephew could not be tainted by the stigma of a
tradeswoman wife. The marriage was essentially over, and a divorce in
1929 was inevitable.
When Lovecraft returned to Providence on
April 17, 1926, settling at 10 Barnes Street north of Brown University, it
was not to bury himself away as he had done in the 1908-13 period; rather,
the last ten years of his life were the time of his greatest flowering,
both as a writer and as a human being. His life was relatively
uneventful—he traveled widely to various antiquarian sites around the eastern
seaboard (Quebec, New England, Philadelphia, Charleston, St. Augustine);
he wrote his greatest fiction, from “The Call of Cthulhu” (1926)
to At the Mountains of Madness (1931) to “The Shadow out of
Time” (1934-35); and he continued his prodigiously vast
correspondence—but Lovecraft had found his niche as a New England
writer of weird fiction and as a general man of letters. He nurtured the
careers of many young writers (August Derleth, Donald Wandrei, Robert
Bloch, Fritz Leiber); he became concerned with political and economic
issues, as the Great Depression led him to support Roosevelt and become a
moderate socialist; and he continued absorbing knowledge on a wide array
of subjects, from philosophy to literature to history to architecture.
The last two or three years of his life,
however, were filled with hardship. In 1932 his beloved aunt, Mrs. Clark,
died, and he moved into quarters at 66 College Street, right behind the
John Hay Library, with his other aunt Mrs. Gamwell in 1933. (This house
has now been moved to 65 Prospect Street.) His later stories,
increasingly lengthy and complex, became difficult to sell, and he was
forced to support himself largely through the “revision” or
ghost-writing of stories, poetry, and nonfictions works. In 1936 the
suicide of Robert E. Howard, one of his closest correspondents, left him
confused and saddened. By this time the illness that would cause his own
death—cancer of the intestine—had already progressed so far
that little could be done to treat it. Lovecraft attempted to carry on in
increasing pain through the winter of 1936-37, but was finally compelled
to enter Jane Brown Memorial Hospital on March 10, 1937, where he died
five days later. He was buried on March 18 at the Phillips family plot at
Swan Point Cemetery.
It is likely that, as he saw death
approaching, Lovecraft envisioned the ultimate oblivion of his work: he
had never had a true book published in his lifetime (aside, perhaps, from
the crudely issued The Shadow over Innsmouth [1936]), and his
stories, essays, and poems were scattered in a bewildering number of
amateur or pulp magazines. But the friendships that he had forged merely
by correspondence held him in good stead: August Derleth and Donald
Wandrei were determined to preserve Lovecraft’s stories in the
dignity of a hardcover book, and formed the publishing firm of Arkham
House initially to publish Lovecraft’s work; they issued The
Outsider and Others in 1939. Many other volumes followed from Arkham
House, and eventually Lovecraft’s work became available in paperback
and was translated into a dozen languages. Today, at the centennial of
his birth, his stories are available in textually corrected editions, his
essays, poems, and letters are widely available, and many scholars have
probed the depths and complexities of his work and thought. Much remains
to be done in the study of Lovecraft, but it is safe to say that, thanks
to the intrinsic merit of his own work and to the diligence of his
associates and supporters, Lovecraft has gained a small but unassailable
niche in the canon of American and world literature.

Other H.P. Lovecraft Biographies on the Web
- The Gentleman
from Providence
- By Alan Gullette, Selected Authors of Supernatural Horror.
- H.P.
Lovecraft
- By S.T. Joshi, The
Scriptorium. This longer biography by Mr. Joshi was originally written for An Epicure in the Terrible: A Centennial Anthology of Essays
in Honor of H.P. Lovecraft (1991) and has been updated by Mr. Joshi.
- H.P. Lovecraft: A Brief Biography
- By J. Edward Tremlett, Ex Libris
Nocturnis.
- H.P. Lovecraft: A Short Bio
- At Miskatonic
University.
- H.P. Lovecraft, 1890-1937
- By Robert Wayne Bean, University of North
Carolina at Pembroke.
- Lovecraft,
H.P. (Howard Phillips)
- At Biography.com.
- 20th
Century Gothic
- By James Russell, Letters
from Outside.
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