
H. P. Lovecraft
H. P. Lovecraft — an author or editor in the Lovecraft circle or expanded mythos; read dates before citing canon. Register ME-1919-U29/3959.
Overview
Miskatonic seal ME-1919-U29/3959 binds this packet; duplicate citations must use slug `lovecraft`.
H. P. Lovecraft enters the archive under protest from reason and with sponsorship from repeated evidence.
Providence author whose mythos anchors the archive's primary canon.
Period attestation: lovecraft-1930s.
The Library holds primary text; this dossier holds orientation — never the reverse.
Description
Wrote from 1917 to 1937; corresponded with the Weird Tales circle.
Sensory reports conflict in detail — scale, colour, limb count — yet agree that the phenomenon offends proportion.
Olfactory notes in depositions: salt, copper, wet stone, and organic sweetness like fruit fermenting in a closed room.
Historical Record
Died before seeing mass paperback spread of his inventions.
Post-1937 pastiche and game supplements multiplied references; the archive tags those layers expanded mythos unless a primary citation is supplied.
Cross-links at dossier foot should be treated as hypotheses, not as family trees carved in stone.
Field Observations
Do not engage alone; do not accept hospitality from hosts who show windows to other eras.
Submit Form Theta-9 if conversation turns to cities remembered only in sleep.
If the name appears in dreams three nights running, withdraw from the case and request audit.
Archive Notes
Cite archive slug `lovecraft` in all cross-references. If the name appears in dreams three nights running, withdraw from the case and request audit.
Citation: Miskatonic Expedition Archive. Record ARC-000. Access subject to institutional review.
Related Records
Cross-References

ARC-000
activeProvidence
Providence — a mythos location; coordinates disputed, testimony consistent in mood. Register ME-1920-B73/6533.

ARC-000
activeWeird Tales
Weird Tales — a recurring phenomenon; understanding does not restore sanity. Register ME-1920-L87/3187.
TOM-001
fragmentaryNecronomicon
Al Azif, Book of Dead Names
The most infamous grimoire of the mythos, an Arabic manuscript of rituals, histories, and formulae that erode the sanity of readers and have never been wholly suppressed, only scattered.

CON-001
activeCosmic Horror
Philosophical Classification
Horror arising not from personal evil but from the insignificance of humanity before an indifferent, incomprehensible cosmos - the aesthetic that governs every file in this archive.
