Author:Thomas Ligotti
Thomas Ligotti's debut collection, Songs of a Dead Dreamer, and his second, Grimscribe, permanently inscribed a new name in the pantheon of horror fiction. Influenced by the strange terrors of Lovecraft and Poe and by the brutal absurdity of Kafka, Ligotti crafted his own brand of existential horror, which shocks at the deepest levels. In decaying cities and lurid dreamscapes tormented by the lunatic pageantry of masks, puppets, and obscure ritual, Ligotti's works lay bare the sickening madness of the human condition.
From his dark imagination emerge stories like "The Frolic" and "The Last Feast of Harlequin," waking nightmares that splinter the schemes validating our existence. In these collections, Ligotti bends reality until it cracks, opening fissures through which he invites us to gaze on the unsettling darkness below-an ordeal from which one may perhaps return, but never to be the same
Thomas Ligotti has had one of the most quietly extraordinary careers in the history of horror fiction. He is a dense, witty, and enormously inventive writer
—— The Philadelphia InquirerProfound, beautiful, moving. You will go back to a little gem that has wormed its way into your mind and stuck there, and discover that it is indeed a little gem, which sparkles a different way each time and flashes with a brief beauty or hidden meaning
—— Susan Hill , SpectatorDavis hints insistently at how abundant nothingness can be when we bother to look at it
—— Joshua Cohen , Times Literary SupplementAmong my most favourite writers. Read her now!
—— A. M. HomesCan't and Won't shows Davis using precise language to articulate the kind of ideas and impressions which are usually left to float around the subconscious
—— Max Liu , Independenta landmark book, full of surprises.
—— TelegraphLish may have helped put Carver on the map of the American short story, but the writer made himself its capital city.
—— Sunday TimesHis style is fearsome: remorselessly spare and precise yet so sharply nuanced that the ordinary people he writes about are exposed in all their messy, emotional weakness...Pure pleasure to read on its own, it is also fascinating to compare against the Lish version.
—— Victoria Moore , Daily MailHere, for the first time, we can read the original versions. They are very good.
—— Michael Kerrigan , ScotsmanThese vignettes remain tremendously distinctive and their characters' generally doomed attempts to keep their hope alive "in the world of men - where defeat and death are more the natural order of things" are wry and touching. Carver's landscapes of motels, "negroes" and "longhairs" are documents from another era, but they are grubby, flawed little gems that still fascinate.
—— James Smart , GuardianThe surprise is that despite Carver's well-earned reputation for spare, grainy prose that dipped into the hard-bitten lives of his characters, these stories have a richness of texture that complements Carver's austerity of tone. Lish seems to have flattened Carver's style, rather than sharpening it, and the tales in Beginners demonstrate just how great a writer Carver was
—— James Urquhart , Financial TimesA precocious talent.
—— Irish ExaminerAmbiguous gender roles, grotesque situations and the whiff of decay hanging over The Shore – brilliantly imagined through the stench of chicken factories – lend a southern Gothic feel to the writing. There are sections of brutal realism, magic realism and speculative fiction. Other dystopias come to mind, notably David Mitchell’s time-hopping epic Cloud Atlas, but also Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and its themes of sexually transmitted plagues and subjugation of women.
—— Irish TimesA haunting and staggering debut novel, this is a multi-layered exploration of redneck Virginia through the eyes of its women.
—— Evening Standard magazineAn impressive debut novel
—— Sunday TimesAn original new voice in fiction
—— Big IssueLyrical writing and quietly tragic storytelling
—— Huffington PostA really promising debut . . . the beauty of it is astounding . . . enchanting.
—— Tiffany Jenkins[A] savage yet hyper-readable debut … [a] harrowing, high-octane novel.
—— Observer, 'Paperback of the Week'This is not a novel for the faint-hearted but dare to read it for the sinuous fluency of the writing.
—— Maureen DuffyThis is an outstanding book, one that makes the reader pause and take stock. It is unsettling, challenging and yet beautiful – made all the more so by the author’s pared back language and careful evocation of the land, marshes, oyster beds and crabs, and the miseries and small joys of island life … this is an extraordinary beginning to a literary career.
—— The Literary ShedA superb first novel . . . [it is] a significant achievement to produce a book of this quality . . . [there is] a wonderful sense of place.
—— Graham FarmeloReminiscent of David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas and just as ambitious
—— StylistAn impressive debut.
—— The Writes of WomenAlready on the longlist for the Baileys Prize, this is an island story told in daisy-chain sequence, a series of succinct vignettes that come together as a vivid portrait of the Shore itself, until you can almost smell the salt air and the stench of slaughtered chicken.
—— For Books SakeSome extraordinary images . . . a wonderful first novel.
—— Michael ArdittiTaylor’s prose is dreamy and surprisingly playful.
—— S magazine (Sunday Express)A wonderful read.
—— InterzoneExuberant, magical and incredibly ambitious, but Sara Taylor pulls it off with style.
—— The BookbagTaylor shows a special affinity with the lives of women that makes for a powerful debut