Thomas Ligotti

""...I’ve conceived of stories that were just too disturbing for me to write. If you can write something, then it’s only so disturbing. Anything truly disturbing can’t even be written. Even if it could, no one could stand to read it. And writing is essentially a means of entertainment for both the writer and the reader. I don’t care who the writer is—literature is entertainment or it is nothing."

Thomas Ligotti, in an interview with Neddal Ayad"

One of the most respected writers in the field of supernatural horror alive today, Thomas Ligotti, in critical terms, has it all. He has been nominated for and won awards for his short stories and poetry on numerous occasions, gaining the accolades of everyone from Ramsey Campbell to Poppy Z Brite and accumulating a wildly devoted cult following. His prose has been favorably compared to Edgar Allan Poe and the Decadent poets of fin-de-siècle France, and before he even had released his first story collection, the late Cthulhu Mythos archivist Lin Carter declared him the Spiritual Successor to HP Lovecraft.

Whence comes the logical question: "So why haven't I heard of this guy?"

In short, because Thomas Ligotti is the Thomas Pynchon of the Cosmic Horror Story.

To elaborate: Ligotti has, since his early twenties, been afflicted with agoraphobia, panic-anxiety disorder, and severe bipolar disorder, rendering him unable to, for example, meet directly with fans or conduct face-to-face interviews. Early on, there were even questions as to whether the man actually existed, with some claiming that Thomas Ligotti was actually a pseudonym for a more famous writer; these rumors began to lose credence following a series of phone interviews, and all but ceased following the proliferation of email.

Perhaps even more damaging to Ligotti's notoriety - although ever appreciated by his devoted fanbase - was his steadfast dedication to the small press, with some of his collections only being produced in editions of under a thousand.particularly extreme example, look here. And yes, the webmaster has a copy. Granted, most of his works were later released in trade paperback, but even these have gone out of print. Only recently has the publisher Mythos Books begun to rectify this, to the extent that copies of Ligotti's most recent fiction (My Work Is Not Yet Done and Teatro Grottesco) and a retrospective (The Shadow At The Bottom Of The World) are now available in major chain stores, while older collections are gradually being reissued in revised form. Which has also pleased the fans.

His longform poem I Have a Special Plan for This World was recorded as a song by Current 93.

Definitely Needs More Love.

Tropes evident in Thomas Ligotti's works include:

 * And I Must Scream
 * Anti-Hero: Finding a straight hero in a Ligotti story is like finding a Happy Ending: If you think that you have, one can be certain that you are terribly, terribly wrong.
 * Author Tract: The Conspiracy Against The Human Race, a book-length non-fiction treatise on philosophical pessimism. It is guaranteed to crush every hopeful bone in your body.
 * Bittersweet Ending: In Ligotti's entire oeuvre, only two stories can be said to have anything close to a positive conclusion, those being Just to give you an idea of how bitter even Ligotti's "happy" endings are,
 * Black Comedy: The tone of many of his first person stories is extremely snarky, which ultimately only adds to the horror of his endings.
 * Blue and Orange Morality: Attempting to assign moral values to the behaviour of Ligotti's characters, human or not, is futile in the extreme.
 * Body Horror: Generally averted, though "The Cocoons", "The Spectacles in the Drawer" and "The Tsalal" all contain some extremely visceral scenes.
 * Cosmic Horror Story
 * Crapsack World
 * Cruel and Unusual Death: But rarely "onstage."
 * Cruel Twist Ending
 * Cthulhu Mythos: "The Sect of the Idiot" is definitely a Mythos story, though "The Prodigy of Dreams", "Nethescurial", "Vastarien" and "The Last Feast of Harlequin" (which was dedicated to HP Lovecraft) are all at least considered part of the Fanon.
 * Darkness Equals Death: Played with in various ways.
 * Deadpan Snarker / The Snark Knight: Most of Ligotti's more detailed protagonists are this, resulting in some surprisingly funny moments. The man himself is also a fine specimen of the latter.
 * First-Person Smartass: Naturally.
 * Downer Ending
 * Eldritch Abomination
 * Eldritch Location: The titular Dark World of "Vastarien" is a standout in modern literature.
 * Enigmatic Minion: "The Clown Puppet" is perhaps the epitome of this trope, as well as its most confusing example.
 * A Fete Worse Than Death: "The Last Feast of Harlequin", "The Greater Festival of Masks".
 * Gainax Ending: Any of his more experimental stories, especially "The Nightmare Network".
 * God Is Evil: And how. For some explanation, please read "Nethescurial".
 * Humans Are Special: Brutally deconstructed in The Conspiracy Against The Human Race.
 * ~The Little Shop That Wasn't There Yesterday~: Ligotti loves ambiguous locations, though "The Astronomic Blur" from "Sideshow," and Other Stories is one of the most unusual.
 * Keep Circulating the Tapes: The seminal Songs of a Dead Dreamer has been reprinted once, but neither edition is currently available through retail. A few copies are available online at exorbitant prices.
 * Lost Episode: Several stories published through small-press magazines have never been collected or reprinted.
 * Medical Horror: "The Cocoons" specifically, though hearing that someone bears the title of "doctor" is usually a bad sign in the Ligotti universe.
 * Mind Screw: Par for the course, though some stories ("The Greater Festival of Masks", "Notes on the Writing of Horror", "The Nightmare Network") are more perplexing than others.
 * New Weird: Considered to be one of the Trope Makers.
 * Nietzsche Wannabe: Interestingly averted with the man himself, who refuses the "nihilist" distinction and is extremely well-versed in pessimistic philosophy (as evidenced by The Conspiracy Against the Human Race). Your Mileage May Vary as to some of his followers, however, as well as a number of his less sympathetic protagonists and antagonists.
 * Nothing Is Scarier
 * Our Vampires Are Different: "The Lost Art of Twilight".
 * Our Werewolves Are Different: "The Real Wolf". Hello, Deconstruction!
 * Our Zombies Are Different: "Autumnal".
 * Personal Horror
 * Perspective Flip: Most of the vignettes in The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein and Other Gothic Tales.
 * Purple Prose: Many of his more abstract vignettes fall into this category, albeit rarely to the degree of his chief inspirations.
 * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: The Conspiracy Against The Human Race is basically this as applied to everyone that has ever lived.
 * Scary Scarecrows: "The Shadow at the Bottom of the World".
 * The Stars Are Going Out: Played with.
 * Surreal Horror: Even Ligotti's most realistic stories have a tendency to rely on a modicum of dream logic. Case in point: "The Frolic".
 * True Art Is Incomprehensible: Played for Laughs (of a rather subtle, bleak kind) in many of the stories in Teatro Grottesco, most of which are set in art communities.
 * The Übermensch: Deconstructed, with ruthless vigour, in "The Shadow, The Darkness".
 * Ultimate Evil
 * Wham Line: So very, very many.