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  • Touch the cow. Do it now.
    well, that would be pretty badass.
  • I have cut a caper with the dancing mad god
    I finished Wool by Hugh Howey last night. It was quite engaging - some of the twists were a bit predictable, but it was a fun ride. It's good if you're looking for a little escapism and to get your mind off things without having to think too hard. Had a lot of Fallout vibes. 
  • after about 5 million years i finally finished 'news of a kidnapping' by marquez which was pretty cool and a kind of a crash course in early 90s colombian politics
  • fight. dream. horse. love.
    I read The Disaster Artist (the book about the making of The Room) and I don't think James Franco has the acting chops to portray Tommy Wiseau
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    Have you see Spring Breakers?
  • a couple days back i bought the penguin classics reissue of Songs of a Dead Dreamer and Grimscribe

    it was cool seeing it and also Teatro Grotesco at the book store, which previously had no Ligotti (i had checked multiple times)
  • For once, or maybe twice, I was in my prime.
    Foucault's Pendulum certainly is a book.
  • kill living beings
    the moral is funny
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    https://storybundle.com/fiction

    ATTN Sredni and also probably other people.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”

    https://storybundle.com/fiction


    ATTN Sredni and also probably other people.

    WHY MUST I BE POOR? OAO
  • Munch munch, chomp chomp...
    Oh, why must I lack a job?
  • Touch the cow. Do it now.
    The idea of a fiction "bundle" is intriguing but this seems to be only e-books, and, as we all know, I'm not gonna read a book unless I can kill a tree in the process.
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inne_pieśni

    Sad that this still isn't translated in English since the last time I checked, which was years ago.
  • My dreams exceed my real life

    https://storybundle.com/fiction


    ATTN Sredni and also probably other people.
    Update: The Bestiary is really good.
  • I have cut a caper with the dancing mad god
    I read "I Have a Special Plan for This World" by Thomas Ligotti today during my breaks at work. It was a good short story, and I liked it. It used some neat repetition techniques to build up tensions and create a feeling oppression on the part of the reader. Apparently there is also a spoken word poem of the same name also written by Ligotti with Current 93, which I think it rather interesting - I have yet to listen to it, but I don't think I know any other authors who've intentionally created two separate pieces with the same title. I read part of "The Nightmare Network," as well, but I think I'm going to reread it from the beginning - I was running out of time on my break and sort of rushed it - before forming a full opinion.

    I'm about to start "My Work Is Not Yet Done" by Ligotti this evening, as well. 
  • edited 2015-12-16 05:53:46
    I have cut a caper with the dancing mad god
    Just finished listening to the poem version of I Have A Special Plan For This World. Man, that was... something else. I feel a vague sense of discomfort.
  • Just finished listening to the poem version of I Have A Special Plan For This World. Man, that was... something else. I feel a vague sense of discomfort.

    It really is. David Tibet's voice with Ligotti's words are amazing. It's probably the only song that has given me a sense of awe and dread, in the best way possible.

    Current 93 and Ligotti did two other collaborations together, at least as far as I know. There's "This Degenerate Little Town", which is another poem with Current 93 providing the backing music, this time read by Thomas Ligotti himself. You can find the track itself on youtube. The other album, " In A Foreign Town, In A Foreign Land", is available at current 93's bandcamp page. It was originally released as a book and CD combo, where CD would provide ambiance for the stories while you were reading them. I don't know if you can find the stories online, JHM/Sredni Vashtar might know more about that, as he's the resident Ligotti expert, but if a physical copy of the book will cost you roughly 500$ and that's for a used edition.
  • edited 2015-12-16 08:37:51

    Ligotti also did something on or inspired Patripassian from All The Pretty Little Horses, the liner notes mention that he lent the song "the phrase and the title" which is a little vague
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    "In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land" was reprinted in the fairly easy-to-find Teatro Grottesco, although finding it standalone is harder. The CD portion has been reissued at least once, however. The physical text of "This Degenerate Little Town" is much rarer, although I *think* it's in the first Durtro edition of Teatro Grottesco—I can check; I have it—but that's in itself pretty rare.

    As for "Patripassian", he reads the poem from "Les Fleurs" over the phone at the very end. The title is a reference to a particular Gnostic heresy which asserts that the Trinity is an illusion in the eye of the believer and that God in Himself suffered on the cross and, in the mind of the believer, suffers still for mankind. It's a very Ligottian take on the dogma.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    Also: Ligotti is himself a musician, although he has done relatively little work. His lap steel guitar appears on the Current 93 track "A Dream of the Inmost Light" on the benefit compilation Foxtrot.
  • edited 2015-12-17 00:37:23

    got around to read the main stories of The King in Yellow, spoopy stuff
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    Repairer of Reputations is the best
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    I have literally been meaning to read "The Repairer of Reputations" for years at this point. I will go do that.
  • edited 2015-12-25 04:15:37
    Munch munch, chomp chomp...
    Strongly tempted to buy Pawnee: The Greatest Town in America. I just might for myself as a sort of, I don't know, mini-congratulations on making it through the year.
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    ETA Hoffman's The Sandman is a weird story.

    Also reminiscent of bits of Bloodborne in odd ways.
  • edited 2015-12-29 00:09:39
    My dreams exceed my real life

    ETA Hoffman's The Sandman is a weird story.


    Also reminiscent of bits of Bloodborne in odd ways.
    Seriously, it seems like a story about a dude going insane because of a traumatic childhood experiment and then the robot comes in
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”

    ETA Hoffman's The Sandman is a weird story.


    Also reminiscent of bits of Bloodborne in odd ways.
    Seriously, it seems like a story about a dude going insane because of a traumatic childhood experiment and then the robot comes in
    And it predates the better part of the horror genre, too. Great story.
  • i have just finished taras bulba by gogol which is highly recommended if you like tales of cossacks getting drunk, cossacks impaling children and burning women alive, anti semitism, and homoerotic undertones
  • i also read another collection of chekhov stories and he still basically styles all over every other short story writer
  • i didnt post it in this thread but because it was inevitable due to my relationship status ive been reading lots of Ligotti lately and Notes on the Writing of Horror is such a good short story that i was in a state of absolute hysterics by the time it was over, good stuff
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    :3 !
  • I read Asterios Polyp last night

    I really enjoyed it, the art was superb, and it was very well constructed in general

    but the basic plot skeleton was very...

    the term I used when talking with Julian last night was "oscar-bait", even though that is movie-specific I feel it kinda hits the nail on the head
  • edited 2016-02-22 06:19:51

    i didn't like Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? much
  • kill living beings
    Why so?
  • Touch the cow. Do it now.
    Why not?
  • it wasnt anywhere near as thematically interesting as Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said, characters werent as interesting either, some of the exposition fell right into "as you know, fellow future person" territory
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    buster friendly
  • edited 2016-02-28 08:35:24
    kill living beings
    continuing my trend of mostly reading fiction while away from computers i read Howl's Moving Castle today. i got it cos i liked the movie but it's a great book in its own right, and the differences from the film are kinda interesting

    Spoiler:
    • probably most obviously, Sophie has a latent witch talent of being able to convince inanimate objects to do things. by the end of the book she can animate a staff to fight for her. most of the wizardlike characters remark on her being magicky before it's obvious so that's neat foreshadow whatever thing too. iirc there was no hint of this in the movie
    • in the movie one of howl's big secrets is that he's a big bird thing. i don't remember the details, maybe it was a curse. in the book the secret is he's from Wales. just regular modern Wales. he has a degree in mythology and his family thinks he's a layabout. it's where the black door in the castle goes, instead of the Ypres sky.
    • from the movie i always assumed the "wastes" in "witch of the wastes" was the hilly area above the treeline that the castle wanders around in. in the book it's more clearly a big desert adjacent to the flowery area, and the witch has a giant sandcastle that seemed pretty cool. i liked the description of having torch flames that you couldn't center in your vision.
    • in the movie i don't know what the witch of the wastes' deal was, but in the book she's pretty nuts and is trying to make a perfect human out of various important people's body parts, so that she can make it king and marry it and be queen. good shit

    so yeah, dwj seems like a pretty good author

  • her chrestomanci books were a staple of my childhood for sure
  • kill living beings
    I read "The Lives of Christopher Chant" or at least part of it, as a kid, but it kind of freaked me out too much to continue. which is odd in retrospect since i read plenty of weird shit
  • My dreams exceed my real life

    I read "The Lives of Christopher Chant" or at least part of it, as a kid, but it kind of freaked me out too much to continue. which is odd in retrospect since i read plenty of weird shit

    The nice guy was part of a smuggling operation and the titular character's uncle was the villain
  • kill living beings
    k watched the movie again and yeah the plot's totally different. i like how suliman goes from "missing royal wizard" to "royal sorceress who is very active and kind of terrifying". kind of a neat example of an adaptation and an adaptee that i both like, i guess

    also the prince is togusa

    yiddish policeman's union next
  • kill living beings
    So I wasn't really feeling all the noir tropes I don't really understand due to lack of history with the genre, but that went to a pretty cool place. i should probably read a mystery novel sometime that doesn't end in a massive conspiracy, but i guess if you don't than it's, what, a Christie short or a CSI episode?
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    Christ, you read fast.
  • “I'm surprised. Those clothes… but, aren't you…?”
    Naney reads at roughly that speed, I think? Or can.
  • My dreams exceed my real life
    You should read another china mieville book.

    Like Perdido Street Station.
  • edited 2016-03-01 02:47:23
    kill living beings
    yeah, i dunno how i got this way. nowadays i mostly read nonfiction that is impossible to read quickly so i don't notice as much. but the yids, they got very nice prose, they got looking like something that fell out of a vacuum cleaner bag,

    You should read another china mieville book.


    Like Perdido Street Station.
    yes, indeed i should. i wanted to read, um. embassytown i think it was called.
  • kill living beings
    incidentally, of the alt history aspect of the novel - which didn't make it feel like sci-fi, that was nice - my favorite part was the offhand and irrelevant mention near the end of the prime minister of manchuria shaking the hands of some manchurian astronauts
  • I have cut a caper with the dancing mad god
    Embassytown was interesting and didn't entirely go in the directions I thought it would. I'd be interested in others' thoughts on it. 
  • kill living beings
    i was doing a lot of mental comparison with the city and the city, especially early on. lots of similarities... kind of homage to old detective stuff, being set in an economic disaster area, protagonist dies halfway through, pursuing cases the department put an axe on for unconspiratorial reasons, fuckin conspiracy... but i think yids was more on the crime novel end of things than city. i don't know if i could articulate why, and it might just be me forgetting things about city. but mieville was just more wrapped up in metaphysics and weird stuff, it feels like, i guess.
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