Showing posts with label Ligotti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ligotti. Show all posts

The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein by Thomas Ligotti on Pre-Order

Monday, July 11, 2011


With far less pomp than it deserves, Centipede Press' new edition of The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein and Other Gothic Tales went up for pre-order last week. Until now, this book of unusual vignettes, sequels, and horror tributes to famous horror icons by Thomas Ligotti was his rarest title on the second hand market, and certainly one of the most expensive. Fortunately, the Centipede reprint revives the book's greatest wonders and unleashes some new ones.

Just like his other definitive collections currently being published by Subterranean Press, Ligotti has revised The Agonizing Resurrection, aiming to make the stories more like they were always intended to be. Longtime fans will notice that Harry O. Morris has provided the illustrations for the volume's own not-so-agonized resurrection. Many will rejoice, since Morris played a crucial role throughout Ligotti's career, as publisher and illustrator of Nyctalops, as well as the first edition of Songs of a Dead Dreamer, and several other works.

According to reports, orders are rapidly pouring into Centipede's database. Fans, dealers, and cynical investors are wasting no time with this title, and for good reason. The handsome looking hardcover is limited to five hundred copies. In a move that mirrors the exceedingly rare red leather edition of its predecessor, Centipede is producing fifteen deluxe copies for $1750 each. While only a few lucky collectors will seize this edition, there's still a chance to move on the far more affordable trade hardcover. Get your order in now.

The Agonizing Resurrection is the third book by Thomas Ligotti released in 2011, and almost certainly the finest. It's due to ship out by late September. Until then, look for Subterranean Press' revised edition of Grimscribe: His Lives and Works, and the new paperback edition of The Conspiracy Against the Human Race.

-Grim Blogger


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Current 93, Thomas Ligotti, and Jan Svankmajer Combined

Thursday, July 7, 2011



Imagery that accurately reflects the grim and surreal vision offered by Thomas Ligotti is difficult to find. However, Youtube user aluminiumface recently posted a video that combines a lengthy excerpt from "I Have a Special Plan for this World" with scenes from Jan Svankmajer's short film, The Ossuary. With little modification, the dark audio collaboration by Ligotti and Current 93's David Tibet really comes alive.

These scenes, produced by the Czech Republic's "militant surrealist," lend sight to dark incantations that could previously only manifest inside our minds. Although many will doubtlessly continue to prefer the natural route, this short production effectively shows the flexibility of Ligotti's hallucinatory words in the visual medium.

-Grim Blogger


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Current 93, Thomas Ligotti, and Jan Svankmajer Combined

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The Conspiracy Against the Human Race by Thomas Ligotti Returns in Paperback

Wednesday, May 18, 2011


Thomas Ligotti's forceful case against life, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race, has recently re-launched in paperback, thanks to high demand and a decision from Hippocampus Press. After darkening the minds of countless readers and disappearing off the shelves, the hardcover book remained elusive and out-of-print for several months. Look for the affordable new edition to pop up in oppressive coffeehouses and ride along in mysterious backpacks.

Whether you see the glass as half full, or vacant and encrusted with mud, Conspiracy is a thought provoking read from an author who continues to command a serious following in contemporary weird fiction. If the odd copy ever makes it into a second hand bookstore, I suspect it will form one of the strangest philosophic Trojan Horses that an unsuspecting reader could ever encounter.

This paperback edition will surely introduce new readers to Ligotti, and serves as field notes for those who are already positioned against life or wedded to bleak, strange fiction. Read my extended review from 2010, or check out The Conspiracy Against the Human Race on Amazon.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti, Laird Barron Stoker Finalists for 2011

Saturday, March 19, 2011


Weird horror fiction is again enjoying a strong presence on the Stoker Award ballots. Finalists for each category were announced earlier this week. Thomas Ligotti and Laird Barron head up the purely weird, for superior achievements in non-fiction and short story collections, respectively.

Laird Barron's nightmare stirring collection, Occultation (reviewed last year), is a strong contender amid fierce competition. It's battling Stephen King's Full Dark, No Stars, among others. Another Barron tale shows up in Haunted Legends, edited by Ellen Datlow and Nick Mamatas, and a finalist for superior anthology.

Thomas Ligotti's pessimistic assessment of human existence, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race (reviewed at length here), faces three other works in a death match. This nomination and potential win is near perfect timing for the book, which sold out its first edition in late 2010. Conspiracy is due for a paperback re-release by Hippocampus Press later this spring. Ligotti holds the possible advantage of being a previous Stoker winner, with numerous past nominations and several outright wins, thanks to The Nightmare Factory in 1996 and My Work Is Not Yet Done in 2002.

Voting for the awards should conclude by late March. Here's a full list of the finalists:

Superior Achievement in a NOVEL:

  • HORNS by Joe Hill (William Morrow)
  • ROT AND RUIN by Jonathan Maberry (Simon & Schuster)
  • DEAD LOVE by Linda Watanabe McFerrin (Stone Bridge Press)
  • APOCALYPSE OF THE DEAD by Joe McKinney (Pinnacle)
  • DWELLER by Jeff Strand (Leisure/Dark Regions Press)
  • A DARK MATTER by Peter Straub (DoubleDay)

Superior Achievement in a FIRST NOVEL:

  • BLACK AND ORANGE by Benjamin Kane Ethridge (Bad Moon Books)
  • A BOOK OF TONGUES by Gemma Files (Chizine Publications)
  • CASTLE OF LOS ANGELES by Lisa Morton (Gray Friar Press)
  • SPELLBENT by Lucy Snyder (Del Rey)

Superior Achievement in LONG FICTION:

  • THE PAINTED DARKNESS by Brian James Freeman (Cemetery Dance)
  • DISSOLUTION by Lisa Mannetti (Deathwatch)
  • MONSTERS AMONG US by Kirstyn McDermott (Macabre: A Journey through Australia’s Darkest Fears)
  • THE SAMHANACH by Lisa Morton (Bad Moon Books)
  • INVISIBLE FENCES by Norman Prentiss (Cemetery Dance)

Superior Achievement in SHORT FICTION:

  • RETURN TO MARIABRONN by Gary Braunbeck (Haunted Legends)
  • THE FOLDING MAN by Joe R. Lansdale (Haunted Legends)
  • 1925: A FALL RIVER HALLOWEEN by Lisa Mannetti (Shroud Magazine #10)
  • IN THE MIDDLE OF POPLAR STREET by Nate Southard (Dead Set: A Zombie Anthology)
  • FINAL DRAFT by Mark W. Worthen (Horror Library IV)

Superior Achievement in an ANTHOLOGY:

  • DARK FAITH edited by Maurice Broaddus and Jerry Gordon (Apex Publications)
  • HORROR LIBRARY IV edited by R.J. Cavender and, Boyd E. Harris (Cutting Block Press)
  • MACABRE: A JOURNEY THROUGH AUSTRALIA’S DARKEST FEARS edited by Angela Challis and Marty Young (Brimstone Press)
  • HAUNTED LEGENDS edited by Ellen Datlow and Nick Mamatas (Tor)
  • THE NEW DEAD edited by Christopher Golden (St. Martin’s Griffin)

Superior Achievement in a COLLECTION:


  • OCCULTATION by Laird Barron (Night Shade Books)
  • BLOOD AND GRISTLE by Michael Louis Calvillo (Bad Moon Books)
  • FULL DARK, NO STARS by Stephen King (Simon and Schuster)
  • THE ONES THAT GOT AWAY by Stephen Graham Jones (Prime Books)
  • A HOST OF SHADOWS by Harry Shannon (Dark Regions Press)

Superior Achievement in NONFICTION:

  • TO EACH THEIR DARKNESS by Gary A. Braunbeck (Apex Publications)
  • THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE by Thomas Ligotti (Hippocampus Press)
  • WANTED UNDEAD OR ALIVE by Jonathan Maberry and Janice Gable Bashman (Citadel)
  • LISTEN TO THE ECHOES: THE RAY BRADBURY INTERVIEWS by Sam Weller (Melville House Publications)

-Grim Blogger



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Thomas Ligotti, Laird Barron Stoker Finalists for 2011

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Miskatonic River Press to Release Ligotti, King in Yellow Anthologies in 2012

Thursday, February 17, 2011


Last week, weird horror writer-turned-editor Joseph S. Pulver made a tantalizing announcement. He's begun work piecing together two new tribute anthologies due to be published by Miskatonic River Press in 2012. The Grimscribe's Puppets will feature a selection of stories that are a homage to Thomas Ligotti. It will be the first book by multiple authors dedicated to the Ligottian aesthetic, and will join only a handful of others that pay respect to a living writer of weird fiction.


A Season in Carcosa will collect new tales inspired by Robert W. Chambers' The King in Yellow. Tributes to Carcosa's mad sovereign have been done before, but only on an extremely limited basis (see Rehearsals for Oblivion by Elder Signs Press for a recent example). There's more than enough untapped horror to help build up a Yellow universe - possibly even an incipient Mythos based around the blasphemous play.

Since its earnest resurrection over a year ago, Miskatonic River Press has rolled out several new works. Their new Lovecraftian anthology, Dead But Dreaming II, can be expected later this year as well. The book is a follow up to the hyper-rare and well received Dead But Dreaming, which I previously reviewed here.

-Grim Blogger



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Thomas Ligotti's Purity Set for Film

Tuesday, February 1, 2011


Film maker Russ Bellew has established a couple social networking sites aimed at launching a film adaptation of Thomas Ligotti's "Purity." Despite some uncertainty about the project expressed last week on Thomas Ligotti Online, it appears there's a chance the venture will move forward. Bellew hopes to raise a few hundred dollars, giving the project a meager operating fund. This will be a completely independent movie. Here's a synopsis for the unfamiliar:

Living in a dark and dangerous neighborhood, Daniel is a strange young man, living on the fringes of society with his very off beat family. One night Dad has an unexpected visitor and Daniel decides to go to his friend Candy's house and show her the fruits of his Dad's experiment, a squat jar containing a green jelly-like substance. Intertwined with a child killer, drug dealers, and murder, Daniel has to step carefully through this surreal landscape in order to survive.

If successful, getting "Purity" on screen will mark the second time a Ligotti work has been filmed. 2008 saw the first, The Frolic, a short film which made do with similarly limited resources. Luckily, a large number of Ligotti's stories open themselves to film without requiring a large set of digital wizardry. Tales like "The Frolic" and "Purity" are deeply psychological. This means a director needs to round up skilled actors and erect a suitably eerie atmosphere - no small order, but doable without the thousands of dollars required for nightmarish creatures or special effects. For "Purity," at least, the real estate meltdown has greatly increased the number of viable sets.

"Purity" is an exceptionally bleak horror story that has begged to get on film. Its reverence for dereliction and creepy philosophical conjectures would, if done right, help establish a promising history for Ligottian cinema. This is all the more important when considering previous filmable pieces that never quite made it to the production stage: Crampton, "In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land," and Michigan Basement (an unpublished screen play co-written by Thomas Ligotti and Brandon Trenz), among others. Hopefully, Purity will join The Frolic on DVD in the next couple years.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Christmas Eves: Atmospheric Possession in Old Grosse Pointe

Friday, December 24, 2010



Since it first appeared in Songs of a Dead Dreamer, Thomas Ligotti's seminal debut short story collection, “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise: A Tale of Possession in Old Grosse Point” has quietly haunted the brains of readers stricken with holiday memories. Some people re-visit this underrated tale near late December, when fiction and existential fact can collide like two screaming locomotives, leaving behind a marvelous, chaotic debris field capable of filling real life with unusual wonderment, if only for an instant. Ligotti's apt creation and manipulation of literary atmosphere has long been one of his most admired traits. In this ultimate holiday horror sideshow, his powers are at their height, inflating the story with a hyper-atmospheric aura equal to weird fiction's other rare Yuletide classics, like H.P. Lovecraft's “The Festival.”

How does Ligotti manage this curious feat? Though a true analysis will never be able to fully quantify Aunt Elise's dark magic, her powers (and by extension, the author's) reverberate from three blazing logs responsible for firing the story's atmosphere. There is a nightmarish toying with time, an anxious glimpse provided by Ligotti at a stagnant immortality and the tragedy of growing old. This theme is carefully fortified by the liminal irreality that churns throughout the piece, bound to an omnipotent dread manifest in Christmas Eve by Aunt Elise's gaudy decorations, as well as hypnotic tendrils of disorientation, bursting from the story's rich imagery and narrative structure. Possession, however, is the chief horror on exhibit. Like other tales by Thomas Ligotti, always at their finest when they are stitched together by elaborate mysteries, “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise” poses a confounding question: Who or what is being possessed in Grosse Point? This inquiry is ripe for speculation, but the answer – if there is one – may yield more Ligottian fear than comfort.

Among the many bizarre elementals weaving this story's unmistakable atmosphere, time is king. Ligotti shows us the equally strange and unsettling effects of time on the march and standing still. From the outset, when readers are introduced to the perspective character Jack - an introverted lad who wishes the holiday would pass uneventfully (or fail to arrive in the first place) - and enter Aunt Elise's abode, there is clear time manipulation. Christmas Eve with Aunt Elise is an affair that flits between otherworldly horror and an authentic family gathering. Yet, the recurring carols, presents, and décor in Elise's estate, year after year, portray a quiescent immortality terrible to behold in its repetitive stagnation. Jack feels, “...the nightmarish sense of a ritual forever reenacted without hope of escape” (page 131). So do we.

There is no comfort to be found, though, in the dramatic leaps through time Ligotti makes us privy to near the story's conclusion. Jack, no longer a little boy or a twenty-something smart ass, find himself remembering Aunt Elise's Christmas Eves in an inebriated state with a new slew of relatives – a gathering that differs only subtly from past Eves. It is clear Jack has nourished a lifelong disdain of Christmas, and cannot escape the long shadow cast by Aunt Elise. Even before she makes her grand re-appearance, Ligotti ensures that the old woman's ghost is alive, particularly by fulfilling a hidden prophecy contained in Elise's nickname for the hapless protagonist: “Old Jack.” Jack may be much older since her passing, but not necessarily wiser – as if anyone could indeed wisen up to her arcane knowledge.

Through this, one thing is certain: growing old is hideous, possibly equivalent to Aunt Elise's virtually unchanging existence. Nowhere is this better illustrated than in the yarn she tells on one particular Christmas Eve. It seems an old man used to live in a grand house down the street in Grosse Pointe. After his residence is dismantled piece by piece following his death, to transport it with him to another world per his beliefs, the ghostly estate reappears one festive evening, to a young antiquarian's delight. All seems well at first, as the youth follows the friendly elder inside and explores its mysteries to his content. But events quickly take a turn for the worse when the old man disappears, leaving his visitor stranded in an outpost amid a sea of darkness outside, populated by weeping, lost figures. Peering out at this hellish sight, the antiquarian sees an old face reflected back: “...then the young man realized that this was now his own face, and like those terrible, ragged creatures lost in the fog, he too began to cry” (135). And there is plenty to cry about, especially the possibility that advanced age is a mere gateway to joining the wandering, decrepit souls outside the house.

Aunt Elise's creepy tale concerning the antiquarian is an outstanding example of the story-within-a-story that helps generate severe disorientation in this work. Ligotti reinforces this facet in the symbolic wrapping paper adorning young Jack's gift that features little bears dreaming of presents, which in turn have sleeping little boys on their paper. Seasoned readers know Thomas Ligotti is fond of depicting these multi-layered realities. The one swirling around Aunt Elise, however, is extremely dizzying.


Displacing solid realities and environments is similarly conducted with rich, often contrasting imagery. Grosse Pointe's mundane, antique environs are upset by obscene lights and festive decorations. This lends the story's backdrop an unfamiliar atmosphere, as when Jack observes, “...a serene congregation of colors that for a time turned our everyday world into one where mysteries abounded” (130). It is this invasion by Christmas warpaint that mirrors the warping of Jack's environment and mind, and possibly even causes it. Outside the luminescent living rooms and halls is a darkened world where fog rolls off nearby lakes. Ligotti's juxtaposition of vibrant inner chambers with outer deadness successfully makes a heavily mysterious atmosphere, but also brings to the surface another important shadow within the story: a supremely transitory world, where anything and everything might happen.

Christmas Eve itself is a threshold between two realms, the uneventfully normal and the holiday. This, combined with weirdly leveled storytelling and supernatural occurrences, is exploited by Ligotti to make everything in this story appear restless and translucent, a liminal irreality where nothing is certain, except the sensation that something dreadful is going to happen. This decoupling of certainty opens the way for possession by Aunt Elise, representing a holiday spirit whose touch brings chills instead of cheers.

By the time the icy climax arrives, when Old Jack returns to a house he had thought forever vanished, and an Aunt he believed long dead, the matriarchal Elise's role as demon appears iron clad. “Oh, how nice, how nice and lovely to be settled in a world where it's always dead with darkness and always alive with lights!” (137), the old creature cackles, as she captures Jack's collected memories. Perhaps she actually functions more like a vampire than a demon, in the end.

Although concluding that Aunt Elise is the possessive maestro behind the horror, Jack's puppet master, and a malevolent holiday entity is the most popular and likely explanation, there is a different angle worth exploring. In Ligotti's work, little is what it seems, and labyrinthine passages to meaning abound. “The Christmas Eves of Aunt Elise” lacks a blatant reference to unseen forces, maniacally wrestling actors from behind the curtain, such as the existential blackness in his later tales, or the Great Chemists in “The Chymist.” Still, there seems to be a nameless force greater than Jack, Aunt Elise, or Grosse Pointe, beneath the uncanny holiday glamor, possessing all of these people and places.

What could it be? This power might best be described as an embodiment of the holiday season, a blind and groping, but real “Christmas Spirit.” Again, the idea of an endless “ritual forever reenacted without hope of escape” springs to mind. Now, imagine the ritual as an occultic rite that summons and sustains a terror more abstract than Aunt Elise. Though difficult to describe, it is easier to see this black holiday spirit's effects.

Christmastime's onset means a complete takeover of Grosse Pointe, the overwhelmingly rich infestation of decorations, guests, and lights in a sleepy suburb that wishes it could stay dreaming. In fact, the rolling fog, aside from its use as an atmospheric component, seems so much like an effort to quarantine the Christmas disease. This is not unlike Jack's reaction to Christmas – one of repulsion, as the holiday threatens all of his natural inclinations toward solitude and quiet. By the story's end, Jack rightly appears to be unwitting prey to Aunt Elise's omniscient machinations, just as the antiquarian falls to the mysterious old homeowner. But then, Aunt Elise and the old man apparently know what is going to happen to their victims and themselves. Their actions feel scripted as they dance to fate's command, so much like supernatural puppets plucking their lesser dolls' strings. In this way, Aunt Elise and her elderly neighbor act more like masks for a nameless force – possessed by an eternal Christmas spirit, just like Jack and Grosse Pointe's affluent homes – rather than demons or vampires with free will.

Thomas Ligotti discusses the surreal and frightening effects of determinism at length in his latest book, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race. Regardless of whether or not there is a deterministic spirit behind Aunt Elise's bewitching motives, the possession occurring in Old Grosse Pointe seems awfully familiar. The town, in fact, could be any, and Jack anyone with a slightly misanthropic streak, who dreads the arrival of candy canes, glittering trees, and family gatherings enacted by duty, not pleasure. By painting an all too common occasion in truly weird atmospheric hues, Ligotti has delivered a resonate tale of holiday horror that will surely gain recognition over coming Christmas Eves. Or, has he exquisitely described, not invented, a ghastly side to a holiday whose bright exterior has always hidden a greater blackness?

Works Cited

Ligotti, Thomas. Songs of a Dead Dreamer. Burton, Michigan: Subterranean Press, 2010 (1986).

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Gothic Tales Return!

Saturday, December 4, 2010


Thomas Ligotti devotees will receive another black multi-vitamin next year, much like 2010, when the revised Songs of a Dead Dreamer and The Conspiracy Against the Human Race were published. Centipede Press has announced their intention to publish a revised version of Ligotti's The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein and Other Gothic Tales by the middle of 2011. This collection of highly sought, long out-of-print vignettes joins Subterranean Press' definitive Grimscribe. Together with the four revised books by Subterranean Press, Centipede's contribution means virtually all of Ligotti's work will be newly available.

Details about the new Gothic Tales, furnished by Centipede owner Jerad Walters, suggest the book will be a signed 6.5 X 11 oversize, with a fresh introduction by Ligotti and unseen color illustrations. None other than Harry O. Morris will be providing the imagery, the famed horror illustrator and original publisher of Songs of a Dead Dreamer, who was also the first artist to translate Ligotti's nightmares to visual art. Five hundred copies will comprise this moderate sized print run.

In a strange way, the resurgent Gothic Tales brings Ligotti's career full circle, revisiting and refining the products of an earlier writing phase marked by an experimental flavor and the artist-publisher who boosted his fiction off the runway. Like most Centipede titles, high end quality is expected, though Walters notes the price shouldn't be "outrageous." The original edition published by the defunct Silver Salamander Press became a rare Ligottian relic this past decade, often commanding hundreds for a paperback or hardcover version. The ten red and black presentation copies of the book remain near the pinnacle of modern weird fiction collectibles in price and scarcity. Fortunately, Centipede's new release makes this previously inaccessible tome viable again, while upholding the almost mystical standards of version 1.0 in quality.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Revised Grimscribe on the Market

Friday, November 19, 2010


Subterranean Press just put their latest Thomas Ligotti item on the market, a revised edition of Grimscribe, due in early 2011. Right now, pre-orders for the limited edition are only open to those who have already bought the previous revised volume. The slightly less spectacular trade hardcover is available to all buyers. Like the definitive Songs of a Dead Dreamer released earlier this year, Grimscribe will contain highly polished versions of the book's original contents. According to Thomas Ligotti, the four revised volumes planned by Subterranean Press will together collect his most celebrated stories in their final form. Grimscribe contains the following pieces: "Introduction";  The Voice of the Damned:  "The Last Feast of Harlequin";  "The Spectacles in the Drawer";  "Flowers of the Abyss";  "Nethescurial";  The Voice of the Demon:  "The Dreaming in Nortown";  "The Mystics of Muelenburg";  "In the Shadow of Another World";  "The Cocoons";  The Voice of the Dreamer:  "The Night School";  "The Glamour";  The Voice of the Child:  "The Library of Byzantium";  "Miss Plarr";  The Voice of Our Name:  "The Shadow at the Bottom of the World".

By the time the revised Noctuary and Teatro Grottesco appear in the next few years, a revolution in Ligottian availability will have occurred. Assuming Subterranean continues to release one book annually, all of Ligotti's oeuvre--save for a few vanished pieces in obscure journals--will be back in print. Virgin has already reprinted Teatro Grottesco and My Work Is Not Yet Done in paperback.

Of course, Subterranean's Ligotti books do sell out. Yet, even if all the revised volumes are snatched up by collectors, it's not difficult to imagine paperbacks or perhaps even something on the order of The Nightmare Factory (a massive out-of-print paperback that collects nearly all Ligotti tales) appearing after all the revised versions have been released.

-Grim Blogger


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The Lamentable Obscurity of Eddie Angerhuber's Nocturnal Products

Sunday, October 24, 2010


There are obscure weird horror collections that will fetch a high price whenever they surface on the market. And then there are the collections that never surface at all. One such volume is Eddie M. Angerhuber's Nocturnal Products. Published as a paperback by Britain's Rainfall Books in 2002, it garnered some significant praise before vanishing into unwarranted obscurity. Nocturnal Products also exists as the prime English language preserve of Eddie Monika Angerhuber's fiction, a German grimscribe who has remained a highly underrated enigma since Rainfall published her work.

Angerhuber is a name that should jump start the memory nodes of longtime Thomas Ligotti readers. In fact, she set up a website lobbying for his dark prose in her native tongue, undoubtedly helping to usher German editions of his collections into existence. Her fascination with Ligotti's tales led her to produce her own fiction, culminating in Nocturnal Products, which features stories very much in the Ligottian style. Today, she rightly stands with authors like Mark Samuels, Matt Cardin, and Simon Strantzas as disciples of Thomas Ligotti, though unlike her male counterparts, her creative voice has been silent for several years now.

Unless Ms. Angerhuber opts to resume writing weird fiction (and adapting it to English), or an unlikely reprint of Nocturnal Products appears, we have only phantasmal traces of her fiction's content and character. An old review by Peggy Jo Shumate offers an extended breakdown of the stories inside this rare tome--and fine ones they are. Fortunately, her entire output will not be expunged from history if every scarce copy of Nocturnal Products meets a fiery demise. Two other tales, "The Blue Star" and "The Heart of Darkness," are preserved in online repositories that are still functional at the time of this posting. These brief samplings are fantastic and somewhat painful examples highlighting the philosophic depth and hauntingly dour obsessions she explores. Her German-English website about Thomas Ligotti remains online too, but in a virtually dormant state since 2007.

It is my sincere hope that Eddie Angerhuber will not be a vague footnote in the great encyclopedia of supernatural literature. Her stories have undeniable appeal, to Ligotti fans, and beyond. If she never writes another word, many horror readers may not realize what's missing from the field. But if the contents of Nocturnal Products stay perpetually unavailable, then a true literary massacre will have occurred for all but the luckiest weird fiction readers.

ADDENDUM: Thanks to tips from German language readers, it seems Eddie M. Angerhuber is not entirely silent in fiction after all. A new book, Die Darbenden Schatten, is reportedly on the way. Unfortunately, Nocturnal Products remains the only collection translated into English at this time.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird Fiction Writers Write Like...

Monday, August 9, 2010


I was toying around with story passages from a few of my favorite weird writers on the I Write Like website, and its textual analysis generated some bizarre results. For H.P. Lovecraft, I chose the famous opening from "The Call of Cthulhu:"

The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and i twas not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining it its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.

The result? Lovecraft writes like Arthur C. Clarke! Though his Cthulhu Mythos stories are commonly associated with science fiction, Lovecraft never ventured toward the celestial concepts and prose of Clarke. Fortunately, I didn't have high expectations for these tests.

To see if the generator would do better with Arthur Machen, I submitted the following from "The White People:"

"Do you know," he said, "you interest me immensely? You think, then, that we do not understand the real nature of evil?"

"No, I don't think we do. We over-estimate it and we under-estimate it. We take the very numerous infractions of our social 'bye-laws'--the very necessary and very proper regulations which keep the human company together--and we get frightened at the prevalence of 'sin' and 'evil.' But this is really nonsense. Take theft, for example. Have you any horror at the thought of Robin Hood, of the Highland caterans of the seventeenth century, of the moss-troopers, of the company promoters of our day?

"Then, on the other hand, we underrate evil. We attach such an enormous importance to the 'sin' of meddling with our pockets (and our wives) that we have quite forgotten the awfulness of real sin."

"And what is sin?" said Cotgrave.

"I think I must reply to your question by another. What would your feelings be, seriously, if your cat or your dog began to talk to you, and to dispute with you in human accents? You would be overwhelmed with horror. I am sure of it. And if the roses in your garden sang a weird song, you would go mad. And suppose the stones in the road began to swell and grow before your eyes, and if the pebble that you noticed at night had shot out stony blossoms in the morning?...

Curiously, Arthur's writing is compared to that of another Arthur...Conan Doyle. This is, at least, better than the comparison given with Lovecraft. Conan Doyle was roughly contemporaneous with Machen, and occasionally a slight Holmesian mystery resonates alongside the supernatural in some tales.


Testing out today's authors is just as interesting. For consistency's sake, I went with another American and a Brit. First, this opening from Ramsey Campbell's "The Same in Any Language:"

The day my father is to take me where the lepers used to live is hotter than ever. Even the old women with black scarves wrapped around their heads sit inside the bus station instead of on the chairs outside the tavernas. Kate fans herself with her straw hat like a basket someone’s sat on and gives my father one of those smiles they’ve made up between them. She’s leaning forwards to see if that’s our bus when he says “Why do you think they call them lepers, Hugh?”
I can hear what he’s going to say, but I have to humour him. “I don’t know.”

“Because they never stop leaping up and down.”

IWL claims that Campbell writes like David Foster Wallace, if this very short snippet of his work is any indication. Not really being familiar with the late Mr. Wallace's work, I can't comment much, only to say that this seems like another mismatched match-up. It doesn't appear that Wallace is a writer of horror or the fantastic at all.

Then there's Thomas Ligotti. Surely, I thought, the website would have to return something obscure and entertaining after inputting this unforgettable scene from "Mrs. Rinaldi's Angel:"

'Now will you leave me?' she said. 'Even for myself there is nothing I can do any longer. You know what I am saying, child. All those years the dreams had been kept away. But you have consorted with them, I know you did. I have made a mistake with you. You let my angel be poisoned by the dreams which you could not deny. It was an angel, did you know that? It was pure of all thinking and pure of all dreaming. And you are the one who made it think and dream and now it is dying. And it is dying not as an angel, but as a demon. Do you want to see what it is like now?' she said, gesturing toward a door that led into the cellar of her house. 'Yes, it is down there because it is not the way it was and could not remain where it was. It crawled away with its own body, the body of a demon. And it has its own dreams, the dreams of a demon. It is dreaming and dying of its dreams. And I am dying too, because all the dreams have come back.'

Getting Dan Brown returned left me understandably confused and slightly shocked (and not in a good way). I decided soon after that these exercises are far more futile than they are fun. To call the technology "hit and miss" would be vastly overstating its power. But, hey, at least the machines are a long way off from being able to outwit mankind's analytical abilities in comparative literature.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Songs: Then and Now

Friday, July 9, 2010


Thomas Ligotti's Songs of Dead Dreamer has been well regarded since its original publication in 1986, a debut flare that fixed weird literature's eyes on Ligotti ever since. Now, a quarter century later, Subterranean Press has reissued the book after its creator passed it through a painstaking and risky revisionary process. Luckily, the effort is a success that magnificently avoids the temptation to transform old masterpieces too much, but alters them just enough to augment their quality. This final, definitive incarnation of Songs of a Dead Dreamer should be equal parts delight and relief to longtime Ligotti fans, and an instance where precision editing polishes and clarifies rather than demolishes and overhauls.

Make no mistakes: this version of Songs contains the same hapless and sardonic eccentrics, the same surreal settings, and the same grim fates as in earlier printings. The awful pillars of the nightmare universe long expressed by Thomas Ligotti remain untouched. But the bleak horror that throbs in each story is subtly adjusted to a different rhythm. The shrill voices of demons and dummies, the clicking of miracle claws, and the accursed breakdown of comfortable realities echo across the pages like never before. New wit enlivens old tales. Meanwhile, more baffling turns of phrase and events, which occasionally earned Ligotti criticism for being too inattentive to plot, have been changed, omitted, or replaced for comprehensibility.

Subterranean Press' Songs is structured in the same way as previous editions, with four sections loosely divided along theme. "Dreams for Sleepwalkers" contains four classic stories. "The Frolic" and "Les Fleurs" can both be looked at as stories of loves lost to supernaturally enhanced psychotics. The former tale (also the only Ligotti story so far to be adapted to film) sees an invasion into the mundane and secure life of a prison psychologist and his family by a mysterious inmate who enjoys violent frolicking. The latter work thrives on the eerie infatuation and jealousy of a lovestruck narrator entwined with a secret society dedicated to mystical botany. Both stories offer glimpses into uncomfortable, otherworldly realms that concentrate the strangest abuses of our own. "Alice's Last Adventure," which covers the time-warping meltdown of a mature children's writer's world, showcases Ligotti's creativity in drawing on Lewis Carroll's legacy for his own dark purposes. "Dream of a Manikin" comes unraveled in layered dreams when a psychologist suspects his wife's devious ideas about dimension-spanning selves are behind the identity confusion of a patient infesting his own life. In every case, the revisions to these tales function as gloss, often by highlighting imagery and ideas Ligotti wants the reader to digest.

In the book's next section, "The Nyctalops Trilogy" (named for the small press periodical these stories first appeared in), Ligotti's alterations are far more obvious and devastatingly effective. "The Chymist" and "Drink to Me Only with Labyrinthine Eyes" are marginally changed by exceedingly subtle twists that enhance their inherent hypnotic power. Ligotti's "The Eye of the Lynx," however, has undergone more changes than any other in the collection. For years, this abstract journey into a seedy brothel has perplexed longtime readers and Ligotti newcomers alike. Fortunately, the author has not been oblivious, and he has drawn on a mature skill set to craft what is almost a completely new story. Everyone may now revel with ease in the shameful pleasure, paranoid shadows, and black hunger masquerading as lust on stage in this tale. Moreover, the dramatic revision proves that Thomas Ligotti can still be a superior storyteller, if he chooses, in a time when his attention is presently turned to non-fiction (see his newly released The Conspiracy Against the Human Race for an example of his current endeavors).

"Dreams for Insomniacs" and "Dreams for the Dead" collect nearly a dozen more cherished stories of unique terror and awe. As with the others mentioned above, each has enjoyed differing degrees of revisionary input, but none as divergent as "The Eye of the Lynx." Yet, one gets the feeling that Ligotti's editorial sonar was cranked up to full, and careful changes were made only when they served to sharpen the dark surrealist blade that gleams and cuts throughout his oeuvre. It is often a nearly indeterminable shift of phrase, or the insertion of a single word or two into a familiar passage, that adds an extra rung on a ladder to melancholy twilight. And so, the unwelcome enlightenment in "Dr. Voke and Mr. Veech" occurs amid actors and places that cannot be mistaken for anything but a great puppet show, and new descriptions by Ligotti underscore the nightmare of consciousness here. "Dr. Locrian's Asylum," whose eponymous building towers over an expired town, is fantastic and menacing in a newly subversive way, as are its haunted and haunting inhabitants. The dream-crossed structures in "The Sect of the Idiot" seem realer than before, and this enriched environment accents the Lovecraftian horrors who work their hypnotic rituals within and above these places.

Two more stories are worth mentioning for the literary sheen applied by their maker. "Professor Nobody's Little Lectures on Supernatural Horror" rings with a stoic crispness previously unseen. Gone are a Professor's lighthearted remarks to his students, replaced by a blazing focus on the wisdom imparted in these uncanny discourses. "Notes on the Writing of Horror," an experimental tale-within-a-tale by Ligotti when he was playing with various styles, has also acquired a cruder and hilarious edge. The stylistic blurring between each story segment is stronger too, and helps integrate the frightful power throughout it, well before the demonic narrator is exposed.

Subterranean's Songs of a Dead Dreamer comes in both a limited signed hardcover and a trade hardcover for little difference in price. Intense demand for these revisions has already scarfed up every copy from the publisher at the time of this writing. If potential buyers move quickly, though, they will still be able to get copies of both editions for little markup via Amazon, Ebay, or Bookfinder. Songs is the first book of four planned "definitive editions" by Thomas Ligotti and Subterranean Press, and its successful launch means readers' demand may be higher still when the revised Grimscribe goes on pre-order for a 2011 release.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's The Conspiracy Against the Human Race Reviewed

Sunday, March 28, 2010


Several years ago, word first began to circulate about Thomas Ligotti working on a philosophical treatise. The Conspiracy Against the Human Race, which takes its name from a fictional book by a character in his story "The Shadow, the Darkness," then remained mysteriously out of reach, save for an early draft published at Thomas Ligotti Online. In the meantime, it underwent an unknowable battery of revisions, additions, and alterations of all sorts. Finally, the titular work is undergoing the final stages of preparation by Hippocampus Press for a release in April, 2010.

The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror is many things, but it is definitely well worth the wait. It emanates a black power longtime readers of Ligotti's fiction will recognize, yet it is not an old comforting horror story. Instead, the book is a history, a philosophy, and a V.I.P. pass to the backstage of Ligotti's many talented puppet shows. On the way to get behind the curtain, though, you find yourself trapped in a dimly lit elevator. Rather than the fireside chat with Thomas Ligotti you expected, you end up listening to his dark observations about this universe and about your existence--many of which make you want to scream and cry and laugh at once--as they pour in over a piercing intercom.

In Conspiracy, Thomas Ligotti successfully balances the multiple authorial roles integral to the book. There is Ligotti, the literary historian and tour guide, who provides a competent overview of pessimistic philosophers many readers without a formal philosophy education will not have heard of. Obscure figures like Zapffe, Michelstaedter, and Mainlander, to name a few, have their bleak and unusual ideas presented in clear terms almost anyone can understand, alongside the equally heady thoughts of more recognizable actors like Schopenhauer and Nietzsche. Each of these thinkers has relevant information extracted and pruned for supporting evidence in Ligotti's case against life. Ligotti, the argumentative pessimist, does not relent from his overall belief that everything, particularly human existence, is MALIGNANTLY USELESS. But his attacks are not constantly overwhelming, they die down enough, when appropriate, to allow the pessimistic historian his say, as well as the cultural critic. Ligotti as analyst effectively incorporates a selection of grim movies and literary works into his narrative. Familiar horror media is particularly drawn on to underscore the terrible condition he believes we find ourselves in. Then, not surprisingly, there is Ligotti the storyteller. While there is nothing that blossoms into a full blown original vignette, the creative flourishes this Ligotti utilizes keep the pages turning, and impress the text with his inimitable stamp. Conspiracy offers a gigantic portion of what may be Thomas Ligotti's special plan for this world, but it comes with cherished side dishes his admirers have tasted before in Death Poems, Clown Puppet nonsense, and the lectures of Professor Nobody.

The existential conspiracy of the book's title is easy to understand. Ligotti's main divergence from most other writers, thinkers, and people is his disagreement with the idea that "being alive is alright." To rip apart this concept, one held sacrosanct by most individuals and civilizations, he uses the framework established by the Norwegian philosopher Peter Wessel Zapffe in his essay, "The Last Messiah." Zapffe believed humanity's existence is a terrible mistake, an error mitigated and hidden by a bag of tricks employed to get by in daily life, but made all the worse by human reproduction. The exceedingly complicated mental hoops jumped through to convince ourselves that existence is not so bad, and will be even better for our children, is the grand conspiracy. To Ligotti, it is an insufferable situation, especially since humanity itself is the chief conspirator.

More intellectually challenging are the ideas he presents to blast the good (or at least tolerable) life espoused by his optimist foes (generally, those who believe "being alive is alright"). The horror of conscious existence, an evolutionary oops of nightmare proportions, is the most convincing evidence Ligotti deploys. Consciousness is a curse, and the conspiracy's sustenance. To Ligotti, conscious awareness results in an illusion of selfhood, a really wild suggestion, until one considers the bizarre theories of Thomas Metzinger and neuroscience highlighted by the author.

"Nobody is Anybody," Ligotti once said on a musical CD called The Unholy City, and he just might be right. His assertion and its support is convincing, fascinating, and frightening. However, if it is true, then the illusion is brutally potent--as readers will see when they react to this news with enthusiastic agreement or sickened dismay, responses pre-scripted by their personalities. With the exception of a few ego-dead savants discussed by Ligotti, the web of persona is almost ironclad, as the author himself notes, perhaps to his own horror and frustration.

The deterministic conundrum of biology and mental self-trickery is not the only monstrous entrapment to be found in Conspiracy. Even if Ligotti fails to change anyone's mind about the human condition, part of his adeptness is in his ability to force a reader into deciding which side of the optimist-pessimist divide they are on while reading. A minefield of observations about life lurks within each chapter, intellectual explosives that will gradually hurl readers into pessimism or away from it, or at least leave them dazed on the battlefield. For instance, Ligotti points out the tremendously important role of pleasure as a driver of human activity, contrasting its limited rewards with the bountiful suffering available to all. Sexual activity and feasting are playfully scorned in ways that oscillate between intensely amusing and freakishly disturbing.

Then there are the times when Ligotti confronts the mammoth in the room: Death. His commentary on the subject is sharp, secretly didactic, and purposeful. As a horror writer, Ligotti already knows how painful it is to be stalked through life by the shadow of death. But his aim is to get us to feel the distant chill of our deaths, even if it is only while thumbing through his book's pages. His crystallizing focus, in fact, mirrors death's advance in many ways, until its whole bulk is pressing down on readers at the nauseating end (where else?) of Conspiracy.

A less abrasive but no less important segment of Ligotti's dark tome explores an entertaining byproduct of consciousness familiar to those likely to pick up this book: the development of the supernatural. A treasury of insight and knowledge about the macabre that only an accomplished horror writer could access is tapped. Ligotti produces original and intelligent observations about the evolution of supernatural atmosphere in literature. He expertly examines weird fiction writers and more "mainstream" literary figures schooled in darkness and demons of one sort or another. In some ways, the book starts to resemble an embryonic draft for an updated, modernized version of H.P. Lovecraft's Supernatural Horror in Literature, but Ligotti wisely reigns this in before it veers away too far. He does not allow readers to forget why supernatural fiction and media exists in the first place: it is a reflection and an outgrowth of the sad state our race is condemned to by existing as conscious creatures, things which are practically supernatural by nature's standards.

Outside a lengthier discussion of the supernatural, Ligotti seasons the entire book with relevant quotations from and observations on all types of horrific media. John Carpenter's eerie films, Lovecraft's dark entities, and the violent machinations in Sweeney Todd are just a few of the diverse examples Ligotti illuminates as supplemental sideshows to the main attraction. All together, these works provide some context for attacking the entrenched fortresses Ligotti seeks to bruise. Where else can existence be seen as pure nightmare, or selfhood as eggshell frail, but in horror?

Although it is non-fiction, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race bristles with Ligotti's sardonic and sometimes hilarious tone, and his well received command of language. The dark comedy, fearful scenarios, and engaging paradoxes on display constitute a sweetener in an otherwise bitter medicine. Just enough to make the book sufficiently readable and even enjoyable for staunch optimists who will not be swayed by Ligotti's tirade against existence. Since this is a work by Ligotti, it would almost be a let down not to see puppets. Luckily, puppet imagery is abundant here, rolled out in eerie and believable comparisons that go beyond their traditional Ligottian roles as harbingers of darkly surreal atmosphere. But the ultimate deterministic puppets, in the author's estimation, may be something all too familiar--and what it is becomes strikingly clear in the frequent, colorful mockery and probing of human existence.

As if the dour argument of Conspiracy were not controversial enough, Ligotti goes one step further by boldly taking optimistic ideas to task. Readers feel the presence of a merciless gardener, who rummages through the soil of humanity's collective beliefs and tears apart anything not conducive to his pessimistic crop. All major religions, except perhaps Buddhism, are sliced, scorched, and tossed aside as delusion making weeds. The same fate awaits transhumanism, a utopian current without any relevance for Ligotti, except its potential to produce a superman one day that might recognize existential futility. Nature-worshiping environmentalism does not escape either. It seems that "Mother Nature" is a sort of demon to Ligotti, a blind and clumsy force responsible for humanity's highbrow suffering as well as the idiotic pain of lesser beings. In short, nothing that celebrates life, tries to make living worthwhile, or mitigates death's horror receives a pardon from Judge Thomas Ligotti.

This includes his vision of a better world where man has concluded that being alive is not alright. It is an unlikely portrait of something approaching a Ligottian utopia for humanity, a planet with a diminishing population as more and more people opt not to reproduce. Yet, it is an idea that crashes on the runway under the heavy weight of impracticality, at least in our own era and any in the near future, as Ligotti himself acknowledges. His frustration bleeds out the pages when he parodies the maniacal attitude of the world at large to the pessimist minority. Ligotti's paradox is our own as an agonized species moving through a world with no exit, or none accessible to readers at this moment in the early twenty first century. What, then, is mankind to do in the face of a conspiracy identified, but unthwarted? What is the role of The Conspiracy Against the Human Race when its anti-natal solution appears too distant today?

Like every notable work before it, the real fate of this volume and its ideas will be determined in due time by a large jury of readers and critics. However, Conspiracy is so rich, so strange, and so thoughtful that each main component of its inner-workings deserves a full evaluation. It is a hyper-effective philosophical tract that demands answers from readers to a few questions, not the lazy consideration of many questions raised by most other philosophic material. It is literary and artistic criticism with an agenda, focusing on its chosen works with a laser beam precision that is rare, and rarer still when it comes from a weird fiction writer. Its engaging prose is solid enough to drive readers of all mindsets onward, from cover to cover, almost making it feel like "being alive is alright" while the book is in one's hands. Almost.

The writing is also proof that Ligotti has lost none of his literary muscle tone, and may have gained some new forcefulness by venturing into non-fiction. Certain words, phrases, and metaphors are familiar, but they have never been this serious before. Moreover, Conspiracy may have one final use its author never intended: a primary resource for scholars studying his fiction. As a clear, vibrant expression of the ideas in his oeuvre swirling around beneath their storytelling framework, the book brushes on an additional layer of black gloss to every Ligotti tale. Any confusion about where Ligotti stands on existence is forever dispelled. This may blow open new mineshafts in his stories, allowing longtime devotees to dig deeper and extract new, strange, and precious intellectual gemstones.

So, perhaps the overarching worth of The Conspiracy Against the Human Race is in its function as a sort of literary Silver Key. It promises to unlock doors unique to whoever picks it up. Unsuspecting newcomers may step through an entrance to a library that holds black truths about their lives they never suspected. Faithful Ligotti readers may find themselves lost in a meta-fictional reverie always dead with darkness to outsiders, but always alive with literary lights for them. And everyone, everyone, will have to answer to a Supreme Court of pessimist philosophers regarding their role as co-conspirators. The shadowy faces of Zapffe, Lovecraft, Schopenhauer, and Ligotti might be indistinct as they glare down from the bench, but the crime itself is not. In the end, everyone will know the self-inflicted conspiracy as fact, not mere theory, and as Pandora's Box rather than Jack-in-the-Box.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Conspiracy Available for Pre-Order

Wednesday, February 3, 2010


Thomas Ligotti's long awaited argument against existence went on pre-order earlier this week from Hippocampus Press. The Conspiracy Against the Human Race is set to be a 240 page hardcover that caps Ligotti's long fictional career exhibiting the horrors of consciousness and being. Unlike his earlier literary endeavors, Conspiracy is a decidedly non-fictional work of philosophy. That certainly doesn't mean the elegant flourishes of language Ligotti is identified with will be absent, though. The book will be an undeniably controversial, but colorful read, even if the colors used are the darkest in the spectrum. It will be unleashed on the world in April.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Conspiracy Available for Pre-Order

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Resonance 104.4's Weird Tales for Winter

Sunday, January 24, 2010


This week, Resonance 104.4 FM begins a series of atmospheric readings by various authors entitled "Weird Tales for Winter." The broadcasts will stream at midnight (time zone unclear) each day. The most notable name on the list is that of Thomas Ligotti. An audio rendition of his story "The Bells Will Sound Forever"by Mordant Music will play on January 30th. This particular tale is a selection from his collection In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land.

This rare audio performance of a Ligotti story will be of definite interest to weird fiction readers. Though the other stories and authors lined up for the series are less well known, its theme suggests other weird yarns are worth hearing. More details are reportedly forthcoming from Resonance 104.4's website.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti's Songs of a Dead Dreamer Up for Pre-Order

Wednesday, November 11, 2009


For those who haven't yet heard, Subterranean Press has opened up the gates for pre-orders of their new edition of Thomas Ligotti's Songs of a Dead Dreamer. They're offering a limited number of leather bound deluxe editions in addition to the standard hardcovers. The books will actually finish production and ship out next spring. This short story collection features the original tales of the book that launched Ligotti's weird fiction career, with revised versions that should add a new touch to old gems for seasoned Ligottians.

The nightmarish art of Aeron Alfrey adorns the cover. Alfrey's collage of terror is a welcome contribution; it almost brings full circle the strange cycle of illustrations that have trailed Ligotti's career. An older edition of Songs of a Dead Dreamer was printed by Harry O. Morris, and included frightening black-and-white artwork that holds a slight similarity to Alfrey's own. The cover art for this edition was reportedly inspired by Ligotti's tale "Vastarien."

The best part is that this is the first in a line of Ligotti reprints Subterranean Press has planned for his collections. Grimscribe, Noctuary, and possibly others will appear in subsequent years from the quality small press. Pre-order now for a Ligotti collectible that hasn't looked this fantastic since Dutro Press' books.

-Grim Blogger


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New Ligottian Art in 2009

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The re-publication of Thomas Ligotti's Teatro Grottesco and My Work Is Not Yet Done in cheap paperback has surely exposed his work to a wider audience. In what may be the first faint glimmers of evidence, a small, but noticeable increase in Ligottian fan art has touched the web in recent months. It's entirely possible that images like the following may have been created by long time Ligotti readers. However, it's less likely, as almost all of them are inspired by the tales that comprise the reissued paperbacks.


Not surprisingly, many of these images come from deviantart.com, the web's enduring hub for all manner of amateur fan art. "The Visitation" is a short comic by robinboywonder. Clearly inspired by Ligotti's tale "The Clown Puppet," it gives a fairly lighthearted and original interpretation of the eponymous entity responsible for the narrator's "visitations." The swirling seen through the window seemingly represents a Ligottian void of chaos, but is also reminiscent of the mystery outside Erich Zann's apartment in H.P. Lovecraft's "The Music of Erich Zann."


Tobythulhu has put his digital skills to good use in this illustration of Frank Dominio, the tormented hero of Ligotti's novella My Work Is Not Yet Done. This stylish impression is definitely a look at Dominio after he has taken on the supernatural and spectral powers of retribution granted to him by forces he only comes to understand later. Tobythulhu must be applauded for his faithful depiction of Ligotti's character--right down to the amber tinted glasses and dark suit. The artist's digital manipulation is also vaguely similar to the illustrations Harry O. Morris did for Ligotti early in his literary career.


Crescent23's gallery includes a few photographs of desolate architecture underscored by quotes from "This Degenerate Little Town." As imaged photos of Ligotti's metaphysical dreamscape,
they are quite effective. Several other pictures of mouldering ruins from the degenerate little town, along with other bleak sights apparently captured in Eastern Europe, are posted at the gallery.


Okay, these last two aren't really fan art in the same sense as the previous works. They are illustrations of Thomas Ligotti's story "Nethescurial," graciously provided by the artist Markku Metso on his Drawer blog. The story appears to have been translated and reprinted in a February, 2009, issue of the Finnish speculative fiction journal "Tahtivaeltaja." It nearly goes without saying that these beautiful drawings wonderfully capture the themes of this Ligotti story.

-Grim Blogger


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SF Gospel: Thomas Ligotti's Dark Buddhism

Saturday, September 19, 2009


Besides being its own self-contained review of Thomas Ligotti's recently re-released paperback, My Work Is Not Yet Done, Gabriel McKee's article at "SF Gospel" is an insightful little piece on the author's worldview. Ligotti's attention to the overwhelmingly negative features of physical, conscious existence have become legendary, and have served as a focus for analyzing his work in a moderate handful of essays. However, the depths of the Buddhist or Eastern philosophical connections to Ligotti's fiction are often just grazed.

McKee's review/commentary doesn't tear into the depths of this fascinating entrapment of ideas, but it is a well said summary of Ligotti's affair with Buddhism. McKee does as fine a job noting the similarities as the differences: especially Ligotti's unshakable conviction that there is no liberation save death (and even that's questionable) from a nightmare universe.

-Grim Blogger


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Thomas Ligotti Mentioned in Rolling Stone

Monday, August 31, 2009


Has Thomas Ligotti fallen headfirst into the pool of mainstream culture? Not quite. But as weird writer and longtime Ligotti scholar Matt Cardin informs us (via this thread on Thomas Ligotti Online), the bleak author has been plugged as a muse in a recent article by "Rolling Stone" magazine. The full article focuses on a new album from the band Clutch. Two references to Ligotti came up as the band's leader Neil Fallon discussed his stylistic influences as well as his inspiration for a particular song:

And in fleshing out the mood of Strange Cousins from the West, Fallon found inspiration in modern horror author Thomas Ligotti, 15th Century Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch, true crime stories, historical landmarks and at least one dare.

***

“Strange cousins from the west overstay their welcome” from “Minotaur”
“This line, like most of them, came about while in my basement either late at night or early in the morning,” Fallon says. “I think I was a bit creeped out by a Thomas Ligotti story, not any particular family members of my own.”


This blogger is hardly equipped to be an analyst of lyrics. However, it would be interesting if someone with a keen ear and familiarity with Clutch were to do a scan that explicitly seeks Ligottian overtones in the group's work.

What should one make of the Thomas Ligotti references in "Rolling Stone"? For one, it's a weak demonstration, at best, for claiming that Ligotti is on the verge of entering mainstream culture or becoming much more accessible to the herd--the performance of his re-released paperbacks Teatro Grottesco and My Work Is Not Yet Done would be much better indicators. On the other hand, it definitely shows the enduring hand of Ligotti in a role he has played since his early print appearances: the muse of the underground. Newer artists in the visual, musical, and literary mediums have pointed to his stark impression in their work. This is no surprise, as sympathizers with his worldview and lovers of his adept phrase crafting often hold an inclination or even a talent in some field of art.

In time, this may well translate into Ligotti expanding his "cult following" more than anyone ever expected. Not unlike his fictional character Grossvogel of "The Shadow, The Darkness," who proselytized others to the blackness through the highly successful organisms he awakened in the void.

-Grim Blogger


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Hippocampus Press Announces Two Big Titles: Lovecraft, Ligotti

Sunday, August 30, 2009


Hippocampus Press, an instantly recognizable name in today's publishers of weird literature, has announced two big titles for release in 2010. Thomas Ligotti's long awaited book of philosophy The Conspiracy Against the Human Race is due to be published, along with a two volume biography of H.P. Lovecraft entitled I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H.P. Lovecraft. The latter seemingly represents a new unabridged work by S.T. Joshi, an update to his acclaimed H.P. Lovecraft: A Life. Of course, the full list of pending titles on their website lists a number of less earthshaking, but nevertheless high quality books slated for late 2009 and next year.


In the case of Ligotti's Conspiracy, the wait has been a long and somewhat anxious one over the past five years as the treatise changed publishers, tentative dates, and undoubtedly underwent waves of intense editing. During this time, Thomas Ligotti expanded his essay into a book length monument to philosophical pessimism and horror. Today, the virtually finalized version probably bares little resemblance to the rough draft temporarily published on Thomas Ligotti Online in 2007. The finished product will reportedly be a hardcover with an illustrated dust jacket in a print run of about a thousand copies, much like many other Hippocampus tomes.

Both of these mind salivating titles ought to spark a fever of yearning amongst weird fiction readers. Though just a flicker in the distance, 2010 looks to be a stunning year for the dark and unusual side of speculative literature. Hold tight, though, as 2009 may yet hold its own bizarre delights.

-Grim Blogger


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