tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6515727505809779817.post1407110870538247994..comments2024-01-22T06:48:48.663-08:00Comments on A View from Sesqua Valley: Devil Babies of ye World Unitew. h. pugmire, esq.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06058736777591351323noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6515727505809779817.post-54359715797301489622014-01-17T00:11:47.701-08:002014-01-17T00:11:47.701-08:00...I am looking forward to seeing the new novella!......I am looking forward to seeing the new novella! I love the fact it will be a collaboration - it always intrigues me to wonder wgicg parts were penned by which author - much as I enjoy the puzzles of Lovecraft's own collaborations. Glad you are writing again! G.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6515727505809779817.post-79752865349155691122014-01-17T00:00:26.941-08:002014-01-17T00:00:26.941-08:00Enoch Soames was a character in "Seven Men&qu...Enoch Soames was a character in "Seven Men" by Max Beerbohm - a decadent absinthe-drinking writer, son of a Preston publisher, who at the Cafe Royal in 1897 sold his soul to the devil for a chance to return 100 years later to the British Museum round reading room to see whether his works were stilll remembered. According to his Wikipedia entry, "at 2:10 PM, on 3 June 1997, a person meeting Soames description mysteriously appeared, and began searching through the catalogues and various biographical dictionaries. A few dozen minutes later, he slipped out of sight of the watching crowd, and disappeared among the stacks." Ah, vanity! Enoch Coffin rocks as a name, though! G.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com