
Lovecraft's 'Haunter of the Dark' Interior Art, Weird Tales Dec 1936
Unlike the bold cover paintings typical of Weird Tales in this period, this is a moody interior black-and-white illustration accompanying H.P. Lovecraft's final solo tale. A skeletal figure looms in the shadowy ruins of a decayed church interior, evoking cosmic dread through stark contrasts and heavy crosshatching. The scene captures Blake's fateful visit to the deserted Federal Hill edifice, rendered in the scratchy, atmospheric pen-and-ink style favored by Weird Tales interior artists of the mid-1930s.
The skeletal figure amid crumbling church ruins delivers a genuine chill, well-suited to Lovecraft's cosmic horror. It's atmospheric rather than lurid — compelling enough to draw in a reader flipping through the magazine, though it lacks the explosive spectacle of a cover piece.
“The Haunter of the Dark By H. P. LOVECRAFT 'A powerful story about an old church in Providence, Rhode Island, that was shunned and feared by all who knew it' (Dedicated to Robert Bloch) I have seen the dark universe yawning Where the black planets roll without aim— Where they roll in their horror unheeded, Without knowledge or luster or name. —Nemesis. "He had come to the deserted edifice in quest of a newspaper sensation." 538 539”





