What I Learned Researching and Writng The Web Page

Writing the web page on H.P. Lovecraft was an extremely enlightening and exhilirating experience.  It really helped me to understand how much more an individual can glean from a work if they have an adequate knowledge of who wrote the work.  Through my research, I found consistent themes evident in Lovecraft's work, such as the belief that we are all inherently evil and his use of oneiric objectivism, the belief that the dream world can be more real than the conscious world.  Armed with this knowledge, I understood more fully Lovecraft's writings, writings which are deemed difficult to understand and interpret by many people.  For example, it is easier to see the Edward Derby's struggle to avoid possession by an evil spirit in The Thing on the Doorstep as mankind's struggle against his inherent evil nature when one understands this is a common thread running through the whole of Lovecraft's works.  One more fully understands the narrator's conversations with his dead uncle and grandfather in The Silver Key and its relevance to the resolution of the story when one has a firm understanding of how Lovecraft uses the theme of oneiric objectivism.  As most authors write from their own experiences, having an understanding of their life helps considerably in interpreting their works.  Reflections of Lovecraft's life can be seen in The Thing on the Doorstep as Edward Derby had a keen interest in Edgar Allan Poe, wrote poetry, and procured an interest in the supernatural.  Thus, putting together this fascinating web page on Lovecraft has allowed me to realize the importance of understanding the author so that I might understand his work.
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