The Sword and Laser discussion

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Lovecraft Country
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LC: The muddle in the middle
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I also agree that the ending was rushed and I don't know what the point of the story was. Spoilers for the end: (view spoiler)

My take was that the "Lovecraftian" elements were incidental to their lives. In the originals the smart white folk who encounter "old ones" tend to go mad. African Americans in the 50s go, hmmm, not so bad.
In the first encounter the horror is being locked in a mansion full of powerful white dudes. The horrors from beyond don't get a look-in.

So I think the book has two primary goals:
1) Give a broad illustration of the kinds of racist oppression African-Americans faced before the Civil Rights Era,
2) Broadly touch upon the different kinds of stories H.P. Lovecraft wrote, e.g. otherwordly travel, time travel, black magic cults, body horror, cursed house, etc.
The Braithwaite coven plot is the framing device of the book, and is right in the vein of HPL's cults and men who delve into forbidden knowledge (Herbert West, Richard Upton Pickman, etc.), but also a good metaphor for the systemic white supremacy keeping the African-Americans down. The other stories explore the other kinds of tales HPL wrote: evil houses, body transformation, extraterrestrial civilizations, and so on.
(We talk about the "Cthulhu Mythos", but that's mostly HPL letting other authors play in his sandbox--while he used certain concepts and ideas in multiple stories, I don't think he set out to link all of them together, except thematically: There are things beyond all human comprehension, whether sleeping gods or tentacled horrors or alien psychics, but they're all terrifying.)
The characters then, were created to examine different forms of oppression in the pre-Civil Rights era: a woman trying to buy property, a man trying to eat at a diner, a woman trying to get and keep a job, a child, etc.
Each character is paired with each type of HPL story. Then Ruff has to find a way to tie it all together at the end, but there are difficulties when Lovecraft never cared how or why Herbert West and shoggoths are in the same universe as Cthulhu and the Great Race of Yith. I agree the ending's a little pat and tidy, but much like the Safe Negro Travel Guide, Lovecraft Country is more concerned with your journey than your destination.


So I think the book has two primary ..."
Exactly this. Insert favorite applause gif here.
Each of the stories riffs on a classic Lovecraft story. The main difference being that Ruff ties them together directly.
Spoiler protected for courtesy, only modest spoilers within.
(view spoiler)[The first part ends with a bang and then...well, it's more like an anthology work after that. I read the back matter and Ruff says he wanted every character to have their "weird tale," Well okay, except that the other stories aren't as gripping. The haunted house was almost completely obvious. Extraterrestrial travel, interesting as a concept but not much in the execution.
The best parts story-wise were where the characters encountered the constant racism of the day. I say "story-wise" because those parts were gripping, but also awful in that they were pretty much completely true.
Various characters drifted on and off the stage, and Caleb is shown to be privileged not just in the traditional sense but in that he believes everyone exists to serve him. He's less of a jerk about race than others, but isn't any better of a person. I knew many like him in my days in Massachusetts, the children of the "Brahmans" - the Mayflower descendants - who made up the power structure of Boston and the surrounding areas. He rings true.
Then we get to the end of the novel and there is a rushed ending. Sure, it ties up the ends, but is more of an afterthought than a fully developed story.
It's still a great read, well recommended. Could have been better woven together though. (hide spoiler)]