The blog of author Dennis Cooper

“Gloomy is the house of woe, where tears are falling while the bell is knelling, with all the dark solemnities that show that Death is in the dwelling” *

* (restored)

 

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Alice

‘Alice lives with its owner Marie Ford in Washington state. This very haunted doll is said to whisper in a ghostly voice if you press your ears close to her porcelain lips. Her eyes will follow you around the room and her expression will change if she does not like you . “This Doll has been in my family for years it was always kept in a locked doll case,” says Marie. “My grandmother said it was possessed by the spirit of her best friend Alice who died by committing suicide at the age of 13. I have captured many Haunted Doll EVP’s from her and the most common statement she makes is, “I want to be left alone to suffer”.’

 

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Letta

‘Kerry Walton, of Brisbane, Australia, stumbled upon Letta while searching for antiques under a dilapidated old house. The doll seemed to behave in unnatural ways as soon as he discovered it. The bag containing the doll rustled in the back of his car. Its facial expressions seemed to change from day to day, and dogs had a vicious response to it. Also, children in the family were having nightmares, and Letta’s head, arms, and legs would move on their own.

‘An Australian psychic conducted a seance and determined a man who was grief-stricken because his son drowned made the doll. The doll was to serve as a type of transference vessel for his dead son’s spirit, and today, everyone who comes into contact with Letta the Gypsy Doll says that it is alive.’

 

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Emilia

‘Emilia is a haunted doll which is at least a 100 years old and is believed to have belonging to king Umberto (king of Italy). The king was assassinated and the doll was given to his best friend Ulvado Belina. Ulvado was also assassinated and the doll was then given to his daughter Marie.

‘Marie claimed that she heard the doll crying and weeping many times and that the doll would change its facial expressions as well. She also claimed that Emilia would open and close its eyes. Marie claimed that she also heard Emilia say a sentence. According to Marie, Emilia said – “It’s not great”. While Amelia was not well known enough to be assassinated, she did die in a hail of bullets.

‘Today, Emilia remains locked in a glass case, and is on display at the Warren Occult museum. The only one of it’s kind, the museum houses haunted artifacts and objects collected from over 50 years of paranormal investigations. It is still reported that while very weak, Emilia still manages to trip, pull the hair, and temporarily blind visitors who walk by her case.’

 

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Okiku

‘Okiku the doll was purchased by a seventeen-year-old boy named Eikichi Suzuki during a visit to Sapporo for a marine exhibition in 1918. The doll was a gift from his travels for his two-year-old sister named Okiku. When she was initially purchased, the doll had a hair style called ‘okappa’ (similar to a bob cut), which is popular on Japanese dolls. Okiku loved her new doll and it served as the little girl’s companion until she died suddenly from a cold-like illness at the age of three. Devastated by their loss, Okiku’s family put her favourite doll on the household altar where they prayed in memory of Okiku. Before long, the family noticed that the hair on Okiku’s doll had begun to grow, as if the hair was on the head of a human. The family concluded that the restless spirit of Okiku, who died so young, was now inside her beloved doll. The doll remained with Okiku’s family until 1938 when they moved to Iwamizawa in Hokkaido and gave the doll to the Mennenji Temple where she remains enshrined to this day. She is now referred to as Okiku after her former owner. Some believe the hair that continues to grow from her head is the hair of the child Okiku.’

 

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Pupa

‘While real haunted doll stories are not uncommon, the case of Pupa is very unique. The original owner had it from the age of 5 or 6 (1920’s) until she died in July of 2005. The doll survived World War II, and many, many close calls to it’s destruction over the years. The owner cherished it always through out her long life. The doll traveled from Italy to the United States then back to Italy and across Europe and finally to the USA once again where it is now.

‘Pupa is said to move by herself. Often she is said to push things around in the display case where the family who owns her keep her. Since the passing of the original owner in 2005 the family reports that the haunted doll has become very active and seems to want to be released from where she is kept in a glass display case. Members of the family, guests, and workers making repairs in their house have reported discovering the the glass of the case steamed white and, inscribed on the steamy glass from the inside of the case by what appears to be a small child’s fingertip, the words ‘Pupa hate’.

‘Still dressed in her blue felt suit, she has also reportedly pulled pranks aplenty on those who care for her. Often, Pupa was placed differently than when the family last saw her. More than once, the family have reported hearing a sound like someone tapping on glass as they pass Pupa’s display case. When they turn to look, they have seen Pupa’s hand pressed against the glass. One member of the family managed to catch on video the doll rising to its feet and walking within the case, but on the three occasions he tried to upload the video onto Youtube, the video was obscured with a mysterious thick white film and the words “Pupa No!” scribbled on the film in a childish handwriting.’

 

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Barbie

‘At the shrine known as Lady Na Tuk Kong Shrine in Pulau Ubin, you will find a barbie doll occupying the place on the altar usually reserved for the statue of a deity. Even some of the offerings left on the shrines altar by worshippers are different from the norm. There are creams, lotions, rouges, powders, small mirrors and combs.

‘According to Literature and History researcher Han Shanyuan, the story behind the shrine begins with a German couple and their daughter. One day in August 1914, the British army came for the German couple and their daughter. The army caught the couple but the girl managed to escape to the mountain behind her family’s plantation. Unfortunately, she fell from a cliff and died.

‘Locals then built the temple in order to pacify the girl’s spirit. According to the temple’s keeper, at first people worshipped a porcelain altar instead of the Barbie doll. The porcelain altar is believed to contain a lock of the girl’s blond hair and a crucifix that is said to be the one the girl was wearing when she died.

‘Three years ago, a local emigrant to Australia had the same weird dream for three nights. In his dream, a western girl led him to a shop. She then asked him to buy a Barbie doll and bring it to the”Lady Na Tuk Gong Shrine”. The man followed the directions given.

‘To his surprise, he found the shop and also the doll the girl described in his dream. He bought the doll and brought it back to Pulau Ubin. Today, a lot of people come to the temple to worship the Barbie doll and it is said their prayers for safety and health are answered.’

 

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The Voodoo Doll

‘A woman in Galveston, Texas bought a real haunted New Orleans Zombie Voodoo doll on ebay October of 2004, It arrived as described Bound and tied in a metal box. Believing it just to be a strange curio she decided to take it out it’s small coffin and display it. “A Real Big Mistake” she says with great fear… the haunted doll attacked her, repeatedly. Afraid for her life she put it back in it;s decorated box casket but it haunted her in her dreams. Afraid to the point of mental exhaustion she tried to destroy it by burning it first, it would not burn. Then cutting it up the Knife and scissors broke and finally burying it at a cemetery. But as she tells the dolls grave was just to shallow and it appeared lying dirty on her front door step once more. She said she even resold it on ebay and the buyer wrote her that the doll had just disappeared from her home, so she sent it back to her when she found it on her door step again. The third time the buyer told her the box arrived empty. Again the evil doll was found at her door once more. The above photo was taken in 2004, right when she had first received the doll through the mail.’

 

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Joliet

‘Anna G. Says this cursed doll has been passed down from mother to daughter in her family for four generations. And each daughter was cursed to have two children a son and a daughter and each son died at 3 days old. The family believes that each spirit of the boy children is cursed to inhabit the doll until Judgment Day. Joliet is said to be heard crying in the night with the voices of several infants at once. Often is heard a piercing scream that sends chills down the spine of any mother.

‘”It can be heard quite clearly”, says Anna. “I lost my only son at three days old from mysterious circumstance in the hospital. My Mother lost a Son the same way as did my Grandmother and Great Grandmother. As I have been told by my mother the cursed Doll was given to my Great Grand mother by a jealous friend for my Grandmother as a toy when she was pregnant with her second child a son who also died at three days old. Each of us in my family have loved the doll and cared for our lost children to this day. My only daughter will do the same one day when she is older. We have not tried to get rid of it because we know the souls of our lost sons or trapped inside and do not want them to come to any harm. It is a haunted curse that my family bears”.’

 

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Emilia

‘This over 100 year old Haunted Doll came originally from one of the royal guards to King Umberto I. Umberto I, King of Italy or Humbert I of Italy (Umberto Ranieri Carlo Emanuele Giovanni Maria Ferdinando Eugenio di Savoy), (14 March 1844 – 29 July 1900) was the King of Italy from 9 January 1878 until his death. He was deeply loathed in left-wing circles, especially among anarchists, because of his hard-line conservatism and support of the Bava Beccaris massacre in Milan. He was killed by anarchist Gaetano Bresci one year after the incident. He was the only King of Italy to be assassinated. This doll was said to be given to Ulvado Bellina one of his most trusted and respected friends and personal Captain of the Royal Guard who was also assassinated. Emilia was gift to Ulvado’s daughter Marie from Humbert I.

‘The doll survived WW I and WW II only losing both her arms and scalp in the second war to a bomb on a train to Udine, Italy. Because she was a prized gift To Marie Bellina from the king no matter what condition she was in the doll was rescued from the rubble. And from that day on she was haunted by the soul of the woman who died trying to rescue her self and the doll for Marie as they fled the explosion. Emilia the Haunted Doll is said to open and close her eyes, and her sound box is still heard at times in the darkness of the night crying for it’s mama. Though her original voice box no longer works.’

 

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Robert

‘Robert, the lifelong companion of painter Robert Eugene (called Gene) Otto. Within months after the arrival of the doll in the Otto household, strange things began to occur. Objects would go missing and turn up broken, Gene took to the unhealthy habit of sneaking out of his window and wandering the grounds at night, and his parents began to suspect him of all kinds of mischief. If he was caught in the act, Gene would always hold out Robert and say, “Robert did it!” Soon the doll apparently became bolder. It no longer seemed to require Gene’s company to move about the house. In the still hours of the night, the servants would often wake to the sound of hollow, pattering footsteps. Too frightened to inspect the cause, they would usually cower in their beds until dawn. Weird humming and singing was heard to come from the nursery if Gene inadvertently left Robert there alone.

‘It was widely believed that the death of Gene Otto in 1972 would put an end to the ghostly activity of the haunted doll. It was quickly learned, however, that true evil never dies, and while the house stood empty reports of the awful doll still continued. Many people would hear the sound of singing coming from the house at night and on more than one occasion the gruesome doll is said to have frightened school children by peering out the window in the attic turret and making faces at them. The home was eventually converted into the Artist’s House historic location as it stands today, Robert was donated to The East Martello Museum not far away. It quickly became evident, however, that Robert was still up to his old tricks. Museum workers began to report strange activity after the arrival of the doll, including one volunteer who was terrorized when the doll apparently spent most of a day following her around. Eventually, the doll was encased in a plastic display case in which it remains to this day. Still, there are those who claim that even this cannot contain the evil doll.’

 

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Amanda

‘Amanda the real haunted doll now lives unhappily in Atlanta, Georgia. She has moved around quite a lot since originally being a haunted doll sold on eBay over 3 years ago. Amanda’s recent life can originally be traced back to Ebay but no further then that. Since she was sold 3 years ago she has been bought sold traded and given away more times then can be counted on two hands. The ghost that is said to possess her is very active if she does not like you. Amanda has been known to move on her own and often heard scratching on the glass class she is now housed in. If she is happy then she just sits there staring into space. But when she is ready to move on she begins to wreck havoc in the home she resides in until she is once again sent on her way.’

 

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The Devil’s Baby Doll

‘Originally purchased as a haunted curio gift from a Leather maker this haunted doll with red leather skin and intense blue hot glass eyes is said to have moved on it’s own and is often heard to make strange growling and gurgling noises and worse. The artist Rafael who made it explains that the doll was made for a close friend who had died. The devil baby even went to this persons funeral. The intention was to place it into the coffin to be cremated with the deceased but his family objected. And after that the doll started to take on a haunted life of it’s own. The artist believes that it is inhabited by his friends soul. He heard it speak to him in his friends voice, and he had witnessed it turning it’s head. Since being sold, it literally drove its two different owners insane before the doll was ultimately locked in a lead box by Rafael and sunk in a river so it would never harm any soul again.

‘This is an excerpt from the first owner Tyler Durbane’s diary, kept while he was institutionalized after this average school teacher was diagnosed with psychosis three months after purchasing the doll: ‘My doll is quite honestly deadly, my doll is absolutely mean. My doll is the mighty Devil embodied, the evil red skinned Satan hiding unseen! He was a shadow of a whisper, a ghost in the night that came to me… calling my name and begging me to hold it, rescue it…take it … make it real and very much alive. Each night it crept cat-like hidden into my deep slumbers… asking me to rescue it from it’s eternal black prison of a hell!’

 

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Elsa

‘The Madonia family from Houston found out that “Frozen” is truly inescapable. An Elsa doll Emily Madonia first gave her daughter in 2013 kept finding its way back home after they twice tried to throw the creepy toy in the garbage. The doll, which sings the inescapable “Frozen” song “Let It Go” when a button on her collar is pushed, began only singing and speaking in Spanish instead of English even when it was turned off.

‘”Mat threw it away weeks ago and then we found it inside a wooden bench,” Madonia wrote. “Okay….so we were weirded out and tightly wrapped it in its own garbage bag and put that garbage bag INSIDE another garbage bag filled with other garbage and put it in the bottom of our garbage can underneath a bunch of other bags of garbage and wheeled it to the curb and it was collected on garbage day. We went out of town, forgot about it. Today Aurélia says ‘Mom, I saw the Elsa doll again in the backyard.’ The doll laughed for 30 seconds straight as soon as it saw her. HELP US GET RID OF THIS HAUNTED DOLL.”

 

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— Texts borrowed and/or collaged from Hauntedamericantours.com, Sharon Stajda, Angelghosts.com, wetellstories,com, and Boing Boing.
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p.s. Hey. ** Alistair, Hi. I generally think/say my all time favorite novel is ‘Death Sentence’ by Maurice Blanchot. ‘White Fang’, I read that, I think in college? Huh, I’ll take a look back at it. Thanks! Ouch: sunburn. Twice when I was younger I got so sunburned I had to go the hospital. My face swelled up and looked like a pumpkin. I don’t think I’ve seen a goldfinch IRL, no. Pretty mental picture. Bon day! ** Steeqhen, I do think that people who grew with the internet and social media and those apps heavily romanticise what social interaction and friendship, etc. was like when it was incumbent on telephones and postal mail and so on. I think people have always had the same impulses, but they had to live out their neediness and voyeurism in person. Which isn’t to say those things are exacerbated by immediate international contact and the ability to easily hide and fake everyone out and protect yourself from the consequences, of course. I don’t know. Food for thought. Glad a couple of the books spoke to you. ** Sypha, Hi. I think if I had to pick a favorite Swans it might be ‘Public Castration is a Good Idea’. Or maybe ‘Greed’. **  Dev, Hi, Dev! Inconsistent commenting is A-okay. Great to see you! Big congrats on getting the exams in your past. I’ve never had vegan soul food. I didn’t know it existed. They don’t even have regular soul food over here. I’ll try it when I’m in LA next. Surely it’s available there. Yes, it’s deeply heartbreaking about Michael. There are people caring for him, and I think he’s as okay as he can be. I hope to see you again soon. ** Hugo, Hey. I have my issues with ‘Safe’, for sure, although I’m still proud of the ‘My Mark’ section, but I meant earlier stuff. I published a couple of little books before then that I would vacuum out of wherever they are in the world if wishes could be granted. I still haven’t cracked the new Swans, but it’s staring at me. ‘I Remember’, so great. Brainard was favorite writer of Leve’s, no huge surprise. I do read books in a day, yeah. I like really short books. When I think of my top ten novels or whatever, the vast majority are quite skinny. It’s nice to gulp something down. ‘Naked Lunch’ in one day is pretty impressive. Trusting that your Sunday was ultra-decent, I hope for a beautiful segue into your Monday. ** Steve, Ah, that’s shame about the restaurant. New show! Everyone, The latest episode of Steve’s “Radio Not Radio” is now out. ‘Follow the dream fish into K-hole trip-hop, minute-long DIY songs, film noir samples, Brazilian and South African party music, and much more.’ How can you resist that? Surrender. No, I missed that Arte broadcast. I didn’t know about it. I don’t watch TV unless I’m pre-clued in to something. The ‘RT’ theater release is in France. ** julian, Will do re: the new Swans. I haven’t been the right mood for it quite yet. They played at the Lodge, nice. I’m sure they’ll tour/play over here in Paris. I think they always pay Paris a visit. Amazing about that music redefining moment. For me it was when I was about 13, and I was at school helping set up for a school dance event, and one of the seniors put ‘The Velvet Underground and Nico’ on the record player, and I was like, ‘what the fuck is this?!’ I’d never heard anything remotely like it. Standing there, confused and mind boggled listening to that record forever opened music and kind of art in general for me. ** _Black_Acrylic, It’s good. And after ‘Gravity’s Rainbow’ it’ll be like breathing easily again. Yes, people went completely wild here. The shouting and fireworks and honking horns, etc. kept me up most of the night. The violence was nearby-ish, but not in my actual hood. ** Carsten, No, the violence mostly happened on and near the Champs Elysee. I can easily walk to the Champs Elysee from where I live, but it’s not at my doorstep. I just got the fun, exhilarated partying around me. I can’t stand Guadagnino’s films. I think they’re really bourgie and perfumey, so I’m going to skip ‘Queer’. I feel 100% certain it would just piss me off. Thanks for the warning. I’m not really worried about the maybe smoking ban, no. Heck, I survived being in Tokyo where you can’t even smoke outside unless it’s in designated random smoking areas. ** pancakeIan, Thank you of your attention to the books. Well, assuming at least some of those slaves are real and using actual photos of themselves, which I think is highly debatable in many cases. It was cool to host the Isherwood reading. And it was quite the event. John Travolta came, and I talked to him a bit and he was actually very nice, and other big celebs too. I’m happy you found and like Bill Henson’s work. See them in person if you ever get the chance. They even much more amazing in person. The black backgrounds in his photos are really rich and extraordinary. ** Bill, Yes, they’re real, David swears. I do like Vollman, yes. And I didn’t know about that doc. And I’ll definitely to find it. Thank you, pal. ** HaRpEr //, Trinidad is a lovely poet. Really singular and focused. Walser’s pretty great, yeah, I agree. His really early work is kind of didactic and clunky, I think, but he really grew into his style. Job hunting, especially now, must be so exhausting and painful. The years Zac and I spent trying to raise money to make our film were miserable, but that must pale by comparison. ** maggie, Hi again. I’d be curious to see my notes too. I agree about that particular allure of that which is wildly popular and which you can’t quite analyse into making total sense. I was pretty interested in the Taylor Swift thing for a while until I got bored thinking about it. And I’m trying to figure out a way to write something that gets at the Timothee Chalamet phenom because that vexes me. But, like, the Paris football/soccer team just won this huge tournament, and Parisians are mad with excitement about it, and yesterday there was this parade on the Champs Elysee starring the team, and I was outside yesterday, and there were just endless amounts of Parisians walking over to it all dressed up in their team gear and looking so thrilled, and it was beautiful to see for some reason — all that happiness, and so many people of every age happy for the same reason and feeling all connected to each other and so on. It was fascinating and very touching too. Thanks about the way I portray or study that in my work. I don’t know why I keep wanting to get to the bottom of it. I’ve never even heard Duster as far as I know. But now I will. You’ve made me ultra-curious. Oh, Sarah, yes. She’s a treasure. Say hi for me. What do you do with your guitar, or I guess what kind of music do you make/play when you play? I have a good friend with Crohn’s. Wow, I hope your case isn’t too bad. My friend has a hard time, although he’s and writer and very productive. but he has it pretty bad. Definitely stay passionate, curious, hungry, confident, etc. There are so many reasons to. That’s how I’ve survived. It’s good starting to get to know you. I’m happy you’re here. Best, me. ** Uday, I’ll look for ‘Petals of Blood’ or ‘The Perfect Nine’, thank you. Yes, I like Gombrowicz, his novels and also his diaries, which get very catty and angry. Enjoy your friend, and no doubt you did and/or will do. ** Okay. I decided to restore this old post about haunted dolls for your possible delectation today. See you tomorrow.

12 Comments

  1. Lucas

    helloooo, thank you so much for this awesome post! i own some dolls but i don’t think they’re haunted. how are you? are you reading anything cool rn? i’m sick since yesterday and currently reading john berger’s first essay collection, ‘permanent red,’ it’s really blowing me out of the water. i really feel like reading more history stuff afterwards. hope everything’s good with you xoxo

  2. Misanthrope

    Dennis, I can almost guarantee I could walk down the street in my town and absolutely no one would know Vuong. Do you like his stuff? I think my friends who’ve read him think he’s all right. Just all right.

    My second toe on my left foot has been a problem for months. One day, it was so bad, I could barely walk. I assume it was/is gout. I iced it and took ibuprofen and the pain went away, but it’s still very tender and I have to be gentle with it.

    Yeah, this neck ain’t getting any better. I’ll be seeing the orthopedist on the 13th. Of course, I’m seeing a PA and not a doctor. How fucking hard is it to see a fucking doctor anymore? Like, I go to their website and their list of providers is all these doctors and I get…a PA. Ugh. We’ll see how it goes.

  3. _Black_Acrylic

    Happy to hear the PSG celebrations were spreading a bit of Parisian love round your way. As we in Leeds know, there’s nothing like an open top bus parade for some life-affirming communal joy.

  4. Carsten

    Bursts of sudden public joy are a lovely (& all too rare) sight indeed. Glad you were able to partake vicariously. We desperately need more of that…

    Yes, you’re wise to avoid Queer–it would definitely piss you off. I even expected to dislike it, but I guess curiosity got the better of me. Part of it was surely also my desire to huff the fumes of old beat/bohemian Mexico. That too was unfulfilled. But you’re right about Guadagnino being bourgie, spot on. I only saw two of his films before Queer & liked them both well enough at the time: A Bigger Splash, mainly for the actors & the soundtrack (which contained Captain Beefheart, Popol Vuh & the Stones as I recall), & Bones and All. The latter was a mixed bag, & once again the stary-eyed love story bored me, but I did find his spin on cannibalism engaging enough. Have you ever seen a good cannibal movie? I don’t even like Trouble Every Day, though Claire Denis is my favorite director alongside Jarmusch.

    There is some kind of primal upset going on with hollow-eyed masks… no wonder dolls freak people the fuck out.

  5. Hugo

    Hi Dennis–Thanks for the kind wishes. My actual Sunday and Monday have been unexpectedly busy. I was getting some friends together and it got out of hand, so now I’m promoting a friends video game and seeing about a collaboration between a pigfuck noise artist and a folk singer. I could not foresee that, but all is well otherwise. I just got off work, and now my shoulder is sore.

    Yeah, reading Naked Lunch in a day was a bit odd, but I could do things like that as a 13-14-year-old, I really don’t know why. I didn’t fully understand the book then, but I just really enjoyed the vision and the bizarre world; something about that spoke to me. I read a lot of books like it cuz I had this one English teacher who I found annoying in 7th grade and who I wanted to offend. So I read Trainspotting and Lolita around that time too. In 8th grade, a teacher who understood me better tried to get me into Blood Meridian, but I didn’t really see eye to eye with that book. Also, I was just more into Batman comics and Gaspar Noé movies at that time (I think I also discovered Throbbing Gristle around then. It was odd, I was threatened with institutionalisation and stuff like that at that time, so my memory is a bit hazy.)

    Small counter to what Casten said, but I actually quite liked the second half of Queer a good deal, and thought Daniel Craig was pretty good. IDK, it’s my favourite Guadaningo, but that’s tempered by the fact that I’m generally ambivalent about him. I do know he did a film based on an album by Arto Lindsey (the lead singer and guitarist of DNA), which I haven’t seen but sounds somewhat (?) interesting (?)

    Anyway, thanks for the dolls. If I find any of your old works in the wild, I will now know to burn them (kidding…I will just scam people here outta their money MWHHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAH)

    Have a good one

  6. James Bennett

    Hey Dennis,
    I’m writing from the comfort of my own home after nine days in the clutches of that cat. Jerry and his night-time neediness can’t get me any more, and I’m catching up on sleep like a newborn baby.
    I started Will Mountain Cox’s “Roundabout” last night after a long stint of it being on my mental to-read list. I’m enjoying it so far. As someone who tends to write about isolated figures, while sometimes fretting about the origins and limitations of that tendency, it’s cool to see Will take as his subject this interconnected hive.
    By the way I read that interview you did with Bob Gluck. It was very dense and nourishing. I’ll definitely be revisiting it. Something that really stuck with me: “use myself with all my flaws and strengths as an opportunity to understand my subject matter, rather than use my subject matter as an opportunity to understand me.”
    Hope you’re well. What does the week have in store? I’m waiting for my redundancy check to land so I can decide how long to remain unemployed. Also it’s full steam ahead building the Ssnake Press website ahead of Kate’s publication day, which I hope to auspiciously make coincide with Bastille Day.
    xo
    J

  7. julian

    I love haunted doll stories. My parents, on their honeymoon, actually stayed in Robert’s old house and visited him at the museum. You’re not supposed to take pictures of him without permission, which they did. Why did you include the Emilia story twice? The Velvet Underground is one of my mom’s favorite bands, so I grew up hearing their more accessible tracks, but when I first heard their more experimental stuff like “Heroin” or “The Black Angel’s Death Song”, that was certainly one of those moments for me. Another band I would kill to see live in their prime.

  8. Steve

    Did you encounter any haunted dolls while researching RT? Where do the photo descriptions come from?

    Some difficult issues with my parents’ estate have come up. It’s not worth going into, and I’m trying to relax for the rest of the day, but so much of this is out of my control even though it has a serious impact on my life. So maddening!

    Guadagnino made a film inspired by Arto Lindsay? Wow! Does anyone know what it’s called?

    I have a few new album reviews, on Pulp’s MORE (https://www.slantmagazine.com/music/pulp-more-album-review/) and Matmos’ METALLIC LIFE REVIEW and Dalava’s UNDERSTORIES. Both of the latter two are part of Artsfuse’s “Short Fuses” column: https://artsfuse.org/310999/june-short-fuses-materia-critica-5/

    • Steve

      Great news: I received my parents’ death certificates in the mail this afternoon. I’ll mail them to my lawyer tomorrow morning. That’ll get the estate process started.

  9. pancakeIan

    Hi Dennis. I never knew haunted doll lore was a thing until now . That quote you put at the beginning sounds like Poe . I believe in other dimensions, but I’m dubious about some spirit deciding to embody a child’s toy . But who knows. People do like to make up stories to get attention , especially these days.
    Speaking of making things up, I’m sure you’re right about many ‘slaves’ fabricating identities on those sites, just to fuck with people . Which ties into the conversation you and Steequen were having, about how easy it is to get attention from random people around the globe , with internet and social media. But it’s equally easy to get hurt by someone you meet and open up to online, if one isn’t careful. That happened to me , not long ago. People are nothing , if not predictable, eh ?

    Ha, I’ve always liked Travolta, and he’s another affable-in-person celebrity…..good to know. Although I wouldn’t have necessarily pegged him as someone who’d show up at an Isherwood reading. But what do I know…..
    Believe me , I would *love* to see Henson’s art in person ( or Henry Scott Tuke’s paintings, for that matter ) . But, Florida is not a mecca of culture, to put it mildly. And I don’t do much traveling .
    I just read your Clive Barker interview. I’ve seen the first couple ‘Hellraiser’ movies multiple times over the years , especially the second one . I love the labyrinth of hell in it, and it has an epic soundtrack. You and he discussed Disney optioning the rights to a series of his novels……’Abarat’? Apparently that never happened, unless I’m missing something . Disney seems way too conservative for that type of collaboration !
    later

  10. Steeqhen

    Hey Dennis,

    Nice collection of dolls. I love haunted dolls, though I’m not the biggest fan of haunted dolls horror movies (bar Chucky). I prefer the folktale, urban legend style stories, like Robert. You’ve given me a whole lot more to read about and obsess over.

    I think you’re right about the romanticizing of the past. Though it scares me just how little people around me seem to have hobbies… though maybe I’m just surrounded by a lot of people that struggle to live.

    I’ve been in a bit of a depressive episode, I’ve probably said this before. I slept until 5pm on Sunday, which scared me a bit. I can’t remember my exact dream, but I remember something of a video game and I knew it was all fake, but I hoped that the further I went, that maybe something real would come out of it. I’ve spent the weekend obsessing over Doctor Who again; I’ve been watching stuff from 2017-2020, the new season airing, and watching the stuff from the 70s. The finale of this newest season was a bit all over the place, and now I’ve become transfixed with trying to write a pilot for a soft reboot of the show. Unfortunately a story involving the Autons (plastic aliens who were used as the main antagonist for two soft reboots in the 70s and 00s) and microplastic that I was thinking of is too similar to an episode from 2020 that I haven’t watched yet, involving microplastic and aliens. I’m still going to try and write it anyway.

    I hope that I can start to feel a bit better soon. But part of me wants to just sleep for a few days. I don’t know if it’s recovery sleep or depressive sleep

  11. Uday

    Re being miserable money-raising: would you ever do the Nick Zedd no-wave zero budget thing? Or is that not your style? Great post. I’ve long wanted to have an old woman as a consensual, non-sexual pet (with the important caveat that we don’t speak any of the same languages). It goes without saying that she should have some sort of haunted doll, or at the very least the sort of doll that would be haunted if I had any sort of belief in the supernatural, which I don’t. It’d be just slightly too big to comfortably hold, so let’s put it at a foot and a half, and have soft cloth skin that covered a hard body so you couldn’t really comfortably press it; all full of wires. Dressed in red, of course, and with an old fashioned cowlick curl. And the old woman would always carry it at her side, dragging it along the floor till the seated legs grew dirty. The doll Leka is a good model for a face, I think. Wishing you a day where you see many moths.

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