Sunday, December 27, 2009

A Ghost Story for Christmas & a REALM Update

For those in the Toronto area, I encourage you to join us tonight at The Central (603 Markham St.) for A Ghost Story for Christmas: books, spirits, and live readings! This is a free event. We hope to see you there.

Also, for anyone who pre-ordered the Deluxe or Lettered editions of The Darkly Splendid Realm: as of earlier this month, Dark Regions Press were just waiting on the arrival of the dust-jackets, which were due imminently. Once the dust-jackets are received, all orders will begin shipping. Keep a three-lobed burning eye on your mailbox...

There will be trade paperback copies of Realm for sale tonight.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

OMENS

One of the great advantages of unleashing a book upon the world is that copies find their way into the hands of new readers all the time.

Two gents were kind enough to share their recent thoughts on my 2007 collection Omens:

Jeffrey Thomas, author of the excellent Punktown mythos, has posted his views here

Scott E. Candey of Crionic Mind music shares his impressions here

My thanks to both Chris and Jeffrey for taking the time to spread the grim word around.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Interview on Thomas Ligotti Online

The good Phillip Stecco recently conducted an interview with me for Thomas Ligotti Online.

You can read the interview here.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Recent Reviews

Now that copies of The Darkly Splendid Realm are beginning to cross critics' desks, a couple of early reviews have made their way online.

Don D'Amassa shares his thoughts on the book here.

Mario Guslandi gives his impressions on Hellnotes.

I was quite happy to see Mario reviewing because he reviewed my first two collections as well, so it's nice to see the tradition continuing.

Both these initial reviews reflect precisely what I suspected was going to happen with The Darkly Splendid Realm: some people would love some stories in the book, others might latch on to different ones. I'm perfectly content with this.

As I've stated earlier, I tried to make this new collection as diverse as I could without turning it into a novelty book. My only criteria was that the stories maintain a literate tone and had their customary dark shading. Since I'm forever going on about how richly diverse horror fiction can be, I thought it best to put my money where my mouth is. That's why readers of Realm will encounter cosmic horror, weird tales, ghost stories, visceral body horror, vignettes, a novelette, a story set in ancient Gaul, and an essay about fear. It's designed to be a banquet; an unsettling one mind you, but a banquet just the same.

Even if you find one entree to your liking I'll consider this book a success. But hopefully there will be more than a few readers who savour the entire menu. ;-)