Tales of Mystery and Imagination

Tales of Mystery and Imagination

" Tales of Mystery and Imagination es un blog sin ánimo de lucro cuyo único fin consiste en rendir justo homenaje a los escritores de terror, ciencia-ficción y fantasía del mundo. Los derechos de los textos que aquí aparecen pertenecen a cada autor.

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Showing posts with label Thomas Ligotti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Ligotti. Show all posts

Thomas Ligotti: The Red Tower



The ruined factory stood three stories high in an otherwise featureless landscape. Although somewhat imposing on its own terms, it occupied only the most unobtrusive place within the gray emptiness of its surroundings, its presence serving as a mere accent upon a desolate horizon. No road led to the factory, nor were there any traces of one that might have led to it at some time in the distant past. If there had ever been such a road it would have been rendered useless as soon as it arrived at one of the four, red-bricked sides of the factory, even in the days when the facility was in full operation. The reason for this was simple: no doors had been built into the factory, no loading docks or entranceways allowed penetration of the outer walls of the structure, which was solid brick on all four sides without even a single window below the level of the second floor. The phenomenon of a large factory so closed off from the outside world was a point of extreme fascination to me. It was almost with regret that I ultimately learned about the factory’s subterranean access. But of course that revelation in its turn also became a source for my truly degenerate sense of amazement, my decayed fascination.

The factory had long been in ruins, its innumerable bricks worn and crumbling, its many windows shattered. Each of the three enormous stories that stood above the ground level was vacant of all but dust and silence. The machinery, which densely occupied the three floors of the factory as well as considerable space beneath it, is said to have evaporated — I repeat, evaporated—soon after the factory ceased operation, leaving behind only a few spectral outlines of deep vats and tanks, twisting tubes and funnels, harshly grinding gears and levers, giant belts and wheels that could be most clearly seen at twilight — and later, not at all. According to these strictly hallucinatory accounts, the whole of the Red Tower, as the factory was known, had always been subject to fadings at certain times. This phenomenon, in the delirious or dying words of several witnesses, was due to a profound hostility between the noisy and malodorous operations of the factory and the desolate purity of the landscape surrounding it, the conflict occasionally resulting in temporary erasures, or fadings, of the former by the latter.

Thomas Ligotti: The Heart of Count Dracula, Descendant of Attila, Scourge of God



Count Dracula travels to England, where he is about to lose his heart . . .

COUNT DRACULA RECALLS how he was irresistibly drawnto Mina Harker (née Murray), the wife of a London real estateagent. Her husband had sold him a place called Carfax. This was adilapidated structure next door to a noisy institution for the insane.Their incessant racket was not undisturbing to one who was, amongother things, seeking peace. An inmate name Renfield was the worstoffender.

     One time the Harkers had Count Dracula over for the evening,and Jonathan (his agency’s top man) asked him how he liked Carfaxwith regard to location, condition of the house and property, andjust all around. “Ah, such architecture,”said Count Dracula whilegazing uncontrollably at Mina, “is truly frozen music.”

Tales of Mystery and Imagination