CAMPBELL, Ramsey, Demons by Daylight, A Star Book/W.H. Allen & Co., Ltd., London,
1975.
Octavo;
illustrated paperback; 192pp. Moderate shelfwear; retailer’s stamp on first
page; tape repair to head of spine. Else, good.
When
I was a kid, I remember haunting the book department of a local store and
coveting the books according to their covers. Just by looking at them I knew I
would never be able to justify purchasing them with my hard-earned pocket
money. The moment my parents clapped eyes on them, they would be taken away and
that would be the last I’d see of them. So I hung out at the book department,
seeing which ones were still there each time and being grateful for one more
chance to say hello.
(I’d
never read them by the way: I knew instinctively that to read without paying
first, was a kind of theft, and I would never stoop to that.)
One
of those titles was something called Legion by William Peter Blatty; there was
a reference on the dustjacket to the movie “The Exorcist” which had done the
rounds of the cinemas a few years earlier and which had caused a big noise: I
knew I’d never be able to crack the cover on that one. In fact, just standing
there watching it on the shelf was something of a thrill.
There
was another title – paperback this time – that always caught my eye: The Height
of the Scream by Ramsey Campbell. One look at the fear–stretched features of
the woman on the cover was enough to know it would never be mine. I even made
sure not to look too closely at it in case some diligent shop steward, or officious
shopper, shooed me away.
So
I lingered over Demons By Daylight. That was pretty innocuous: just an image of
a cracked skull with a big lizard crawling out of the top of it. It was still
pretty racy, but no moreso than the average biker tattoo, or anything that Bon
Scott had inked upon his person, and he was almost acceptable at this time.
Almost.
In
the end though, I’d just blow my change on an omnibus re-print of a Superman or
Batman medley, issued by Gordon & Gotch in 96-pages of glorious
black-and-white, and head home. (In those days, Marvel and DC didn’t have
distribution networks in Australia, so we had to make do with these third-hand
do-overs.)
Today,
Legion rests comfortably on my bookshelf, the same edition as I drooled over
those many years ago. Of those tempting Campbells, I now have a copy of Demons
in an acceptable condition; my only question is: was it worth it?
Is
it just me, or does Campbell’s stuff just seem a little ‘bitty’? Most of what
I’ve read seems a little out-of-focus; just scraps with no real substance. I
guess it’s somewhat of the same thing I have with Belknap-Long: if there’s no
solid set-up, then there’s no real pay-off. In stories such as “The Face at
Pine Dunes”, “The Render of the Veils” and “Cold Print”, the stories reveal
enough to shock the reader without having to spell everything out: we get
enough clues to piece the whole together, into an uncomfortable, but
inevitable, whole. (Just to be clear, none of those stories are in the present
volume.)
Even
the contents page is a bit fluffy here: it’s broken up into three sections –
“Nightmares”, “Errol Undercliffe: a tribute” and “Relationships”. Glancing at
this list, as a horror aficionado, I’m wondering “what have I gotten myself
into?” Perhaps I’ve just bought one-third of a horror-story selection and the
rest is some new stuff, experimental work by the author. It gets a little
better, happily; sadly, not a lot.
“Errol
Undercliffe” is a dismal little morass of gloopy writing that wanders all over
the shop without getting to the point. A writing teacher of mine once said that
sometimes you need to throw the entire architecture of a story onto the page
and then remove as much of the scaffolding as is not required to get your meaning
across. That is what I think is happening here. These are notes; not a finished
tale.
The
rest of the offerings vary wildly in impact: most are simply mood pieces,
half-worked things that don’t quite emerge from the darkness. I hate reading
something and getting to the end, only to say, “Huh?” That happens all too
often with this selection.
I
wonder if Campbell should be writing in this genre at all. His
characterisations are great; he has a very literary feel for how his actors
move and respond in the situations that he devises for them. I just can’t help
feeling that the scary stuff is just an addendum, something bolted–on at the
last minute to ensure a publisher’s nod. I certainly don’t get the sense that
he’s particularly galvanised by the process.
In
other stories, for instance “The Tugging” (again, not in this collection), the
material reads as though HPL blocked it out and Campbell finished it off. It’s
a good Mythos tale, well worth hunting down if you get the chance. I suspect
that maybe Campbell began to bridle against the association and decided to
forge his own path: that’s fine; as far as I can tell he succeeded in doing
that by writing “The Face at Pine Dunes” which is a brilliant beast, completely
his own. This selection looks like he’s continued the quest for his personal muse
and it’s taking him way out to the fringes of...God alone knows what.
I
feel like a seven-year-old kid once more, hanging around with the ‘safe
option’. Maybe I should start looking once more for a copy of “The Height of
the Scream”? But then again...
Two-and-a-half
tentacled horrors for this one.
No comments:
Post a Comment