tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8073948304625181907.post3712991857866908525..comments2023-12-22T06:35:13.217-05:00Comments on The Stars at Noonday: Accounts of Some Mercilessly Brief Visits to the House of Pain: Thomas Ligotti's Gothic TalesBrendan Moodyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18029384135423483043noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8073948304625181907.post-62930932595783734252011-11-03T23:14:31.427-04:002011-11-03T23:14:31.427-04:00I am indeed an admirer of Aickman. As a matter of ...I am indeed an admirer of Aickman. As a matter of fact, one of the items I initially put on my Halloween reading list was "The Hospice," which along with "Into the Wood" is one of the two Aickman stories I most enjoy. I've written a few posts about various of his collections, so that may well be how you found this blog.Brendan Moodyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18029384135423483043noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8073948304625181907.post-19825103857891659472011-11-03T21:56:07.611-04:002011-11-03T21:56:07.611-04:00Thanks for the excellent short discussions of your...Thanks for the excellent short discussions of your Halloween reading, much of it wholly outside my ken. I'm an academic, with ever less time for anything but professional reading, but I marked the season by re-reading one of my favorites, Robert Aickman. I can't recall how I found your blog, but it may have been in a search for sites referring to Aickman, so forgive my likely forgetting what I once saw if I ask whether he is to your taste. (My re-reading was "Into the Wood," in the Tartarus _Collected Strange Stories_).Robertnoreply@blogger.com