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Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
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As of February 4th! I'm so late! Here's my yearly recap/brief history of TLO: After discovering, Ligotti’s work back in 1991, I felt like the only reader alive who had a profound connection with his fiction. And I wanted to share that feeling. Sure, I recruited a Ligotti reader here and there over the years, but for the longest time I felt my enthusiasm for his work wasn’t widely or even moderately shared, and I longed to discuss Ligotti’s prose with other like-minded readers. As a research and, later, law librarian—in the days before Netscape—I began surfing the World Wide Web using an early version of a text only browser called lynx. For years of solid web presence thereafter, I tried to spread the word about Ligotti’s work but became increasingly frustrated at the lack of awareness about his fiction throughout cyberspace. Finally, in 1997—upon receiving a job in New York City which paid me very little but gave me tons of free time to mess about on the Internet—I truly became a Ligotti advocate (some would say an annoying one) on the old alt.horror.cthulhu Usenet newsgroup. After some argument and semantical wrangling, I managed to get the alt.books.thomas-ligotti newsgroup created, with the nearly sole support of Matt Cardin, who spent so many of those early days creating impromptu, brilliant analyses of Ligotti's work. A website, cobbled together using stolen HTML from a William Faulkner fan website, wasn’t far behind the newsgroup. Version 1 of TLO from early 1998 is—sadly—lost to the cyber-void as far as I know. Version 2 from the Fall 1998 can be found here (at least in part), and Version 3 existed for the next five years of so and looked like this. I’m proud of these difficult, initial efforts. In version 1 through 3 of TLO, we published a number of Ligotti stories, some for the first time. TLO—for instance—was the first publisher of the Ligotti and Brandon Trenz penned, original X-Files screenplay, Crampton, and was the original home for Ligotti’s masterful novella, My Work Is Not Yet Done. It has also been—for twenty-one years now—the source for (more or less) updated Ligotti-related news, a place for Ligotti readers to chat and share thoughts and ideas with each other, and—notably—a place in which Ligotti-inspired work may be shared. TLO published Matt Cardin’s remarkable short story, “Teeth,” for the first time anywhere (in 2020, everything came full circle, as I narrated "Teeth" for two PseudoPod episodes). About five or six years into TLO’s twenty year life to date, the website had fallen into quiescence—mainly due to my challenging job and active home life in New Orleans. Fortunately, back in 2004, Brian Poe (aka Dr. Bantham) contacted me with a plan to revive the site. And, boy, did he ever revive it. For the next fifteen years, TLO became a thriving, vigorous community of Ligotti readers, which is what I originally intended but didn't have the know-how or time to pull off. I can never repay Brian for what he’s accomplished. We've had our ups and downs over the past two decades, but TLO remains an important source of analysis and discussion of weird fiction and more, well beyond its original Ligotti-centric intent. Back in 2005, in fact, Ligotti himself wrote of TLO, “what I like the most about the site is the idea of people who appreciate my horror stories talking about stuff that has nothing to do with my horror stories and, as we used to say in the sixties, just doing their own thing.” Twenty-three years after its inception, TLO remains paradoxically vital, though we've had our ups and downs in that time (and a new upgrade on the way). Happy Birthday, TLO. Here's to twenty-three more years of weirdness, derangement and macabre goodness. And thanks, of course, to all of you who continue to make this site worthwhile. |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Thanks for posting this wonderful history of TLO and all the countless hours of your work (and of your colleagues) that went into it!
"Twenty-three years after its inception, TLO remains paradoxically vital, though we've had our ups and downs in that time (and a new upgrade on the way)." Humbly wish to support this statement, and to express sincere gratitude for TLO, an oasis of thought, creativity and reflection. Cannot say how deeply important TLO is to many of us. Thanks and Happy Anniversary! |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy anniversary! Thank you for your hard work in keeping this forum alive.
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Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy Birthday TLO!
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Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy Anniversary!
This is the one site that I visit daily and don't feel I've wasted time if I linger. If it weren't for this site I don't think I would've hheard of/read people like Laird Barron, Richard Gavin, or Mark Samuels. If it weren't for the thread Off the Radar Metal Recommendations, my musical tastes (if any) would not be what they are today. Thank you for everything you and the other members contribute. |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy Anniversary!
May there be many more years. |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy Birthday!
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Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Happy Anniversary!
TLO is an invaluable resource for me. It is also a place of contentment and solace. It has played an important role in bringing Ligotti's ideas and stories to a wider audience. Enlightenment is a good thing. |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Hail, Eris! Happy 23rd hatch day, TLO. The number 23 is a very special number, if you are a Discordian.
I am so glad I finally found my way here. |
Re: Thomas Ligotti Online - 23rd Year Anniversary!
Good call on the Discordian resonance, Grimalkin. As I said on Twitter, given the collision of this year's TLO anniversary with the 23 enigma, we can probably expect a year full of nightmarish synchronicities issuing from the silent, staring void of Chapel Perilous.
(And yes, my take on 23 is definitively tilted in a Robert Anton Wilsonian direction.) |
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