Thomas Ligotti - The Shadow At the Bottom of the World.txt

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The Shadow At the Bottom of the World
1 
The Shadow
at the Bottom
of the World
"Thomas Ligotti is an absolute master of supernatural horror and weird fiction, 
and a true original. He pursues his unique vision with admirable honesty 
andrigorousness and conveys it in prose as powerfully evocative as any writer in 
the field. I'd say he might just be a genius."
--Ramsey Campbell
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Songs of a Dead Dreamer
Grimscribe: His Lives and Works
Noctuary
The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein & Other Gothic Tales
The Nightmare Factory
In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land
I Have a Special Plan for This World
This Degenerate Little Town
My Work Is Not Yet Done: Three Tales of Corporate Horror
Crampton
Death Poems
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The Shadow
at the Bottom
of the World
Foreword by Douglas A. Anderson
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Cold Spring address
P.O. Box 284, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 E-mail: Jopenroad@aol.com
Copyright ?2005 by Thomas Ligotti
"Foreword" copyright ?2005
by Douglas A. Anderson
ISBN 1-59360-058-5 Library of Congress Control No. 2005928861
- All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America
"Horror Stories: A Nightmare Scenario" copyright ?2005 by Thomas Ligotti
Stories from Songs of a Dead Dreamer, including "Dr. Voke and Mr. Veech," 
"Alice's Last Adventure," "Vastarien," and "Dr. Locrian's Asylum," copyright 
?1989 by Thomas Ligotti
Stories from Grimscribe, including ""The Last Feast of Harlequin," "The Mystics 
of Muelenburg," "The Spectacles in the Drawer," "The Shadow at the Bottom of the 
World," "Nethescurial," and "The Cocoons," copyright ?1991 by Thomas Ligotti
Stories from Noctuary, including "The Strange Design of Master Rignolo" and "The 
Tsalal," copyright ?1994 by Thomas Ligotti
Stories from The Nightmare Factory, including "The Bungalow House," "Teatro 
Grottesco," and "The Red Tower," copyright ?1996 by Thomas Ligotti
"Purity" copyright ?2003 by Thomas Ligotti
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To the memory of my uncles Leonard Ligotti and Joseph Mazzo.
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Contents
Foreword by Douglas A. Anderson 8
Introduction: Horror Stories: A Nightmare Scenario by Thomas Ligotti 10
The Last Feast of Harlequin 17
Dr. Voke and Mr. Veech 53
Alice's Last Adventure 63
Vastarien 80
Dr. Locrian's Asylum 94
The Mystics of Muelenburg 104
The Spectacles in the Drawer 112
The Strange Design of Master Rignolo 124
The Shadow at the Bottom of the World 135
Nethescurial 144
The Cocoons 158
The Tsalal 168
The Bungalow House 196
Teatro Grottesco 216
The Red Tower 234
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The Shadow At the Bottom of the World
8 The Shadow At the Bottom of the World
Foreword
In the historical development of the artistic horror story, there are three 
major figures. The first is, of course, Edgar Allan Poe (1809-
1849), the father of the modern psychological horror story. The next, 
chronologically, is H. P. Lovecraft (1890-1937), who brought cosmicism--an 
awareness of the vastness of the universe and of the insignificance of the human 
race-- to the weird tale. And now there is Thomas Ligotti (b. 1953), who has 
extended Lovecraft's cosmicism by suggesting that an inescapable malignancy and 
nightmare inheres in all existence, manifesting itself in both the individual 
psyche and the physical cosmos. Interestingly, these three writers have found 
the short story rather than the novel to be their ideal vehicle for expression. 
For Ligotti, "the short story allows a purer and more intense expression of 
horror ... than do novels."
Born in Detroit, Ligotti grew up in a nearby suburb and in 1977 graduated from 
Wayne State University with a B.A. in English. From
1979 to 2001 he worked in the literary criticism division of the Gale Research 
Company (now Thomson Gale), a publisher of reference books. Ligotti then moved 
to Florida, where he makes his living as an editorial freelancer.
He began writing horror fiction around 1976, and published his first short story 
in 1981. His first book, a small press collection entitled Songs of a Dead 
Dreamer, came out in an edition of 300 copies in 1985. Today it is a 
highly-prized rarity. An expanded edition appeared from a trade publisher in 
1989, followed by further collections: Grimscribe (1991), Noctuary (1994), and 
the omnibus volume The Nightmare Factory (1996). Since then Ligotti has worked 
mostly with small publishers, like Durtro Press, which has issued elegant 
limited editions like In a Foreign Town, In a Foreign Land (1997), a collection 
of four
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interconnected stories; an unproduced screenplay, Crampton (2002), written in 
collaboration with Brandon Trenz; and some small books of Ligotti's verse, I 
Have a Special Plan for This World (2000), This Degenerate Little Town (2001), 
and Death Poems (2004).
In 1994, Silver Salamander Press collected Ligotti's vignettes in The Agonizing 
Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein & Other Gothic Tales. Another small press, 
Mythos Books, has published My Work Is Not Yet Done: Three Tales of Corporate 
Horror (2002), whose eponymous story is Ligotti's lengthiest tale. Forthcoming 
from Mythos Books is Ligotti's long essay, The Conspiracy Against the Human 
Race: On the Horror of Life and the Art of Horror, a kind of personal credo of 
Ligotti's views on life and literature. The two main websites devoted to 
Ligotti's work are Thomas Ligotti Online (www.ligotti.net) and The Art of 
Grimscribe (www.ligotti.de.vu). Both websites have a complete Ligotti 
bibliography, and much else of interest.
The stories in this volume were selected by Ligotti and myself as an 
introductory sampler of his works. They are arranged in the order in which they 
were written. Thus, "The Least Feast of Harlequin"-- which Ligotti has referred 
to as the first story he wrote that he thought was good enough not to throw 
away--opens the collection, and "Purity," one of his most recent tales, 
concludes it. The bulk of these stories, however, date from the late 1980s and 
early 1990s, Ligotti's most productive period.
Unlike the bulk of horror fiction past and present, Ligotti's work" is 
essentially outside the tradition of strict realism in which a neatly demarcated 
natural world is threatened by a supernatural menace, an aberration in the 
normal course of things that more often than not maybe combated and conquered. 
In the universe of Ligotti's fiction, the natural and the supernatural merge 
into the same nightmare; to distinguish them is meaningless and no salvation is 
to be found in this world or any other. As Ligotti has noted, many of his 
stories "focus on those anomalous moments in which a character's perception of 
his world is shaken and he is forced to confront a frightening and essentially 
chaotic universe." Which is, in its way, a realism of the highest order.
--Douglas A. Anderson
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The Shadow At the Bottom of the World
Introduction
HORROR STORIES: A NIGHTMARE SCENARIO
Extracted from the forthcoming book, The Conspiracy against the Human Race: On 
the Horror of Life and the Art of Horror.
For a horror story to be effective, it must both reflect and deform the world we 
know, the place in which we eat and fight and procreate. This means that it must 
not intrude on the sacred ground already being worked by established 
institutions of faith, which at some point inevitably deviate into the 
unknowable in order to comfort their audience rather than distress them. Should 
it follow this craven path, the horror story would lose its greatest value--the 
power to convey truths that have currency with respect to our evolving 
trepidations rather than perpetuating some primitive lore of the remote past. A 
literary law that only the greatest writers in the genre, such as Edgar Allan 
Poe and H. P. Lovecraft, have followed in their writings maybe stated as 
follows: No horror tale shall take advantage of its readers by playing upon 
their religious beliefs. This is an easy and a vile game that only the lowest 
form of scribe would perpetrate on those who already have their heads filled 
with all kinds of fears conditioned into them since they were children in the 
hands of an angry god. Fortunately, we find that a model for creating horror has 
been provided for us that has nothing to do with preachers and pulpits and the 
puppetry of doctrinal compliance. This model is given to us in the form of 
nightmares, which conform to no orthodoxies except those of our developing 
fears. No bad dream ever ended with its dreamer finding salvation from his 
mind's hell. Such finales are always invented after the fact by storytellers 
with a redemptive agenda.
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As necessity dictates to most of us that we must be conscious of death, disease, 
damage, and derangement, however reluctantly and infrequently we submit to this 
knowledge, it also forces us to leave that world on a regular time-table and 
enter another one where we face horrors beyond the natural, warped realities 
that are produced simply because our brains have shifted to a different mode of 
activity and that by the reckoning of our wide-awake selves can only be 
described as lunatic. An equally apt term would be "supernatural," since there 
obtains a tradition of symbolically equating states of mental abnormality with 
bizarre incidents in the "real" world, as elaborated by Sigmund Freud in his 
famous essay "The Uncanny" (1919). This is the basis for the longtime 
association between the supernatural and horror fiction. When we take a ghost 
from our dreams and place it in the context of waking consciousness, if only in 
the pages of a ghost story, we have chosen, as though freely and of our own 
will, to engage in the metaphysics of the mistake. The point of this act is a 
tangle of motives we cannot begin to unravel any bett...
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