" It is new, indeed for I made it last night in a dream of strange cities: and dreams are older than brooding Tyre, or the
contemplative Sphinx, or garden-girdled Babylon" The Call of Cthulhu

Monday, May 20, 2019

Vastarien: A Literary Journal (Thomas Ligotti)

  I have made no secret of my admiration for the works of Thomas Ligotti so when I noticed a journal called Vastarien, (available at the Kindle store) which I recognized as the title of one of his stories, with a wonderfully evocative cover by Dave Felton I had to check it out. I have read stories from two issues so far, "The Gods in Their Seats, Unblinking" by Kurt Fawver and "Commencement" by Joanna Parypinski, both were brilliant. I have included a quote and link below to the announcement on The Teeming Brain website that Vastarien has won an award as Magazine of the Year from the annual This is Horror Awards. 
"Vastarien: A Literary Journal was conceived five years ago by a handful of people who wanted to see more writing about and in response to the work of writer/thinker Thomas Ligotti. Since then, our publication has been bombarded with stellar, but unusual, work by authors and artists — many of whom are underrepresented and/or newer voices. Without them and the incredible support Vastarien continues to receive from its devoted readers, this singular journal never would have come to fruition. Thanks so much to all of you and the staff of This Is Horror for this wonderful award."

—Jon Padgett, Editor-in-Chief of Vastarien: A Literary Journal
THIS IS HORROR FICTION MAGAZINE OF THE YEAR


Also, The Teeming Brain offers an interview with Thomas Ligotti (see link below).
"Certain writers are more prone to eliciting this experience than others, simply because of the way they write. For example, many millions of people have read and loved The Da Vinci Code, but it’s unlikely that any of them have found the voice of their soul reflected in Dan Brown’s prose. The same holds true for virtually all genre writers and mass market writers. When was the last time somebody felt profoundly confirmed and transformed by reading a Robert Ludlum novel? Or a Dean Koontz novel? Or a Conan story? Or a Harlequin romance? It seems the transformative power of literature is almost always found in the explicitly “literary” branch of the family tree, and with a few rare exceptions in the work of authors who write in a specific genre but do so with a distinctive voice and sophisticated style, and under the power of a driving personal vision. In such cases the term “literary” is often appended to the generic category label, so that for instance we today have the subgenre known as “literary horror.”"

from Interview with Thomas Ligotti
It’s All a Matter of Personal Pathology

http://www.teemingbrain.com/interview-with-thomas-ligotti/

Photo; detail of Chris Mars illustration for the cover of the Penguin edition of Songs of a Dead Dreamer and Grimscribe by Thomas ligotti

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