Suggestion request
Gary Webb
gwebb8686 at gmail.com
Sun Nov 3 01:25:37 UTC 2019
The Vorrh trilogy by Brian Catling... it’s unlike anything I’ve ever read...trippy & surreal, almost Blakean...
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 2, 2019, at 8:31 PM, Jan Devenish <jndvnsh at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I picked up Chants de Maldoror by Lautremont before Halloween. Not dipped
> into it yet but surely fits the hallucinatory and macabre that you're
> after.
> If anyone else has read it, please chime in with what you thought...
>
>> On Sat, Nov 2, 2019, 7:07 PM John Bailey, <sundayjb at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Paul Tremblay's The Cabin at the End of the World ticks all your boxes.
>> Great mix of cosmic horror, intimate storytelling and compulsive narrative
>> momentum.
>>
>> On Sun, 3 Nov. 2019, 9:42 am Mark Thibodeau, <jerkyleboeuf at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I'm looking to discover some new literature.
>>>
>>> Something horrific and cosmic and disturbing and weird and cultish.
>>>
>>> Something Thomas Ligotti-ish, Laird Barron-ish, Jorge Luis Borgesian,
>>> or HP Lovecraftian... only not those four, because I've read
>>> everything from them (and most of Lovecraft's heirs).
>>>
>>> Something that mixes philosophy and horror, like the works of Eugene
>>> Thacker, only more fictional. Or Reza Negarestani. Or group projects,
>>> experimental stuff, like Audint Unsound:Undead (Google it).
>>>
>>> Got any recommendations for me?
>>>
>>> Mark/Jerky
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