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1%% The correct spelling of Moore's version of the Whateley family is the "Wheatleys".
2
3[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/providenceact1_hc.jpg]]
4 [[caption-width-right:350: Robert Black and Company]]
5
6-> ''"There is a concealed country, therefore, hidden below the society we show the world. Uncomfortable truth, it lurks behind our pretences. This truth, it is a land sunken beneath many fathoms."''
7-->-- '''Dr. Alvarez'''
8
9''Providence'' is a 2015 12-Issue series by Creator/AlanMoore and Jacen Burrows. It is published by Creator/AvatarPress.
10
11Reporter and aspiring novelist Robert Black works for the New York ''Herald Tribune''. One day in June 1919, he is asked to write a fluff piece for the newspaper, and uses it as a chance to meet Dr. Alvarez, whose literary criticism had impressed him. This meeting, coupled with personal tragedy, sends Black on a quest of introspection and self-journey. He decides that he will write that novel he wanted to write and quits his job to follow some leads investigating the Order of the Stella Sapiente and the mysterious Booke of the Wisdom of the Stars. The quest takes him to the heart of New England and brings him into contact with a gallery of interesting and sinister figures. Robert slowly spirals into the heart of a bigger mystery than anything he ever imagined, and the scope of the mystery slowly takes a hold on his sanity.
12
13While the book is a {{Sequel}} and {{Prequel}} to ''ComicBook/{{Neonomicon}}'' and ''The Courtyard'' respectively (both were collaborations with Jacen Burrows), ''Providence'' is vastly more ambitious in its scope and intent. It is simultaneously a {{Homage}} to Creator/HPLovecraft, a SidelongGlanceBiopic of the writer himself, as well as a {{Deconstruction}} and a {{Reconstruction}} of LovecraftCountry. Moore has stated that ''Providence'' is his most heavily researched work since ''ComicBook/FromHell'' and that ''Providence'' is going to become "my ultimate Lovecraft story".
14
15----
16! Tropes in ''Providence''.
17* AdaptationalAttractiveness: While Leticia Wheatley appears to be suffering from both albinism and Down's syndrome, she's still a youthful-looking woman with soft features who's a far cry from the "hideously deformed" Lavinia Whately of ''Literature/TheDunwichHorror''.
18** [[Literature/HerbertWestReanimator Buck Robinson]], unsurprisingly, looks neither loathsome, nor [[ValuesDissonance gorilla-like]] during his brief cameo in issue 11.
19* AdaptationalSexuality: Many characters based on ones from Lovecraft's works are depicted as gay, although since most of them never had any kind of romantic relationships in the original stories, this is probably moot. Robert himself almost certainly counts, as he's indirectly based on Creator/RobertBloch. And then, there's the landlady from ''Cool Air'' being a necrophiliac.
20* AdaptationalVillainy: [[spoiler:The original Pickman in Lovecraft's story, while an arrogant and generally unpleasant person, merely photographed ghouls and painted them. Ronald Pitman on the other hand, while more mild-mannered and pleasant than his short story counterpart, is a SerialKiller who willingly gives the ghouls victims to feast upon]].
21* AffablyEvil:
22** Almost all the supposedly evil and unsavory characters from Lovecraft's stories that Robert Black crosses paths with are nothing but polite, friendly, and helpful with his book project. Even Hector North is a charming flirt, despite apparently intending to kill him. The exceptions are Willard Wheatley, who is rude and begrudging, and Edgar Wade, who is such a colossal jerk that he's disliked even by Garland Wheatley and Tobit Boggs.
23** Even the ghouls are charming and kind in their own macabre way, despite eating people. King George compliments Robert's red hair, pities him for falling foul of the Wades, and is sad that Robert isn't happy. So he tries to cheer him up by telling him that even unhappy people are enjoyed once they are dead, when the ghouls eat their bodies.
24* AlienSky: In issue #12, the sky seems filled with some strange nebulae. It's not. It's ''Azathoth''.
25* AlternateUniverse: Although the books are heavily researched and intended to take place in LikeRealityUnlessNoted early 20th Century New York, the series as a whole features much like ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' a world where fictitious events occur. The "[[Literature/TheKingInYellow suicide booths]]" prophesied by Creator/RobertWChambers are regarded and treated as a reality.
26* AmbiguouslyGay: Robert Black is still in the closet in an era where that was the norm. Whenever he meets another man he suspects to be gay, they have to use contemporary slang and oblique references to suss out the other's preference, such as the wearing of a green tie. Though the minute he sees Tom Malone, he comes close to giving himself away.
27** Dr North heavily implies his sexuality when flirting with Black, recognising him as a man "familiar with Greenwich".
28** Averted with Howard Charles, as he and Robert quickly flirt and then have a tryst.
29** Shadrach Annesley very clearly has a sensual interest in other men, but it's unclear how much of that is sexual and how much is simply due to being [[ImAHumanitarian a cannibal]] (of course, looking at RealLife cannibals such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Armin Meiwes suggests a significant amount of overlap between the two).
30* AmbiguouslyJewish: Robert Black is the descendant of Jewish immigrants but has attempted to pass himself off as WASP to better fit in.
31* AnachronicOrder: Issue 11, starts out telling the story of Robert Black's return from New England to New York but the plot has a lot of flash-forwards and TimeSkip showing future events.
32* AntiquatedLinguistics: Lovecraft himself talks with excessively antiquated terms, even for 1919, making him as hard to understand as Willard. Japheth Colwen does the same, indicating that [[spoiler: he has possessed Charles Howard]].
33* {{Applicability}}: [[invoked]] InUniverse. After seeing Pitman's paintings, Robert Black puts on his amateur art critic hat and theorizes ghouls/zombies and other beings as metaphors for middle-class fears of class uprising. Pitman notes that he's never seen things that way but SureLetsGoWithThat.
34* ArcSymbol: Bridges, which always appear at crucial moments. Robert's lover throws their love letters from a bridge before going to commit suicide; Robert crosses bridges many times in his journey, including the one leading to Anselm College where he meets Elspeth Wade. The shortest bridge he crosses is [[spoiler:the one leading to the exit garden, where he commits suicide. And ultimately, Agent Brears gives birth to Cthulu himself on a bridge]]. It's likely that the bridges represent both Robert and Lovecraft's nature, bridging Earth's reality to that of the Elder Gods.
35* ArcWelding: The Stella Sapiente and its offshoots are the most obvious examples of tying together all of Lovecraft's stories (more so than they all ready were), but then there are more exact instances of this trope, like how [[spoiler:the Shining Trapezohedron from "The Haunter of the Dark" doubles as the meteor that caused the events of "Literature/TheColourOutOfSpace"]].
36* ArmorPiercingQuestion: Alvarez asks one to Robert Black and then gives a speech about the truth buried underneath America:
37--> '''Dr. Alvarez''': There is a concealed country, therefor, hidden below the society we show the world. Uncomfortable truth, it lurks behind our pretences. This truth, it is a land sunken beneath many fathoms. Were it one day to rise and confront us all, what would you do, Mr. Black? What would any of us do?
38* ArtShift: Pitman's photographs are actual photographs scanned, altered and placed into the comicbook. This effectively mimics the shocking reveal of the photograph from the original "Pickman's Model".
39* TheBeard: Jonathan Russell is referred by Robert Black as "Lily" in his journal entries because he's deeply in the closet. In his fever dream, Robert free-associates Prissy Turner with the altered Jonathan / Lily and treats her as his beard.
40* BeneathTheMask: While he's unfalteringly polite and proper in real life, Robert is a great deal more critical of the people around him, especially women, in his journals. He's also rather boy-crazy, something even he acknowledges may not be appropriate while he's still mourning his recently dead lover.
41* BigBeautifulWoman: Tobit's wife, Negathlia-Lou is rather plump and also drawn far more attractively than the other Deep Ones, with perfectly smooth, pale skin and long red hair, her unusually wide-set eyes being the only clues to her true origin.
42** Leticia Wheatley, like many people with Downs' Syndrome, is quite pudgy. She's also a platinum-haired beauty with a soft, girlish face.
43* BiographyAClef: ''Providence'' is essentially a biography of the cultural and political context that underpinned Creator/HPLovecraft's fiction. The way it achieves this is by having Lovecraft's creations (The Old Ones, Nyarlathothep, the Church of Starry Wisdom) more or less guide its author towards creating them, with his entire life (recreated quite accurately in the comic) secretly being manipulated and ordered to this end.
44* BittersweetEnding: Zigzagged like crazy. [[spoiler:The Elder Gods return and their presence reshapes reality into a nightmare world, yet people are oddly serene about it as they let go of the notion that mankind controls its own destiny. Brears and S.T. Joshi note that this is still horrifying because it shows their own thoughts are being reshaped by the new reality. Still, both are more curious about the changes than frightened, and resolve to "learn to dwell among wonder and glory forever." Meanwhile, Robert's Commonplace Book can't be used to stop the apocalypse, but the pages are dispersed and may find their way to other realities to prevent it from happening again]].
45* BizarroApocalypse: [[spoiler: As noted above, The Elder Gods of Creator/HPLovecraft come to Earth in the last two issues, resulting in a slow and steady breakdown of reality itself. Nightmarish creatures stalk the streets, the landscape changes into impossible configurations, and humanity adjusts to this new world with a resigned weariness, knowing that their previous life was a dream and this new nightmare is now the everyday.]]
46* BodySurf: One of the four methods of immortality as outlined in Hali's Book. It is also the choice taken by [[spoiler:Edgar Wade who is currently occupying his daughter Elspeth Wade's body and who is actually the 15th Century Huguenot Etienne Roulet who has been doing GrandTheftMe across the centuries]]. He can do this at will, and demonstrates this to [[spoiler:Robert Black when he hijacks his body, and puts him in little Elspeth's body and essentially uses Robert Black's own body to rape him]].
47* BreatherEpisode: Subverted in issue 8. Robert at first has a pleasant time, spending weeks with Carter and his only supernatural episode lacking danger in the most part. But then he meets Lovecraft by chance and the reader realises that the end of the world has begun.
48** Issue 9 is lighter as well, serving as a calmer (although still eerie) beginning to the final act of the story. Robert mentions that it's his most pleasant part of the journey so far: having pleasant conversation, touring Providence, and even getting laid.
49* BrokenPedestal: [[spoiler:Robert Black's friendship and camarderie with Lovecraft cools down sharply when the latter voices homophobic and anti-semitic statements]].
50* ButNotTooGay: In the Commonplace Book, Robert notes that he would ideally like to talk about the secret world of America's gay life but coat it in a metaphor that would be broad enough to get the same idea across. This is why he is drawn towards the occult and the Stella Sapiente since he finds a parallel to his own situation in the survival and maintenance of an occult tradition in [=WASP=]-America.
51* TheCameo: Johnny Carcosa's mother appears in issues 2 and 9, suggesting Nyarlathotep is interested in Robert's journey.
52* CanonWelding: Much like ''League of Extraordinary Gentlemen'', Moore is using Lovecraft's fiction to merge different stories and events into a single coherent verse. This includes ''Cool Air, The Horror at Red Hook, The Shadow over Innsmouth, The Dunwich Horror, The Color Out of Space, The Dreams at the Witch-House, The Thing on the Doorstep, Pickman's Model, The Haunter of the Dark, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward'' and the Randolph Carter stories.
53* CaptainErsatz: Most Lovecraft characters, as well as locations such as Arkham, are renamed. The exceptions so far are Robert Suydam and Thomas Malone from ''The Horror at Red Hook''. Moore is not dealing with copyright issues, as Lovecraft has lapsed into public domain (as shown by Cthulhu commonly appearing in horror work). Instead it appears that Moore is suggesting that in-universe Lovecraft took the characters and locations depicted and wrote about them in his stories, merely changing their names. However Moore could not do this with Suydam and Malone as they were already named in ''Neonomicon'', so he used their original Lovecraftian names.
54** Doctor Muñoz from ''Cool Air'' is Dr. Alvarez, Obed Marsh from Innsmouth is Jack Boggs and the Marsh Refinery is likewise renamed as the Boggs Refinery. The Whatelys from "The Dunwich Horror" are now the Wheatleys. Dr. Herbert West becomes Dr. Hector North, Asenath and Ephraim Waite become Elspeth and Edgar Wade, Keziah Mason becomes Hekeziah Massey, Richard Upton Pickman is Ronald Underwood Pitman and Randolph Carter is now Randall Carver. The Church of Starry Wisdom becomes the Order of Stella Sapiente.
55** In the case of locations, Moore simply transplants the fictional locations used in Lovecraft's prose to the real-life equivalents cited by Lovecraft himself as his inspiration for the renamed landscapes in his works (with letters citing the inspiration printed on the back cover of each issue). Innsmouth is Salem, Arkham is Manchester, Dunwich is Athol. Miskatonic University is now the real-life [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Anselm_College Saint Anselm's College]] whose exterior facade is accurately reproduced in the book, and the Church of the Starry Wisdom is the demolished St John's Church of Providence. This become a plot point [[spoiler:in the final issue, where the characters enter "Lovecraft Country" Lovecraft's fictional rendition of these events]].
56** Issue 9 makes clear that Robert Black is actually an expy for Robert Harrison Blake, who is also a writer who moves into 66 College Street and becomes researches the Church of Starry Wisdom, [[spoiler:Issue 10 has him meeting a similar fate as Blake]]. Interestingly Lovecraft in real life based Blake upon a friend of his, horror writer Robert Bloch.
57* CastFullOfGay: About half the male characters who appear in the story act as potential love interests for Robert.
58* CityOfAdventure: Manchester, the ''Providence'' analogue for Arkham in a very horror-styled take. It is the location of Saint Anselm's College (Miskatonic University) which has Hali's Booke of Wisdom (aka the Necromonicon), it has Hezekiah Massey and her Witch-House, Hector North Reanimator is faculty there, and the meteor from ''The Color Out of Space'' fell in the same location, and of course Elspeth Wade lives there.
59* CreepyChild: Lovecraft readers will recognise that Elspeth as standing in for Asenath Waite from "The Thing on the Doorstep", and so is apparently possessed by [[spoiler: Etienne Roulet, one of the founders of Stella Sapiente]].
60** Willard Wheatley looks like a fully grown ugly man despite being 6.
61* CompositeCharacter: Edgar Wade, Ephraim Waite's counterpart, is made a previous vessel of Etienne Roulet, a 15th century French occultist mentioned in ''The Shunned House''. The Shining Trapezohedron from ''Haunter of The Dark'' is really the meteor from ''Colour Out Of Space'', and probably also an avatar of Nyarlathotep.
62* CoolShades: Henry Anneseley wears purple lensed spectacles that is especially groovy for 1919! Unknown to Robert, [[spoiler:they provide Henry a glimpse into an interdimensional realm filled with eldritch abominations that are apparently all the time present hovering around us invisible]].
63* CosmicPlaything: Robert and H.P. Lovecraft are just acting out roles prophesised long ago and suffering while doing so, particularly Robert. [[spoiler:Robert finally wises up at the very end but it doesn't help. The end of the series, Issue 12, more or less states all of humanity, and each individual is one and they should accept it]].
64* CovertGroupWithMundaneFront: When Robert Black meets Henry Annesley, an actual memeber of Liber Stella Sapiente, the latter successfully sells the order less as a MysteryCult and more as an academic book club of shared enthusiasts. He says that the Order's interests in occult is merely a foundation for scientific research and the complaints made by the Wheatleys and Boggs is unfair. Robert seemingly buys this and feels disappointed that the group he had built up is so disappointing. [[spoiler:Naturally it's an act, they are actually no different from Wheatley, and even conceived the Redeemer in the same manner, but with a more scientific, and less incest-y, approach]].[[note]]The sequence is a meta-commentary on S.T. Joshi's argument that Lovecraft's fiction switched from supernatural explanations to scientific explanations in his later stories.[[/note]]
65* DarkMessiah:
66** The Booke of the Wisdom of the Stars outlines the arrival of a figure called "The Redeemer" whose coming will be greeted by a Herald. Willard Wheatley implies that Robert Black is the Herald for the Redeemer, and Hezekiah Massey and Elspeth Wade also treat him likewise.
67** The Stella Sapiente had a split in their organization about the nature and identity of the Redeemer. The snobby leaders kicked Wheatley and Boggs out of the organization to follow their own plan. This led Garland Wheatley to summon [[spoiler:Yog Sothoth and impregnate Leticia with his own candidates for the Redeemer: Willard Wheatley and John-Divine]].
68** The Liber Stella Sapiente settled on [[spoiler:Howard Philipps Lovecraft]], product of an ArrangedMarriage between the daughter of the Order's leader and a young novice he was mentoring. [[spoiler: It's implied by Sarah Lovecraft that her husband Winfield may have been possessed like Garland at the time.]]
69* DeadlyEuphemism: Suydam and Gerritsen whisper about a shipment of "unripe fruit" they have just received, which looks "Norwegian" and about "five or 6". They are talking about a child sacrifice they just bought through trafficking, who will presumably be fed to Lilith.
70* DeathByAdaptation: Ephraim Waite is long dead here, unlike in Lovecraft's original story. Instead of being a capable sorceror, Edgar Wade was merely a more recent host of the body-swapping Etienne Roulet.
71* DeconReconSwitch: It's ultimately stressed that colored by the prejudices of those that tell it, CosmicHorror is still CosmicHorror, and it takes no prisoners regardless of one's views or supposed level of righteousness.
72* {{Deconstruction}}: Part of Alan Moore's intent is to ground Lovecraft's stories in the context of the political and social tensions of the period in which it was written:
73** The racist subtext of Lovecraft's original stories is directly brought to the surface and re-examined with a modern lens. The residents of the Innsmouth-expy resent others for racially discriminating against them. Red Hook is shown as a positive example of New York's melting pot rather than the hysterical racist atmosphere in Lovecraft's story set there.
74** Likewise, where Lovecraft described the occult in generally sinister terms, and seemed to feel that cosmic forces can make one GoMadFromTheRevelation, Moore, being an occultist himself, is more neutral towards these aspects. As such many of the evil and creepy wizards and sorcerers from Lovecraft's stories are shown to be AffablyEvil or given PetTheDog moments.
75** Occult societies are also shown to contain the same class biases and prejudices then the supposedly conventional society they are criticizing. Garland Wheatley and Tobit Boggs are both disappointed that they are looked down as low-down hicks by the current Order of the Stella Sapiente, which is led by the more urbane and academically minded occult groups:
76---> '''Robert Black''': I mean, I don't know much about the occult, but I'd have thought that serious philosophers should be above all that.
77---> '''Garland Wheatley''': Course they should! They talk about distant stars an' eternity's depths an' how man ain't nothin', though respectable society is, seems like.
78** Henry Anneseley for his part refutes these charges, and states that the Liber Stella Sapiente have modernized and become more accessible, less ritualistic and more scientific in their approach and researches and for them the Redeemer prophecy is only one of many parts of the Order and not the sole one.
79* DidYouJustRomanceCthulhu: [[spoiler: In volume 10, Robert gets a blowjob from Carcossa, a messenger from the outer spheres and an EldritchAbomination. Robert is not in the least pleased by the experience.]]
80* DissonantSerenity: [[spoiler: The characters including FBI Chief Carl in the final section comment on this when they enter the Lovecraftian dreamworld and accept the bizarre as normal. Including having a man commit suicide in front of their eyes, forgetting small details and events from two or three minutes back]].
81* DoubleMeaningTitle: Common in the issues, which often refer to Lovecraft stories.
82** The title of the whole series "Providence" is first a reference to Lovecraft's birth city, but also means a divinely ordained chain of events. It is implied throughout the story that Black's journey is due to forces above his own volition and he is continuously referred to as a "herald".
83** Issue 2's "The Hook" refers to "The Horror at Red Hook", the story that it is largely based on. It also refers to hooks which grasp the mind: Robert finds out much more about Hali's Booke and fuel for his research, and the reader sees the first obvious sign of the supernatural.
84** Issue 4 is called "White Apes", referring to Lovecraft's "Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family", which was first published as "The White Ape". The issue refers repeatedly to ideas of eugenics, a field which led to monkey-related slurs for black people.
85** Issue 6 is called "Out of Time", as the protagonist from the famous "The Shadow Out of Time" appears, Robert discovers that he time-travelled, he experiences time dilation when reading Hali's Booke, and Etienne Roulet is a centuries old immortal who has surpassed his time. The title also ominously suggests that Robert is out of time and so is doomed.
86** Issue 7 is "The Picture", reflecting Pitman's work as an artist, the photograph in the last panel which fundamentally separates Pitman from his Lovecraftian equivalent Pickman, and how Pitman attempts to show Black "the bigger picture" to explain his supernatural encounters.
87** Issue 9 is "Outsiders" which shows us Providence from the perspective of New Yorker Robert Black, but also refers to the [[spoiler:eldritch beings in the higher plateaus of the inter-dimensional realm. It also refers to Charles Howard's sense of being an outsider in Providence, where as a gay man, he has to keep a front of local antiquarian to fit in]].
88* DramaticIrony: The series is rife with it, as Robert Black encounters many famous Lovecraftian characters yet often fails to truly comprehend the horrors he faces.
89** Dr North drops so many puns about his unusual hobbies it is remarkable that even Black does not note the truth.
90** For a character with precognitive dreams, Robert Black is awful at predicting the future when awake. He even dismisses the possibility of prohibition becoming law.
91** Robert is also an investigative reporter, yet he is staggeringly poor at picking up clues around him. These range from his denial of the supernatural in front of him, to more mundane features such as [[spoiler: recognising O'Brien's coat in Pitman's possession]]. Though the latter is somewhat forgivable given his distraction.
92** Pitman is an artist who expresses himself and his knowledge of ghouls through his paintings: he reflects that he is a very visual man. But when he introduces Robert to a ghoul to explain the supernatural, he repeatedly insists that Robert must not look at King George.
93** [[spoiler: Lovecraft quips that the stars must have dictated his meeting with Robert Black, having no idea that their meeting is part of a great prophecy. He also has no idea that he might not be entirely human, while his books show a deep fear of miscegenation between races.]]
94* DreamLand: Randolph Carter takes Robert Black on a lucid dream tour of the Dreamworld, sharing their vision through the 700 Steps method. It's implied through this they metaphysically travel underground and back in time, to where Lovecraftian entities wait to return to the mortal realm.
95* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Robert Black in the penultimate issue, after he realizes the role he has played in the upcoming apocalypse.]]
96* EffeminateMisogynisticGuy: Robert is unflinchingly polite in his day to day life but makes disparaging remarks about nearly every female character in the story in his journal.
97** One major exception to this is Elspeth, whom he has nothing but praise for [[spoiler:prior to the rape scene]]. This may be a result of his subconscious picking up on the fact that [[spoiler:"she" is actually a man's soul possessing the body of his (or rather a previous host of his in this version) daughter]].
98* EldritchAbomination: Feature deliberately lightly in the story, as Robert Black is merely touching the surface of the Mythos in his storyline. What is apparently Yog-Sogoth does appear on page in a flashback in issue 4 though.
99** [[spoiler: Carcossa of volume 10 which having roughly the shape of a human (from one angle) looks like a superposition of every position he was in, and his mouth looks like a butthole.]]
100* EndOfAnEra: Issue 11 shows the fall of the various cults seen in the series and the rise of the unchecked fanboyism seen in ''Neonomicon''.
101* EurekaMoment: In volume 10, Lovecraft shows Robert a picture of his grandfather Philip Van Buren. It allows Robert to slowly to surely piece together everything he's heard about the Stella Sapiente and discover that Lovecraft is their latest experiment and the Redeemer. This discovery shakes him profoundly
102* FairCop: Tom Malone from "The Horror at Red Hook" is quite a bit more handsome than Robert Black expected, lampshading that his literary inspiration was considerably older.
103* FauxAffablyEvil: King George presents his fellow ghouls as scavengers that peacefully eat dead humans. But Pitman's paintings show ghouls gleefully slaughtering people at a train station, and another painting shows a pair stripping a victim and prancing around in his clothes.
104* FishPeople: The residents of Salem look human but they have a lot of fish features, such as protruding eyes, scales, and neck wrinkles which resemble gills. They metamorphose when they age into fully aquatic creatures.
105* {{Foil}}: Willard Wheatley states that in the Redeemer story there has to be "thuh crazy granpappy, un' thuh whaht-faced wummun, un' thuh bad-lookin' bwoy". As rivals in competing the prophecy, Garland Wheatley and Whipple Van Buren Phillips are the crazy grandfathers, Sarah Lovecraft (who used arsenic face-whitening powder) and the albino Leticia are the white-faced women, and H.P. Lovecraft (who is called hideous by his mother) is set against the monstrous Willard and John Divine. But despite this the families are heavily contrasting, considering Sarah and Howard's ignorance of the supernatural, the Lovecraft's urban and the Wheatley's rural character, and their responses to economic and social struggle.
106* ForegoneConclusion: The prophesised rise of the Dreamworld is often discussed, where Lovecraftian creatures return to reclaim the earth. The beginnings of this is depicted in ''Neonomicon''.
107* {{Foreshadowing}}:
108** In his Commonplace Book entry for August 2nd, which Black pens shortly before visiting the Wheatleys, he describes a story idea about a young journalist who investigates a supernatural horror without realising its true nature until it is far too late. Black even notes that his protagonist would need a strong capability for self-delusion to remain believable. [[spoiler:This is pretty much his own fate]]. Doubles as DramaticIrony.
109** [[spoiler: Officer O'Brien's fate is subtly revealed by the fact that his black coat is still in Pitman's house, and the ghoul mentions encountering another redhead dressed in black.]]
110* FreakyFridayFlip: The third method of immortality mentioned in Hali's Booke. Black temporarily undergoes it with Roulet, who inhabits Elspeth Wade.
111** Nat Paisley briefly appears in issue 6 as well, as he is the most famous Lovecraftian example. It's alluded to that he already underwent it for five years, ending about a year back.
112* {{Futureshadowing}}:
113** Issue 3 includes several references to UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust, the Swastika that Robert Black runs into on the road and a dream where he sees several of the fish-folk executed in the Gas Chamber. He also sees J. Edgar Hoover with a HumanoidAbomination, which is depicted in ''The Courtyard'' in a photo dated a few years after this series.
114** Issue 7 has O'Brien complaining about Governor UsefulNotes/CalvinCoolidge, predicting he'll use the RedScare and militia suppression of the riots and parlay that into a political career where he'll ruin things even more. Coolidge who once proclaimed "the only business in America is business" is regarded as a President whose policies paved the way for TheGreatDepression, scheduled for arrival 9 years later.
115* FlingALightIntoTheFuture: [[spoiler:The Commonplace Book becomes this inadvertently after Robert's suicide in the penultimate issue, helping to take down two covens and providing what appears to be a last ditch hope for humanity.]]
116* GainaxEnding: [[spoiler:The finale is a major one. Brears gives birth to Cthulhu who is then given over to Johnny Carcosa. Humanity and all existence will continue to exist in a Dream World with most unaware of it, some gone crazy, while others accepting it and coming to terms with it somehow]].
117* GilliganCut: Elspeth invites Black to her lodging, as he feels he's going a little crazy. He promises he "won't pour out all his problems". One panel later he's babbling about everything on his mind.
118* GlowingEyesOfDoom: King George's shine white.
119* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: In volume 9, Annesley's CoolShades allow him to see [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch Abominations]] floating in the air and through objects.
120* GreaterScopeVillain: The unseen "secret chief" of Stella Sapiente, who appears to be Nyarlathotep judging by Johnny Carcosa's mother's presence within his room at Saint John's church.
121* HalfHumanHybrid: Most Salem residents are half-Deep One, and the Wheatley siblings were fathered by Yog-Sogoth. [[spoiler: Issue 9 implies that H.P. Lovecraft may be as well, considering the light his mother Sarah describes his father Winfield at the conception sounds similar to Garland summoning Yog-Sogoth. ]]
122** Pitman may be a ghoul-human hybrid, or a human turning into a ghoul, as both are possible in Lovecraft's original stories. His inhumanity is subtler than with the above examples, but his prominent bone structure, heavy body hair, pointed ears and resistance to cold are all familiar. King George may admit that they are related, and it explains Pitman's affinity for the ghouls.
123** The final issue [[spoiler:depicts Cthulhu as a half-human hybrid, the child of the Deep One and Agent Merrill Brears. As Joshi, speaking on behalf of Moore comments, of all of Lovecraft's fictional gods, Cthulhu is the one described as humanoid]].
124* HauntedHouseHistorian: Dr Wantage is one of the few people outside of Stella Sapiente who seems to understand what Hali's Book really is. He relates how it was one of the few books to survive a mysterious fire, worries that something might break out of the book, and alludes to how it might harm Robert.
125* HeKnowsTooMuch: [[spoiler: Pitman tries to urge O'Brien to leave, but the police officer just had to notice how extremely realistic the painting of the Boylston Street Station disaster was...]]
126* TheHeroDies: [[spoiler:Ashamed at the role he played in the upcoming apocalypse, Robert opts to commit suicide in the penultimate issue.]]
127* HillbillyHorrors: Deconstructed, subverted and played straight: The fish-people of Salem resent how the townfolk and in general tourists see them as hicks because they are mixed-raced, with the narrative comparing their prejudice to anti-semitism.
128* HillbillyIncest: When Robert Black visits the Wheatley family, he gets an earful from the town barber that patriarch Garland Wheatley is a bizarre hillbilly who fathered children on his daughter. The truth manages to be even more disturbing: Garland and his family resent how the people of Athol and the Stella Saps (as he and Boggs call the Order) are treated as low-down hicks. So to prove that he and his family are not low-down hicks who are unworthy of the knowledge of cosmic force, Garland proceeds [[spoiler:to summon the Elder God Yog-Sothoth, willingly become possessed, and impregnate his daughter with abomination twins]].
129--> '''Robert Black''': My God. You hear about how these things [[StopBeingStereotypical are forever going on among the rural poor, but I'd always assumed such tales were born of city prejudices]].
130* HistoricalDomainCharacter:
131** Hali, the author of the "Booke of the Wisdom of the Stars", is described as the pseudonym of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calid Khalid ibn Yazid]], an actual, and highly obscure, figure in medieval alchemy. In Moore's fashion, he is the mirror and parallel for Abdul Alhazred, the author of the Necronomicon.
132** The splash image of the Actor's Equity Strike has Creator/WCFields in the crowd.
133** In addition to this, Whipple Van Buren Philipps, Lovecraft's grandfather and Winfield Scott Lovecraft, his father are members of the Stella Sapiente.
134** Weird-fiction giant Creator/LordDunsany and of course, Creator/HPLovecraft himself finally makes an appearance in Issue 8. Issue 12 [[spoiler:has a fictional version of Lovecraft's real-life biographer S. T. Joshi attending the birth of Chtulhu]].
135* HistoricalInJoke: [[spoiler:Issue 11 has J. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI discuss Robert's Commonplace book, with Clyde Tolson. Hoover himself notes there's something "unmanly" about Robert. The joke is that Hoover was himself a closet GayConservative and Clyde Tolson was his longtime partner]].
136* HurricaneOfPuns: Issue 3's fever dreams has several repeated allusions to Nazism and UsefulNotes/TheHolocaust:
137--> '''Prissy Turner / "Lily" / Jonathan''': Oh Bobby, you are a camp ... Did I ruin your concentration? Did I interrupt your [[MasterRace masterwork]]?
138--> '''Robert Black''': My Book, my work, it's going to make me free. [[note]]Every concentration and extermination camp had a sign at the gates that said Arbeit Mach Frei - Work Will Set You Free[[/note]].
139** The church pamphlet at the end of the issue is also filled to the brim with rather labored fish-related wordplay.
140* HumanoidAbomination:
141** Lilith, [[spoiler: who Robert Black encounters beneath Robert Suydam's cellar]].
142** Johnny Carcosa's mother, who cameos in the series and doesn't appear to age. [[spoiler: Johnny Carcosa appears himself, and reveals an anus-like mouth underneath his mask.]]
143** The residents of Salem who are the fish-men hybrids of ''Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth''. They look humanoid but have features that are quite fish-like, including protruding eyes and gill-like neck flaps.
144** Willard looks more human than his brother John-Divine, but he looks middle-aged when he's six years old, and can warp cubes into a tessarect.
145** His mother states that [[spoiler:Lovecraft is himself one, that his father's face was the "same ball of light" that Leticia glimpsed when she was impregnated by her father]].
146* HypocriticalHumor: [[spoiler:H.P. Lovecraft]] declines the opportunity to fawn over one of his literary idols since he believes it to be rude, but he is absolutely starved for adulation himself and encourages Black to keep singing his praises upon meeting him.
147* IJustWantToBeSpecial: [[spoiler:Lovecraft]], who is almost cruelly blockaded from the real-life equivalents of all the supernatural characters and events he is manipulated into writing.
148* ImAHumanitarian: [[spoiler:Robert Black accuses the ghouls of cannibalism, King George doesn't deny but he says that he and his kind eat the already dead, the ones which are no use to society. The last scene suggests that Pitman is in essence a SerialKiller who has murdered people and then fed their bodies to the ghouls, and then used those photographs as reference. The special references to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Molasses_Flood the Great Molasses Flood]] and a gas leak in Boylston Street which Officer O'Brien recognizes hints that Pitman was behind those disasters and that he killed O'Brien because HeKnowsTooMuch]].
149** [[spoiler:King George actually denies being a cannibal, pointing out that if he ate his brother "George Washington", that WOULD be bad (and cannibalism). Eating dead humans, however, isn't cannibalism, because ghouls aren't human.]]
150** Shadrach Annesley appears in issue 3, and is implied to share his literary counterpart's cannibalism. [[spoiler:Confirmed in Issue 12, where he casually eats and consumes an FBI agent, as well as Aldo Sax, licking the blood around his tongues]].
151* ImmortalProcreationClause: Male Deep One hybrids have their [[GroinAttack penises ritualistically removed]] when they complete their transformation into their final, immortal FishPerson form. The Oannes church pamphlet also mentions that it was once common for them to remove it themselves after mating only once and leave it inside their mates to prevent others from mating with her but this practice has fallen out of favor.
152** Another reason for this is revealed towards the end, that being [[spoiler:to prevent the males from mating with human women. In humans the genes for limiting growth come from the father, whereas in Deep Ones they come from the mother. The results of a male Deep One and female human mating can be... [[{{Kaiju}} unwieldy]].]]
153* ImmortalityImmorality: Suydam and Dr North are heavily implied to have killed people in their attempts to gain further life, and [[spoiler: Etienne Roulet has been stealing people's bodies for centuries, of which only the most recent is Elspeth]].
154* ImmortalitySeeker: Elongating life, particularly using the four methods mentioned in the Kitab (diet, temperature, transference of souls, and revitalizing a cadaver) are referred to repeatedly and help tie the myriad stories together. Two founders of Stella Sapiente (Roulet and Massey), and Roulet's acquaintance Annesley have all managed to survive the centuries.
155** Shadrach Annesley[[note]]inspired by the nameless old man of ''The Picture in the House''[[/note]], who briefly appears in the third issue, is suggested to use the diet method of cannibalism, extending his life by two and a half centuries.
156** Dr. Alvarez[[note]]inspired by Dr. Muñoz of ''Cool Air''[[/note]] in the first issue uses the second method by chilling himself.
157** [[spoiler: Etienne Roulet]][[note]]inspired by Ephraim Waite of ''The Thing in the Doorstep''[[/note]] has managed to live as long as Shadrach by stealing people's bodies through the swapping of souls.
158** Dr North[[note]]inspired by Herbert West of ''Herbert West-Reanimator''[[/note]] is attempting the fourth with his experiments, but is largely unsuccessful so far.
159** Hekeziah Massey[[note]]inspired by Keziah Mason of ''The Dreams in the Witch-House''[[/note]] of issue 5 managed to discover a fifth way of prolonging her life that was not mentioned in the Kitab.
160* InsultFriendlyFire: It was bound to happen when Robert Black, secretly homosexual and Jew, meets with Lovecraft and spends time with him. After Lovecraft assures Robert that the poet Samuel Cleaves couldn't possibly be homosexual because he writes good poetry or that the poet Loveman's ability as a writer is exceptional because he can write "despite being a Jew", Robert is considerably colder with Howard. Not that Howard notices.
161* InterspeciesRomance: Cave drawings in Salem depict men mating with Deep Ones.
162* UsefulNotes/{{Kabbalah}}: [[spoiler:Issue 4 depicts Yog-Sothoth as the Tree of Life]].
163* LargeHam: [[spoiler:The ghouls are really over-the-top even when they're horrific. The final photograph depicting O'Brien's corpse has them shamelessly mugging for the camera with one ghoul even giving what seems like a thumbs-up]]
164* LeaveYourQuestTest: Issue 4, features this. Robert Black follows Wheatley's advice to go to Manchester but the latter advises him that there could be no coming back. The final panels shows Black walking out of Athol towards Manchester but staring back one last time before moving on, while the panels cite Lovecraft's poem, "The Ancient Track".
165--> '''Garland Wheatley''': Just so long as you remember that them paths to the old knowledge only goes one way. One you're there, you can't come home no more.
166* LockedOutOfTheLoop: [[spoiler:Lovecraft and his writing]] is essential to the master plan. [[spoiler:Lovecraft's]] awareness of this? Much, much, much less so.
167* LovecraftCountry: Much of the series is set in New Hampshire, particularly Manchester, the series' analogue for Lovecraft's Arkham. Salem, Massachusetts also stands in for Innsmouth.
168* MadArtist: Robert Black's notes in his commonplace book is filled with misgivings about whether he has the literary talent to write the UsefulNotes/GreatAmericanNovel about the "hidden America". He states that he's probably too normal to be a great writer and that to properly deal with the occult one has to be a little crazy to start with.
169** Ronald Underwood Pitman plays with this trope. He paints murderous ghouls and the Stella Sapiente, and [[spoiler: kills people for his art]]. But he acts perfectly sane.
170* MaliciousMisnaming: Both Boggs and Wheatley call the Order of the Stella Sapiente, Stella Saps (i.e. starry fools).
171* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: The approach to Lovecraftian horror in the books is to present it this way to Robert Black, while the reader knows the truth. Robert Black, being an aspiring writer, lampshades the trope by describing it in his commonplace book at the end of Issue 4:
172--> '''Robert Black''': Now, if something supernatural were to actually occur to someone in real life, anyone normal would just run a mile. They wouldn't have the author and reader's interest in unravelling the mystery and getting to the story's end. They'd simply flee. I know I would, and I like to think that I'm a normal person underneath it all. I suppose the only way to handle it realistically is to rely on people's tendency not to believe that anything out of the ordinary is going on, even if evidence is mounting to the contrary."
173** Issue 1, has Robert encounter the undead protagonist of "Cool Air", but believes he is merely suffering an unusual medical condition.
174** Issue 2, has Robert Black visits Suydam's house and his famous basement [[spoiler:filled with an underground cavern of unusual architecture. He then gets attacked by Lilith, a glowing creature with claws, and he loses his hat in the basement. Later he wakes up in the basement and rationalizes the entire episode as a psychological dream grounded in conversations and anxieties he had experienced earlier that day. Then the last page reveals that his experience was absolutely ''real'']].
175** Issue 3, has Robert Black meeting the fish-human hybrids from ''Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth'' with Robert Black not noticing many tell-tale signs of their non-human origins.
176** In Issue 4, Black meets Willard (a Wilbur Whateley expy) who is obviously inhuman and is constructing an impossible fourth-dimensional object (albeit with his back turned to Black), as well as Wilbur's invisible, totally-alien brother. The latter doesn't really faze him, as he believes that Wilbur's mother Lavinia is having a hysteric episode and talking to thin air, but he mishears Wilbur's comments on his age.
177** In Issue 5, Robert believes his perception of the time loop is a dream, and dismisses his missing time of three weeks in the next issue as a symptom of mental illness.
178** Averted in issue 6. Black perceives clearly supernatural events when Elspeth switches bodies with him, and sees himself in the time loop with Mr Jenkins. He thinks the first event may have been hypnotism, but that is more like denial. He clearly knows he is witnessing the paranormal now.
179** By issue 7 Robert is clearly in denial about his experiences, and suppresses memories he cannot handle. He interprets Pitman's explanation of the Wade's power as illusions. He additionally convinces himself that his experience with King George was self-hypnosis, despite clearly glimpsing and smelling the ghoul.
180** In Issue 9 Henry Annesley deliberately tries to convince Robert of this, unlike previous characters who are more subtly covert or go with Robert's self delusions.
181** In Issue 10, [[spoiler:Robert finally puts together and solves the Stella Sapiente conspiracy and writes a note to Tom Malone about all the hints he's picked, but at that very moment he is met by Johnny Carcosa/Nyarlathothep and meets his fate]].
182* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent: In issue 5, the moon is the only reliable way to follow the passage of time. [[spoiler: Its passage makes it clear that Robert Black travelled days into the future.]]
183** Black sees a man running in the rain at the start of issue 5. [[spoiler: The next issue reveals that it's actually a future version of him]].
184* MeaningfulRename: Richard '''Up'''ton Pickman is now Roland '''Under'''wood '''Pit'''man, signifying that he's significantly darker and more villainous than his original version.
185* MercyKill: The "Lethal Chambers" in Robert Chambers' ''The Repairer of Reputations'' have been opened in New York, and Jonathan Russell visits one in Bryant Park.
186* MetaFiction: Since it's a pastische/homage/deconstruction of Lovecraft this is to be expected:
187** Wilbur Wheatley comments on the nature of the comic, how Robert Black is intruding upon his story and so competing with him. He is referring to prophecies in-universe, but the meaning is clear. Robert Black's commonplace book which jots down ideas for plots and stories has him LeaningOnTheFourthWall numerous times in describing the implications of the occult and the many tropes that Lovecraft would tackle in his books.
188** H.P. Lovecraft's father Winfield Scott is alluded to in issue 3, and appears in issue 5.
189** Since this series occurs in the same universe as ''Neonomicon'', it appears that in-universe H.P. Lovecraft discovered the various supernatural phenomenon featured here and then wrote at least some of his stories about them, changing the names.
190** H.P. Lovecraft himself appears in issue 8.
191* MetaOrigin: Nearly all the supernatural characters depicted are shown to be influenced by Hali's Book (the expy of the Necronomicon), either following its instructions on immortality or attempting to enact its prophecy.
192* MindRape: The same and literal rape happens to [[spoiler:Robert Black when Edgar Wade/Elspeth Wade hijacks his body while trapping his consciousness in the body of Elspeth, a young girl. Robert gets raped by his own body in turn, while for extra horrific effect Robert believes he suffered a dissociative episode, and that he himself is a rapist.]].
193* MoreThanThreeDimensions: Wilbur Wheatley casually constructs a tessarect in his shed.
194** Black becomes [[spoiler:trapped in a nested time crunch]] during his stay in the Witch House
195* MostWritersAreWriters: Alan Moore writes Providence as a homage to the writer H. P. Lovecraft and his main protagonist Robert Black is himself an aspiring novelist and literary reader.
196* TheMourningAfter: Robert Black's boyfriend, Jonathan Russell (who Black calls "Lily") commits suicide in the first issue. On account of their relationship being hidden from society, Robert can't be caught mourning in public nor is he allowed to go to the funeral since absolutely no one would be allowed to know of their relationship. To get away from his grief, Robert gets involved in the occult research to write his first novel.
197* MysteryCult: The Order of Stella Sapiente. Both Boggs and Wheatley complain about the main leaders not listening to all the suggestions of its members because the former two are despised by the more snobby figures in charge. The leaders which includes Ephraim Wade have their own plans with the Booke of the Wisdom of the Star and ensure that the knowledge is kept out of reach of the Wheatleys and others.
198* MysteriousBacker: Robert Black is often likened by the people he meets as a "Herald" and it's implied that his arrival into LovecraftCountry is part of a big plan. Suydam is especially deliberate when he sends a letter to Boggs telling the latter about Robert's arrival and his stumbling into Suydam's basement by accident. Elspeth Wade and Hezekiah Massey also recognize Robert as a special herald, and Wade states that they among others wanted to make an "impression" on him. [[spoiler:Robert finally works out the true nature of the conspiracy when he finds out that Lovecraft's father and grandfather were members of the Liber Stella Sapiente, and Lovecraft is the Redeemer with himself as the herald]].
199* MythArc: Recurring features ties the stories together: dreams, the occult, immortality and underground are the most obvious. This is all part of the greater storyline of Providence: Robert Black is the Herald of the Redeemer, who must learn of the secret chaotic world beneath human civilization.
200* MythologyGag: The Church that would become "Club Zothique" in ''The Courtyard'' appears in "Providence" where it has already become a dance-hall.
201** Later, Robert Black's fever dream, flashes to the photograph of J. Edgar Hoover and the Deep One featured in ''The Courtyard'' and ''Neonomicon''.
202** In the Commonplace Book portion of Issue 8, Black also describes meeting a pregnant woman on a bridge in a dream. Given what she tells him, it's pretty clear this is [[spoiler: Merry Brear from ''Neonomicon'', and she is very pregnant with Cthulhu]].
203* NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: Jonathan Russell, Robert's lover, is nicknamed Lillian, an allusion to the theatre actress [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lillian_Russell Lillian Russell]].
204** Boston ghouls are named after famous people from the Revolutionary War, maybe because these are the names they know best from when they first encountered humans when Boston was built. King George is the only one we see, but he mentions his brothers George Washington and Mary Pickford.
205* ANaziByAnyOtherName: The respectable people of Salem who paint Swastika marks around the Boggs area of town are likened to proto-Nazis. [[note]]From the opening paragraphs of ''Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth'': ''No trials, or even definite charges, were reported; nor were any of the captives seen thereafter in the regular gaols of the nation. There were vague statements about disease and concentration camps, and later about dispersal in various naval and military prisons, but nothing positive ever developed. Innsmouth itself was left almost depopulated, and is even now only beginning to shew signs of a sluggishly revived existence.''[[/note]]
206* NonMaliciousMonster: King George treats individual humans kindly at times, and sees the ghouls eating dead humans as necessary for his species, and a use of an otherwise wasted resource. Subverted in that he doesn't justify the ghouls clearly gleeful consumption of alive and screaming people.
207* NotSoHarmless: Pitman seems like a very decent chap throughout issue 7 and hosts Robert for ten days, treating him particularly kindly with the result that Robert is more relaxed than he's been in several issues. [[spoiler: Then the last panel reveals that he doesn't just paint ghouls' horrific acts, he killed Officer O'Brien for his painting.]]
208* OurGhoulsAreCreepier: They naturally show up in the issue based on Pickman's Model. Seen on-page instead of alluded to, the ghouls show characteristics that Lovecraft just hints at, such as speech, intelligence and a sense of humour. They also grow to large sizes, dig up into graves to feast and live in urban tunnels, as Lovecraft describes them.
209* PaintingTheMedium: An Alan Moore staple. Deep One hybrids have an emboldened and jagged speech, while ghouls speak with earthy yellow and brown speech bubbles. Additionally when panels are edged with ruler-drawn straight yellow lines instead of by hand, it is implied that something paranormal is happening or present.
210* ParasiticImmortality: Robert Black unknowingly encounters several immortals from the Stella Sapiente occult group who keep themselves immortal through various means. The most malicious is the [[FrenchJerk Frenchman Etienne Roulet]], who has survived for centuries by doing a [[BodySurf swapping bodies with members of his family line, transferring his consciousness into a new body while the original occupant dies in the previous body]]. He demonstrates the process by swapping minds with Robert, trapping him in the body of 13-year-old Elspeth Wade, while Roulet uses Robert's own body to rape him/her.
211* ParentalIncest: Issue 4 reveals that [[spoiler:Old Man Whateley's expy equivalent is the father of his daughter's children. Possibly mitigated because Wheatley was possessed by Yog-Sothoth at the time.]]
212* PetTheDog: Pitman tries to explain to Robert's experience to reassure him that [[spoiler: he didn't commit rape]], and tries to show ghouls to Robert so that the poor man knows what he is getting into. He explains that he is doing it because Robert is kind, has appreciated his work, and it is the decent thing to do.
213* ThePowerOfLove: Dr. Alvarez, of all people, cites Love as the force that defines life.
214--> '''Dr. Alvarez''': Love is the only substantial thing. It is [[SexIsGood noble in its noises and odours]], I think. From where I look at this, to not love is to waste the existence. Even life is a small matter beside it. You see, it is not interrupted by death. Without it, this world cannot be endured.
215* PowerBornOfMadness: Sarah Lovecraft can see Annesley's invisible creatures without equipment.
216* {{Prequel}}: The series functions as this for The Courtyard and ''Neonomicon'', also by Moore and Burrows.
217* PsychoticSmirk: An indicator that someone is possessed by Etienne Roulet.
218* RealityBleed: [[spoiler: As the three FBI agents investigate Black's diary in Issue 12, the entire world is drawn/fades into the reality of Yuggoth.]]
219* ReligiousHorror: More so than the original stories, as the storyline is centred around one of the Lovecraftian cult's mythology and attempts to fulfill their warped messianic myth.
220* ReverseArmFold: Elspeth Wade does this a few times in Issue 6.
221* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: Black's response to his dream of Mrs Mason and her familiar, when he realises that something undeniably supernatural may actually be occuring.
222** And then twice in a row at the end of issue 6. I think it's safe to say that Mr. Black had enough of Manchester for a couple of lifetimes.
223* ScrewYourself: A deeply disturbing version happens in Book 6, as thanks to Body Surf, [[spoiler:Robert Black's consciousness is transplanted from his body to that of a young girl possessed by an immortal sorceror. Robert Black's consciousness is helpless and trapped as he gets raped by his own body]].
224* SecretSocietyGroupPicture: A picture of the Stella Saps was taken by Ronald Underwood Pitman. Pitman notes that he was chosen by the group because he was a man of discretion (presumably because he had something to hide himself). The people in the photo are Garland and Leticia Wheatley (as a young girl), Edgar Wade, Henry Anneseley and at the center of the picture, Van Buren (aka Whipple Van Buren Phillips, Lovecraft's maternal grandfather [[RaisedByGrandparents who helped raise him]]) and next to him, a travelling salesman with an English accent identified by Pitman as "Winston something" (he is in fact Winfield Scott Lovecraft, HP's Dad).
225* SelectiveObliviousness: Robert is insistent on trying to ignore the supernatural, rationalising them as psychological episodes. He even manages it retroactively after [[spoiler: his body-swap rape]], though by this point he is clearly in denial and suppresses his traumatic memories.[[spoiler: Ironically his obliviousness is shattered not by seeing something inhuman, but by realising in a conversation with Lovecraft the latter's ties to Stella Sapiente.]]
226* SequelHook: Since each issue is fairly stand-alone, although connected by the arc of Robert's work, they tend to include hints of what Lovecraftian characters Robert will meet next.
227* ShoutOut: The book is a {{Homage}} to Lovecraft and each issue features a WholePlotReference to one or many Lovecraft stories and other Weird Tales:
228** The first issue, "The Yellow Sign" features extensive descriptions of Robert Chambers' ''Literature/TheKingInYellow'' and has a WholePlotReference to the Lovecraft story ''Cool Air''.
229** The second issue "The Hook" is a {{Prequel}} to Lovecraft's "The Horror at Red Hook".
230** Issue 3, "A Lurking Fear" visits [[Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth Innsmouth]].
231** Issue 4 takes us to [[Literature/TheDunwichHorror Dunwich]].
232*** The POV of the invisible John-Divine is shown in infra-red, reminiscent of the ''Film/{{Predator}}''.
233** Issue 5 focuses mainly on "The Dreams in the Witch House", with additional references to "The Color From Outer Space".
234** Issue 6 focuses on ''The Thing on the Doorstep'' and alludes to events from ''Herbert West, Reanimator''.
235*** Hector North and James Montague's looks appear to have been based on concept art of West and his unnamed assistant for a [[VaporWare never produced]] Disney Comics adaptation (seriously!).
236** Issue 7 is one for ''Pickman's Model'', though the art-work showing the 1920 Boston Riots suggests an InternalHomage by Jacen Burrows to ''ComicBook/{{Crossed}}''.
237*** There's also a fair few homages to Moore's earlier work. Robert's free association nightmare filled with allusions to Nazism recalls the one experienced by ComicBook/SwampThing, with its "Plain, Aryan Worms" at the beginning of Moore's career-making run after he learned he wasn't really Alec Holland. The ending also resembles [[spoiler:''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'''s, featuring somebody holding a book written by one of the main characters that has the potential to undo the far-reaching, tentacle monster-related changes the world has undergone. Unlike ''Watchmen'', however, Perlman ultimately decides it's not worth it, tears the book up and throws it in a river]].
238* ShownTheirWork: An Alan Moore staple, but the background details of the comic, is highly dense and very well researched.
239** The stories are especially accurate about the backgrounds, architecture and general layout of various places visited by Robert Black. Special references and whole photographs are recreated for [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1919_Actors%27_Equity_Association_strike The 1919 Actor's Equity Strike]], [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Police_Strike the 1920 Boston Police Strike]] and the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Molasses_Flood the Great Molasses Flood]].
240* SidelongGlanceBiopic: The entire series is a critical examination of Lovecraft's life and fiction, exploring him in the sociopolitical and artistic context of his time and place with all kinds of AllohistoricalAllusion to his life, work and background packaged in the background. Lovecraft himself only appears on-screen in Issue 8 of the 12 part series.
241* SignatureStyle: The first issue of Providence features elaborate background details, a multiple cast of characters and ends with a post-script text feature that elaborates on the backstory, much like ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' and ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen''.
242* SignificantWardrobeShift: Robert Black gains a black raincoat in issue 6, showing his corruption by his reading of Hali's book and his experiences.
243** Howard Charles gains an old fashioned top hat and pipe as well as stubble [[spoiler: when Japheth Colwen possesses him]].
244* SmokingHotSex: A rather disturbing version in Issue 6 [[spoiler:where after Robert-in-Elspeth gets raped by Etienne/Elspeth-in-Robert, the latter reverses their bodies and Robert backs away in shock while Etienne/Elspeth lights a cigarette muttering about the soreness of the body that he had just raped using Robert as a proxy]].
245* SparedByTheAdaptation: [[spoiler:Shadrach Annesley]] is strongly indicated to be [[spoiler:the nameless cannibal backwoodsman in "The Picture in the House"]] who survived his implied death in the Lovecraft story.
246* StealthPun: Dr North's conversations with Robert Black are riddled with references to his work of reanimating the dead.
247** Mrs Massey/Macey is referred to as a "wise woman", an old term for a witch, and mentions residing in "another space nearby", which is actually a different dimension.
248* SureLetsGoWithThat: Pitman wavers between this and attempting to straight-out explain Black's situation to him, as he struggles with the journalist's obvious denial.
249* TearsOfFear: Robert starts to silently weep when the ghoul King George is approaching him. Subverted, as the commonplace book entry reveals that his eyes were tearing up because he couldn't tolerate the Ghoul's revolting odor.
250* TheyLookJustLikeEveryoneElse: Ronald Underwood Pitman is a quite boring-looking fellow, shy, agreeable and a modest artist. Which makes it all the more unnerving what he is mixed up in, as he knows that it's wrong.
251* TimeSkip: Between each issue. The commonplace book bridges the gap and tells us what Robert is up to (mostly travelling/arranging/moving from one place to another). This skipping of events becomes a plot point in Issue 5 and 6 where time dilation happens, and Robert's journal gets hazy as he tries to keep his head straight.
252** Happens again in [[spoiler: Issue 11 where the narrative travels almost 80 years to the time period of ''Neonomicon''.]]
253* TimeTravel: [[spoiler: Robert Black travels back and forth in time in issue 5, astrally projected through his dreams. At the start of the issue he actually sees himself without realising, when he's projected temporarily forward in time by three weeks. In Issue 6, he experiences time dilation while reading Hali's Booke, moving slower in time than those around him.]].
254* TomeOfEldritchLore: Hali’s "Booke of the Wisdom of the Star", also known as "Liber Stella Sapiente" and "Kitab Al-Hikmah Al-Najmiyya", stands in for the Necronomicon.
255** It drives much of the plot, as Black researches it as part of his book, the secret society Stella Sapiente is centred around it, and numerous characters are inspired by it in their drive for immortality.
256** Robert Black finally gets a hold of a copy in Issue 6 and the book is genuinely creepy, [[spoiler:as time starts dilating around Robert, so that a single session spent reading and taking notes, despite seeming to last a couple of hours, lasts ''for three days''. The artwork and panels really conveys how weird and distorting the book is]].
257* TownWithADarkSecret:
258** Salem, where its people mate with Deep Ones and then transform when they age.
259** Manchester, its the location of St. Anselm's college (i.e. Miskatonic University) which contains one of the world's only copies of the TomeOfEldritchLore. It's also the site of a meteor crash that converted the rural outskirts into a "blasted heath", and then there's the really old Wise Woman's house.
260** Boston is infested with ghouls, as are many other places in the world.
261** Providence, where the Stella Sapiente are based and the local church houses Nyarlothotep. Lovecraft even mentions he is inspired by Robert to portray his town as a sinister place.
262* UnwittingPawn: Black, who eventually catches on, and [[spoiler:Lovecraft]], who never does.
263* VerbalTic: Ronald Underwood Pitman says "uhm" just about every sentence, and slightly more when he is lying.
264** Robert notably stutters a lot when he arrives in Boston at the beginning of issue 7, a result of his traumatic experience in Manchester.
265* ViewersAreGeniuses: It is difficult to catch all the Lovecraftian references without a [[https://factsprovidence.wordpress.com/moore-lovecraft-comics-annotation-index/ guide]].
266** It's never remarked upon, but Dr Alvarez is even paler than Robert and his breath doesn't mist, confirming his nature to a perceptive reader.
267** Pitman has prussic acid, which is used in the photography process. A knowledgeable reader will know that this is an alternative name of hydrogen cyanide, which hints at its more recent use.
268* WhamEpisode: [[spoiler:Issue 8 finally has Robert Black meeting H. P. Lovecraft. The Herald has met the Redeemer, the end of the world has begun, and almost everyone who Black interacted with on his quest seem to realize somehow that the meeting has finally happened]].
269** [[spoiler: Issue 10 has Black finally figure out the prophecy, at which point he meets Johnny Carcosa.]]
270* WhateverHappenedToTheMouse: By the time of ''Neonomicon'' there have been over half a dozen "Heads and Hands Killers", [[spoiler: but Issue 11 only shows Merill Brears freeing Aldo Sax and the first three murderers from the mental institution.]]
271* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: A variation. During [[spoiler:Robert Black's suicide]], we see the beginnings of Lovecraft's influence in American society, interspersed with the fates of several characters (with some details filled in later by Etienne Roulet):
272** Lovecraft himself dies in Providence, aged 46 and practically forgotten as a writer.
273** Hezekiah Massey finally perishes in the 1930s when the witch-house is pulled down; Jenkins the familiar's bones are later discovered in the remains.
274** Hector North is tracked down and decapitated by some of his previous "experiments"... and unfortunately for him, his head stays alive.
275** Willard Wheatley is found disemboweled, possibly by his own brother.
276** John-Divine himself is last seen battling the priests of St. Anselm's college. Considering the Wheatley plan is considered a failure, they likely managed to destroy him.
277** Japheth Colwin is interrupted from jumping into a new body in 1927 and ceases to exist.
278** The fish people in Salem are massacred by the FBI.
279* YearOutsideHourInside: Time dilation happens in the area around Manchester. Robert Black experiences it first hand when he starts reading Hali's "Booke of the Wisdom of the Star" and also in Hezekiah Massey's house.
280* YoungerThanTheyLook: Willard, who looks 30, is 6 and a half.

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