i09.com: Paris of the 1890s had several supernatural nightlife options, each of them with marvelously outlandish gimmicks. In the 1899 book Bohemian Paris of To-Day by William Chambers Morrow and Édouard Cucuel, the authors visit several of the City of Lights darker drinking destinations, such as Cabaret de l’Enfer (“The Cabaret of the Inferno”), a Satanically themed nightclub in Montmartre that abutted another cabaret called Cabaret du Ciel (“The Cabaret of the Sky”), a divinely themed bar where Dante and Father Time greeted visitors and comely ladies dressed as angels pranced around teasing patrons.
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FSK: Are the French crazy or what? They are crazy, alright! The truth is, they are crazy like a fox. I will tell you the story of two side-by-side cabarets created by two Frenchmen who hated each other. The one who owned the Cabaret of Hell was an ex-clergyman. The other guy who called his establishment Cabaret of Heaven was an ex-convict and known in the neighborhood as “the morally bankrupt.” The drinks at the Cabaret of Hell were more expensive than the cheap drinks served at the Cabaret of Heaven, but the food was bloody awful. The owner explained: “Mes chers amis, my drinks are expensive because all those who are going to hell dead or alive come here. They come here, because it is more fun than the other place. There are no rules here, like in hell. In heaven, MON DIEU! there is nothing but rules! So where you would rather prefer to go? To Hell or to Heaven?”
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William Chambers Morrow: Presently we reached the gilded gates of Le Cabaret du Ciel. They were bathed in a cold blue light from above. Angels, gold-lined clouds, saints, sacred palms and plants, and other paraphernalia suggestive of the approach to St. Peter’s domain, filled all the available space about the entree. A bold white placard, “Bock, I Franc,” was displayed in the midst of it all. Dolorous church music sounded within, and the heavens were unrolled as a scroll in all their tinsel splendor as we entered to the bidding of an angel.
Flitting about the room were many more angels, all in white robes and with sandals on their feet, and all wearing gauzy wings swaying from their shoulder-blades and brass halos above their yellow wigs. These were the waiters, the garcons of heaven, ready to take orders for drinks. One of these, with the face of a heavy villain in a melodrama and a beard a week old, roared unmelodiously, “The greetings of heaven to thee, brothers! Eternal bliss and happiness are for thee. Mayst thou never swerve from its golden paths! Breathe thou its sacred purity and renovating exaltation. Prepare to meet thy great Creator and don’t forget the garcon!”
A very long table covered with white extended the whole length of the chilly room, and seated at it, drinking, were scores of candidates for angelship, mortals like ourselves. Men and women were they, and though noisy and vivacious, they indulged in nothing like the abandon of the Boul’ Mich’ cafes. Gilded vases and candelabra, together with foamy bocks, somewhat relieved the dead whiteness of the table. The ceiling was an impressionistic rendering of blue sky, fleecy clouds, and golden stars, and the walls were made to represent the noble enclosure and golden gates of paradise.
“Brothers, your orders! Command me, thy servant!” growled a ferocious angel at our elbows, with his accent de la Villette, and his brass halo a trifle askew. Mr. Thompkins had been very quiet, for he was Wonder in the flesh, and perhaps there was some distress in his face, but there was courage also. The suddenness of the angel’s assault visibly disconcerted him, he did not know what to order. Finally he decided on a verre de Chartreuse, green. Bishop and I ordered bocks.
“Two sparkling draughts of heaven’s own brew and one star-dazzler!” yelled our angel. “Thy will be done,” came the response from a hidden bar. Obscured by great masses of clouds, through whose intervals shone golden stars, an organ continually rumbled sacred music, which had a depressing rather than a solemn effect, and even the draughts of heaven’s own brew and the star-dazzler failed to dissipate the gloom.
Suddenly, without the slightest warning, the head of St. Peter, whiskers and all, appeared in a hole in the sky, and presently all of him emerged, even to his ponderous keys clanging at his girdle. He gazed solemnly down upon the crowd at the tables and thoughtfully scratched his left wing. From behind a dark cloud he brought forth a vessel of white crockery (which was not a wash-bowl) containing (ostensibly) holy water. After several mysterious signs and passes with his bony hands he generously sprinkled the sinners below with a brush dipped in the water; and then, with a parting blessing, he slowly faded into mist.
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National Geographic: A hot spot called Hell’s Café lured 19th-century Parisians to the city’s Montmartre neighborhood—like the Marais—on the Right Bank of the Seine. With plaster lost souls writhing on its walls and a bug-eyed devil’s head for a front door, le Café de l’Enfer may have been one of the world’s first theme restaurants.
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Manning Leonard Krull: Le Café de L’Enfer was a Hell-themed café in Paris’ red light district (aka Pigalle, the neighborhood of the Moulin Rouge), created in the late 19th century and operating up ’til sometime around the middle of the 20th. I first heard of this place years ago, before I ever lived in Paris. I had no idea that I’d one day end up living right down the street from where L’Enfer, which was located right on the Boulevard de Clichy, which was about fifty paces from the front door of my second apartment in Paris. Unfortunately, there’s very, very little solid information to be found regarding Le Café de L’Enfer. In all my searching, I’ve only been able to nail down the fact that it was definitely on the Boulevard de Clichy, somewhere near Place Blanche. I also haven’t had any luck trying to track down L’Enfer’s specific dates of operation, information about its design and construction, etc.
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The Long Forgotten Blog: The pub originally opened in Brussels in 1892 as the Cabaret de la Mort (i.e. the Cabaret of Death), but it soon moved to the Montmartre district of Paris, where it was renamed the Cabaret de l’Enfer. The Montmartre district was THE place to be if you were an artiste in the second half of the 19th c. It seems like all of the important Impressionist painters lived there or hung out there. In the 1890’s, it was bursting at the seams with cabarets and theaters, including fully-themed nightclubs. The Cabaret of Heaven and the Cabaret of Hell sat side by side. The waiters dressed as angels in the former and devils in the latter.
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i09.com: Once inside Cabaret de l’Enfer, the revelers witnessed a snake transform into a devil, were heckled by Satan, and were warned repeatedly of the scalding temperature. (To quote Morrow, “In spite of the half-molten condition of the rock-walls, the room was disagreeably chilly.”)
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William Chambers Morrow: We passed through a large, hideous, fanged, open mouth in an enormous face from which shone eyes of blazing crimson. Curiously enough, it adjoined heaven, whose cool blue lights contrasted strikingly with the fierce ruddiness of hell. Red-hot bars and gratings through which flaming coals gleamed appeared in the walls within the red mouth. A placard announced that should the temperature of this inferno make one thirsty, innumerable bocks might be had at sixty-five centimes each. A little red imp guarded the throat of the monster into whose mouth we had walked; he was cutting extraordinary capers, and made a great show of stirring the fires. The red imp opened the imitation heavy metal door for our passage to the interior, crying, “Ah, ah, ah! still they come! Oh, how they will roast!” Then he looked keenly at Mr. Thompkins. It was interesting to note how that gentleman was always singled out by these shrewd students of humanity. This particular one added with great gusto, as he narrowly studied Mr Thompkins, “Hist! ye infernal whelps; stir well the coals and heat red the prods, for this is where we take our revenge on earthly saintliness!”
“Enter and be damned, the Evil One awaits you!” growled a chorus of rough voices as we hesitated before the scene confronting us. Near us was suspended a caldron over a fire, and hopping within it were half a dozen devil musicians, male and female, playing a selection from “Faust” on stringed instruments, while red imps stood by, prodding with red-hot irons those who lagged in their performance.
Crevices in the walls of this room ran with streams of molten gold and silver, and here and there were caverns lit up by smouldering fires from which thick smoke issued, and vapors emitting the odors of a volcano. Flames would suddenly burst from clefts in the rocks, and thunder rolled through the caverns. Red imps were everywhere, darting about noiselessly, some carrying beverages for the thirsty lost souls, others stirring the fires or turning somersaults. Everything was in a high state of motion.
Numerous red tables stood against the fiery walls; at these sat the visitors. Mr. Thompkins seated himself at one of them. Instantly it became aglow with a mysterious light, which kept flaring up and disappearing in an erratic fashion; flames darted from the walls, fires crackled and roared. One of the imps came to take our order; it was for three coffees, black, with cognac; and this is how he shrieked the order: “Three seething bumpers of molten sins, with a dash of brimstone intensifier!” Then, when he had brought it, “This will season your intestines, and render them invulnerable, for a time at least, to the tortures of the melted iron that will be soon poured down your throats.” The glasses glowed with a phosphorescent light. “Three francs seventy-five, please, not counting me. Make it four francs. Thank you well. Remember that though hell is hot, there are cold drinks if you want them.”
Presently Satan himself strode into the cavern, gorgeous in his imperial robe of red, decked with blazing jewels, and brandishing a sword from which fire flashed. His black moustaches were waxed into sharp points, and turned rakishly upward above lips upon which a sneering grin appeared. Thus he leered at the new arrivals in his domain. His appearance lent new zest to the activity of the imps and musicians, and all cowered under his glance. Suddenly he burst into a shrieking laugh that gave one a creepy feeling. It rattled through the cavern with a startling effect as he strode up and down. It was a triumphant, cruel, merciless laugh. All at once he paused in front of a demure young Parisienne seated at a table with her escort, and, eying her keenly, broke into this speech: “Ah, you! Why do you tremble? How many men have you sent hither to damnation with those beautiful eyes, those rosy, tempting lips? Ah, for all that, you have found a sufficient hell on earth. But you,” he added, turning fiercely upon her escort, “you will have the finest, the most exquisite tortures that await the damned. For what? For being a fool. It is folly more than crime that hell punishes, for crime is a disease and folly a sin. You fool! For thus hanging upon the witching glance and oily words of a woman you have filled all hell with fuel for your roasting. You will suffer such tortures as only the fool invites, such tortures only as are adequate to punish folly. Prepare for the inconceivable, the unimaginable, the things that even the king of hell dare not mention lest the whole structure of damnation totter and crumble to dust.”
The man winced, and queer wrinkles came into the corners of his mouth. Then Satan happened to discover Mr. Thompkins, who shrank visibly under the scorching gaze. Satan made a low, mocking bow. “You do me great honor, sir,” he declared, unctuously. “You may have been expecting to avoid me, but reflect upon that you would have missed! We have many notables here, and you will have charming society. They do not include pickpockets and thieves, nor any others of the weak, stunted, crippled, and halting. You will find that most of your companions are distinguished gentlemen of learning and ability, who, knowing their duty, failed to perform it. You will be in excellent company, sir,” he concluded, with another low bow. Then, suddenly turning and sweeping the room with a gesture, he commanded, “To the hot room, all of you!” while he swung his sword, from which flashes of lightning trailed and thunder rumbled.
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i09.com: Even though Cabaret de l’Enfer isn’t open today, it stuck around a while — the photo above depicts a police man standing outside the cabaret in 1952.
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Paris Monster Kid Cabaret: This is the front and back cover of possibly a ticket booklet, postcard bocklet or program. It appears to be plaster work from the interior — note the serpents that spell out L’ENFER:
And the interior:
This is the flipside of a card I have (the obverse looks like the right-hand side (front cover) of the booklet above):
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Darren Nemeth: I have that postcard booklet. I think there are only 4 or 6 cards in it. Le Enfer specialized in fantasmagoria and ghost shows. Here is what the
old postcard booklet says inside:
“HELL” Montartre, Paris. The most unique cabaret in the world open every evening at 8:30.
Part I (ground floor): Visitiors purify their souls in Purgatory. Their suffering is greatly mitigated by up to date music, dancing and 1st class Refreshments. Discours by Lucifer and Satanas. No Extra charge is made for the entertaiment on the floor above.
Part II (1st floor): Satan introduces his diabolic spouse. Titania casts her into hell flames and her body is completely consumed in full view of all spectators. Any lady from the audience may make the experiment. Illustrations of the sufferings of the eternal damned and tableaux vivants of the deadly sins.
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Douban.com: Interestingly, a duplicate of the Cabaret de L’Enfer opened in New York in 1896, located near Broadway and 39th St., and it was popular when new, but I can find little information about this American version. Above is a surviving image of the American location’s facade.
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Tod Michel: Both L’Enfer and Cabaret du Ciel were demolished well before the Sixties. I was very often in this quarter of Paris, even in the mid-Fifties, and never saw these cafés. I only heard of them by my mother, who lived in Paris since the mid-Twenties. So I made some research and both were demolished in 1954. I missed them only by some months – alas – as in 1954/55 I started to go regularly in Paris (I was living in the suburb) to watch movies. The place where both L’Enfer et Cabaret du Ciel once existed is now a Monoprix supermarket.
On the opposite sidewalk, facing the place where L’Enfer and Le Ciel once existed, there was a movie theater called Le Colorado, and from the mid-1960s until recent years it specialized in horror movies only, with painted monsters and zombies on its façade – so in a sense it continued the tradition. Hundreds of horror movies played at this theater, from all periods and countries, like the 1931 Frankenstein, the Hammer movies, the Italian movies starring Barbara Steele, Mexican masked wrestlers, 1950s SF flicks, etc. From memory Le Colorado opened in 1964, but, before that date, it was a “normal” movie theater playing any kind of movies.
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p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Almost everything is wrong with people at the moment, wouldn’t you say? Mm, I think I’d want the Lit Cigarette Vending Machine. And it would look so nice and perfect stationed next to my Camel Blue vending machine, thank you, love! Love explaining why pigeons’ heads jerk forwards and backwards when they walk and why that doesn’t give them headaches, G. ** jay, There are spiders that eat hummingbirds? How particular. Hm, I’m not driven to see Lanthimos’s films, I must admit. I kind of really didn’t like ‘The Lobster’ and ‘Sacred Deer’, and I kind of bailed after that. That said, I am strangely curious about the new one given that it’s so violently hated by some. Hm. ** Bill, I know, all problems solved via one machine, right? I’ve found the later Kim films kind of disappointing. I think the last one I liked in toto was ‘Stop’ maybe? ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi. Wow, I’m sort of surprised that women still wear perfume, but why wouldn’t they? That Marc Jacobs is so on the money albeit 10 years late. But it works, I guess. ** Lucas, Hi! I still haven’t read it yet either. Today, I guess. I’ll get the album in any case. So what’s controversial about the video? Wait, I should find out myself, shouldn’t I? Oh, no, your creative fieriness left your head and snuck into the no-go land of your body? I hope it’s one of those quickie flus. You’re gonna make a zine? Ooh, that’s so promising! I’m okay, getting through, getting there. Feel tons better!!!! Oh, my favorite Bataille fiction is very predictably ‘Story of the Eye’. My favorite non-fiction Bataille is … hm, tough choice, I think either ‘Erotism’ or ‘Guilty’. What’s yours? ** Tosh Berman, Urgh. My favorite Meguro vending machine is one near the metro station where you can buy tickets to the Ghibli amusement park. ** Malik, Hi. I spent a weird amount of time thinking about that cemetery candle/lantern machine, I don’t know why. I guess ‘mourning’ is a very charismatic act. Your poem! I can’t wait to read it once I’m freed of the p.s. Everyone, Malick has a poem newly up and fully readable on the Expat site, and I’m excited to read it, and perhaps you are too? I would think so. Do so here. Big congrats to you and to them!!! ** Sypha, Mystery boxes are as good as vending machines. I should do a post about them. Man, thank you so much for reading and giving such a thoughtful response to ‘Flunker’. I’m really happy and honored. Thank you, James! Needless to say, your first comment arrived in perfect shape. I never understand why readers don’t get to see their comments sometimes. This is the strangest place. Great day to you! ** Steve, Disneyland is secretly full of undercover security/police. They’re everywhere. They dress and act like normal visitors, but, when you study the crowds, you see them. They all wear dark glasses, and they all have a little earpiece in their ears. So it’s easy to get caught. Yes, I went to Disneyland on acid a lot as a teen and then on Ecstasy later on. No, no drug-caused revelations that I can recall, but my imagination always goes wild there with or without chemical input. I … don’t know if it’s a front. Wouldn’t shock me. Survive the humidity as best you can. Ours is still on the horizon, probably about the time the Olympics start. ** James Bennett, Hey, James! Relatively speaking, given everywhere else including here, you guys definitely had a good day over there. So big congrats with obvious qualifiers. Great that you’re not only writing but invigorated! I’m cracking my Tinkerbell chem trail-like whip of encouragement over here. Clearly I hope you like ‘Lancelot du Lac’, obviously, but, if you don’t, that’s okay, I can take it. Review? ** Charalampos, Hi. Is there an Alphaville song in one of my books? Weird, I don’t remember that or why I would have referenced that, but I believe you. Gisele can easily see your book. I don’t see why not. Paris is bestowing its loveliness on Crete and you today. ** Harper, Hi. I think they still have voting booths in the US, but they’re awfully shallow and skinny, so mutual j.o. is probably as hot as it could get in them. Dave from Blur. Nice that he’s got something else going on. I … think I must have gone to a planetarium high at some point. But I don’t remember seeing anything that wasn’t just slides projected on a concave ceiling. I never took acid at school. My friends did, and all but one of them got expelled for doing that. I don’t know why I thought it was important too be sober at school. Seems odd. ** Berkstresser, Ontzettend bedankt! I don’t know German, but I know a little Dutch. Well, if Stan is running on a machine then I will cease worrying about him this second. Tot ziens, Berkstresser. ** Darby, The baguette one or the canned bread one? I like the canned bread one. My week is plenty weird too, so no worries, we’re simpatico. Right, okay, I’ll think about the poetry thing today. My brain is kind of cooked at the moment. I personally like poetry in books more than online. I think novels can make the book -> online transference okay, but I feel like poetry needs to be printed on pages and bound, I don’t know why. Good luck with your week’s weirdness. ** Uday, Welcome home. I was just thinking about ‘Alcools’ the other day and how it used to be such a cool, trendy book to read and how no one ever talks about it or him anymore, at least in my sphere of people. I’m a fan of it, of course. It is a luscious title. I’ll take a dog hug, but, really, as I think I’ve said here before, you almost never ever see dogs on the streets of Paris. Why, I don’t know. I’m going to hope for extreme de-humidification for you today. ** 🌀 HEY DENNIS 🌀, Ha ha! Sneaky, or the opposite of sneaky, rather. If you know people who play Wordle, tell them the secret word today is you-know-what, and that they now owe you big time. I liked ‘Crash Bandicoot’. I played the first ‘Animal Crossing’, and I got so addicted and co-dependent that I vowed never to play that game again, and I haven’t. My favorite games are ones that involve lots of wandering around and extremely minimal battling with characters and lots of puzzles of every kind and a general atmosphere of wittiness. Basically, your classic Nintendo type a la, to go way back, ‘Banjo Kazooie’ or ‘Conker Bad Fur Day’, or, to be more in the now, ‘Paper Mario’ or, you know, ‘Zelda’ or even ‘Epic Mickey’. But I do really like, you know, ‘Resident Evil’ and that sort of thing too. Make sense? What about you, gamer? Me too. I miss vending machines. The one I miss the most was this one where you could step inside and record a vinyl record of doing whatever you want, and then the vinyl record would slide out through a slot, and you could, in a limited way, design the picture sleeve. I think Friday might be okay, or so it’s looking. Our election is on Sunday, and everyone’s stressed out, but I think I can circumvent that maybe. It’s not going to rain, and it’s not going to be hot, so that’s pretty promising. I hope yours is similarly de-cloaked. ** Okay. I’m accessing the blog’s time machine function to give you a tour of these famous but utterly inaccessible Parisian venues of ages ago. That’s what I’ve done. You may proceed apace or not. See you tomorrow.
Yes, I think those spiders do exist – as far as I know, they’re called “Goliath Birdeaters”. There are some videos of them feeding online I think, although they don’t keep the birds alive in the same way other spiders do with insects, and instead just eat their bodies, which is a relief.
Yes, I know what you mean about Lanthimos – I don’t love all of his films, but there is something I find kind of poignant about them, particularly Dogtooth. I think there’s a scene in that film where a person is taught the word for “pasta” is “cock” by an authority figure in an attempt to make him unable to function in society that I found pretty incredible. I don’t know, I think I just adore the way he shows implicit violence as very explicit, like the woman from this new film physically making herself smaller to appeal to her husband. Is the new movie widely hated? I never knew that, is it the “sex scenes shouldn’t be in film” crowd, or is it a more thought out critique?
Hi!!
I really adore the idea that two guys hated each other enough to build these two elaborate, magical places just to piss each other off.
You’re right about everything being wrong with people nowadays… Sad, but you are.
Okay, I had to google why pigeons bob their heads when they walk. Apparently, it serves a visual function – it makes it easier for them to process visual information while in motion. Huh.
Love giving you the superpower to Get Shit Done for 24 hours, Od.
We used to have a nightclub here in Leeds called Heaven and Hell that closed forever in 2006. Think I drunkenly went in there one night and it was never as cool as this place looks.
Best of luck to France tonight in the Euros!
Dennis — Yes, everything sucks except yesterday was Flunker debut day. (And Myth Lab launch was 2 days before that)… Congraz-matazz!! To prove it, here’s our twin-born books side-by-side in Write Or Die mag’s July recommendations. https://www.chillsubs.com/writeordie/essays/31-books-we-cant-wait-to-read-july-2024
Alsooooo, you got big buzz on Flunker on Instagram, man…! xo Jack
hi dennis!
yes, I guess you should find out for yourself wrt the xiu xiu mv. I have good news on that front: my friend confirmed they’ll be able to go with me to the concert so all I have to do now is buy the tickets. I’ll see you there maybe? though it’s still so far off. I’ve been feeling horrible today too thanks to this flu so I haven’t gotten much done, but yeah I’m planning to make a zine w my collages and poems! I’m giving myself a deadline to finish it this month; outside of physically not being able to concentrate, I keep looking at the things I made before and kind of scrapping them and going ‘no, I can do better’, which I guess is good since I’m challenging myself, but it’s a bit tiring haha like I want to stick to something! I don’t have a fav bataille yet, I just finished reading ‘story of the eye’ an hour ago, which is the first book I’ve read by him, and I thought it was great. I’m really curious about ‘blue of noon’.
it cleared up a little here yesterday (before it began raining again) so I went on a tiny walk and saw that it’s all indeed still really green here. https://imgur.com/a/WPxeiM6
I hope the weather stays weirdly springlike for you!
ok I wanted to tell you since we talked about it sometime ago, I stayed up late to finally see ‘barbarian’ after my friends hyped it to death, and I’m honestly disappointed… it’s a great fun schlocky horror movie (I really missed seeing this kind of movie) but I think it does that thing we both dislike about being too literal — there’s a lot of social commentary that’s embedded into the plot that the movie would be better off making subtler… there’s a #metoo storyline that just goes nowhere too. so I wouldn’t especially recommend it, but it’s a good enough time I guess. funnily enough, it has a gross eye gore moment that reminded me of ‘story of the eye’
Hey Dennis,
Hmm.. I can’t decide whether I want to go to Heaven or Hell. Actually I can (Hell).
Review of LdL… I found it hypnotic. Still digesting it. Bresson’s style is definitely well suited to depicting people who act according to codes which are totally foreign to the viewer. I like how love seems to be equated with madness. The sets and costumes felt dated which distracted me a bit. Weird because I don’t normally care about that stuff… But overall I did like it. What do you like about it?
Happy weekend! Hope you’re well.
J x
Hey, maybe I should mention this place in my French Decadence novella. This place opened in 1892? My novella is set in 1893, so that’s doable. One section of the novella is from the POV of a diabolist, so I could see him going to this place.
Dennis, yeah, I know usually when I post comments here I don’t see them… but in the past if I come back here again via Facebook I will see them… but for whatever reason that wasn’t happening yesterday, though after a few hours I did see them show up. It’s very strange!
Smothered, I Wished, and now Flunker (particularly From Here On) are part of an arsenal that has kept me going through a couple great losses of the past couple years. Thank you!
hiii dennis, long time no see — okay, just two days — i would probably fantasize about going in before finally deciding to do it and find out they have been closed for at least six months.
my bookclub decided to do a category called ‘hoes-scaring books’, i am not sure what book it will be but i am excited, or at least half excited, i don’t want to be rude to my buds but we might have two different wavelengths. i did get one of them to read mawrdew with me, it’s been fun sharing notes and talking about it, even if that means i have to restart the book like four chapters in.
i ordered flunker today, it would be comedic if somehow i got my copies before you at this rate. can’t wait to see how it destroys my writing. amphetamine sulphate seems like a cool press, added some of them to my ever growing list of things i need to read.
a friend said i could have a free drawing — long story –, and i asked to do a book cover for me. the sketch made me the comedic potentials of having an ultraviolent story with an anime cover that might look like it’s some romantic story, oop.
i know of (kier cooke) sandvik as an artist, i’ve seen his work in oslo once or twice, even was gonna go there in april for something called oslo open which he was featured in, but it didn’t pan out. actually that reminds me, one time my dad saying in a gallery that the artist we were looking at was my babysitter, i wonder if that was true or not — though that’s now complicated by the fact i forgot their name lol.
the discussion on norwegian landscape made me consider the roadtrip i went on — for a wedding and i was not gonna book a plane –. i kept taking pictures of random mountains on the way, my internet friends were very captivated by the pictures. i was totally just ‘hey this is just how the country looks’, but the pictures now got some power now out of context.
i think that should be it.
The heat and humidity are even worse here today!
I made an appointment to meet with my parents’ bank on the 30th. Having that already planned is a relief. Next week, I will make arrangements for train tickets to visit them around the end of the month.
A new Cabaret de l’Enfer would be a great Disney attraction, especially with more than a century’s advances in special effects. If the Satanic Temple can hold a “SatanCon,” surely there’s an audience for this, and they could get free promo from the QAnon crowd.
I saw a photo of Dave Rowntree in his current guise as a politician, and it made me think of recent pics of the Kids in the Hall, where they’re now very convincing as middle-aged businessmen.
Any plans for the weekend? Fingers crossed for the election – it sounds just as terrifying as America’s.
Hey. It’s funny you said that about ‘Alcools’ by Apollinaire and nobody reading it because I’ve been reading him recently and had a lecture on asemic writing not too long ago in which he was brought up. He did coin the term ‘Surrealism’ after all. Maybe only a select few are reading him but he is clearly worth reading. Actually good writers always have posthumous bouts of popularity in waves. Maybe nobody cares now but I’m sure they will eventually.
And oh yeah, I have a video game rec. I’m not the biggest gamer on the planet and am kind of like you in that I like wandering around and doing puzzles. So that said, I’ll recommend a game called ‘Superliminal’ if you’ve heard of it? It’s focused on the idea of liminal spaces and the spaces in between spaces (waiting rooms, hallways) that function solely in a transitory sense. Most of the game is puzzles that are mostly based on visual perspective and stuff like that, and it maintains that interesting liminal atmosphere throughout. It’s on basically every platform as far as I know, I play it on switch.
RE: Today’s post. Oh, I really like stuff like this. Very French, I can’t think of the UK or the US doing anything on the scale of this. I guess nostalgia is part of the reason why it seems so interesting. Movements are less frequent than they used to be, maybe that’s only because movements are only properly recognised in retrospect. But the late 19th century on to the 20th century seemed to have movements every five minutes, but maybe that’s only because most of them are within living memory? Maybe it’s a good thing anyway. With the internet everyone can find their niche interest and don’t need to start a revolution in order to find like-minded people.
Hey, Dennis! My copy of ‘Flunker’ arrived this morning. ‘From Here On’ is really beautiful. I don’t even have the words. I had to put the book down after reading that. I’m selfishly glad it wasn’t included in ‘I Wished’ as I think, for me, reading ‘FHO’ after reading ‘I Wished’ really made the story’s effect that much more impactful. Thank you for sharing your writing with the world. I know I’ll probably have torn through the rest of ‘Flunker’ by day’s end. Hope you have the best of weekends! 🫀p.s. Le Ciel’s facade was so cool!
I haven’t played Wordle in a long time! Damn. So, neither ‘Dennis’ nor ‘Cooper’ can fit within Wordle’s five letters, but I have it on good authority that one of today’s PlusWord clues is “hey, Dennis!” and the answer is whatever five-letter word springs to mind for you first — giving you a pretty massive advantage.
I’m with you on ‘Animal Crossing’. I didn’t play it until ‘Animal Crossings: New Horizons’ came out, which unfortunately coincided a little too well with lockdown and all that, which led to some very long days shaking fruit off trees and fishing. And the rest of it makes sense! Those are some good picks (especially ‘Zelda’). I really like stuff like ‘Dark Souls’, so, really, just anything that’s really frustrating trial and error. I do also like games that let me explore, I think ‘Firewatch’ is probably my favourite.
The part about the Cabaret of Hell being owned by an ex-clergyman and the Cabaret of Heaven being owned by an ex-convict cracked me up. This was such a fun read. I hope your not hot but also not rainy weather continues — it’s like 16-19 degrees over here for the next week or so, which is grand. And good luck with the circumventing!
That Alcools used to be trendy worries me if only because you said something similar about Rilke a few weeks ago. I don’t want to be an elegist. No dogs? That’s sad. All my friends at college have cats and this is not to say that I’m not fond of them (and these cats in particular are a delight) but a world without dogs is sad indeed. For this past week I’ve been thinking over a novel that meditates on the usual themes of extremity, but once written is edited to remove sex, violence and (most) death. Just as an exercise. I’m not sure whether it’s a worthwhile exercise, or if I’m necessarily skilled enough to do it, but it might be something fun to try. The Olympics start in about a fortnight, right? Is the city of Paris tightening further in response?