March, 1953, The Hall of Fantasy, a weekly radio
series broadcast “an original tale of fantasy by Richard Thorne entitled,” “The
Masks of Ashor.” The story begins when Marsha’s Uncle Harold sends two gold masks.
Marsha’s husband, Bert, says that the masks are “…beautiful, except grotesque
at the same time”; his wife adds, “well they look human, and yet….” In spite of
their uncertainty about the masks, they decide to hang them up on either side
of the mirror that hangs above the fireplace in their living room.
Accompanying the masks is a letter from Uncle
Harold. The masks are from Istanbul, they’re gold yet the seller sold them for
very little—was eager to be rid of them—and, “there’s some kind of story
connected with them, I don’t know what it is….” When Uncle Harold finds out, he
rushes to save his niece and her husband from
the true owner of the masks, Ashor—but too late.
Last year—in March, as a matter of fact, I
received a pair of masks in the mail. I have no Uncle Harold, but an Aunt Eileen. One of the masks is pictured above.
During my Color Plates book tour, I was handed a
play, properly, a masque, by an actress leaving what I presumed was an audition
taking place in the space above the bar where I read. I transcribed some of the
“Black Masque” here, in the hope someone would claim authorship. No one has. Though I am not the author, I tend to think of it as mine.
My copy of Transactions of the Flesh arrived a
little ahead of Christmas. I’ve only just started to poke at it, but see it
includes “Indescribable,” an excerpt from M.O.N.’s ObliviOnanisM, a “profanely mystical work of hyperpurple
theory-porn”—a description provided by ObliviOnanisM’s publisher, gnOme.
The connection I made between gnOme and the masque handed me in New York City
is gnOme’s aesthetic toward anonymity and an authentic kind of falsehood, the
sort of truth that lives in, as gnOme has it, “pseudepigrapha” and “apocrypha.”
I believe the “Black Masque” is more than just a
script; it’s a transcript, and when performed, a liturgy.
Does Anonymous make contact with gnOme, or
does gnOme contact Anonymous?
Inquiries and submissions: gnOmebooks AT gmail DOT com. No need to identify yourself.
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