Having
had a good time with “Shadows Over
Innsmouth” I decided to look around for some other Mythos-fiction compendia
and my searching led me first to Military Simulations (a fantastic local
distributor of gaming and associated material whose existence I had completely
forgotten about!) and the productions of Miskatonic River Press. From the
available selections I chose two titles: “The
Strange Dark One”, a collection of the writings of Wilum Hopfrog Pugmire,
and “Seasons in Carcosa”, a gathering
of tales inspired by the works of Robert W. Chambers and his King In Yellow cycle. My reasons for
taking on these two books were quite specific so, without further ado (as they
say in the funny pages) let me start my dissection:
PUGMIRE, W.H., The Strange Dark One – Tales of Nyarlathotep,
Miskatonic River Press, LLC, Lakeland, FL, USA, 2012.
Octavo;
paperback, perfect bound in illustrated wrappers; 154pp., with 6pp. of adverts.
Mild wear to the covers; else near fine.
I
feel that I have to offer a caveat
before jumping into this. I have always felt that a writer should let their
works speak for themselves; if there has to be a level of pageantry or theatre
surrounding the work then, to me, it’s a signal that someone somewhere feels
that some extra marketing on the side needs to take over in order to make up
for the shortcomings in the writing, or at least muddy the waters so that close
inspection is rendered void. Neil Gaiman’s work – and again, this is a personal
issue – suffers from being overshadowed by too much self-promotion, and even
Terry Pratchett’s moody, be-hatted back flap photo portraits seem to me a
little contrived. A brief look at the back cover of this volume really says it
all: Pugmire’s photo makes him look like a cross between Boy George and a
Formula 1 race car driver; all bad drag and Mythos branding.
Now,
I have no qualms about people wanting to be themselves and expressing
themselves as they see fit; but when the persona of the writer invades the
writing to the extent that there are axes grinding in the background, then it
becomes less entertainment and more proselytising. Call it catharsis; call it
“freaking the mundanes”: it’s still self-indulgent. In terms of Lovecraftian
fiction, Pugmire has sketched out a little corner of the universe and - along
with Anne Rice, Poppy Z. Brite and Richard Watts – has populated it with
vicious pretty-boys, indulging in sordid, bloody, rent-boy sex. Like the very
worst in current vampire erotica, being from Sesqua Valley is a metaphor for
being outside the mainstream, for being “Bohemian”, for being on drugs, bisexual,
or gay. In this vein, with his personal baggage clearly in view, Pugmire then
steers a very dangerous course towards becoming a Stephenie Meyers clone.
And
this is a shame. In the first story of this collection – the titular “Strange Dark One” – Many good things
happen: we are introduced to the quietly off-kilter inhabitants of Sesqua
Valley and gain a sense of what’s amiss there through the eyes of an outsider,
April Dorgan. She arrives from Wisconsin following up some unfinished business
left by her late grandfather, whose bookshop she has inherited. Despite his
written injunction to not offer the residents of Sesqua Valley the books locked
away in his safe at any price, she blithely tosses the hoard – which contains
copies of De Vermis Mysteriis and the
Book of Eibon - into a cardboard box
and drives there to make a deal. Why? Because there's no story otherwise, but mostly because, like all of Pugmire's protagonists, she's a selfish ingrate. Everyone she meets in town is strangely
alluring, darkly mysterious and wrapped in enigma. She discovers an instant connexion
to a local youth named Cyrus who rescues her from a near-fatal attraction to a
piece of glass rescued from a New England church, an incident which focusses
the attention of Nyarlathotep upon her. The locals are all very welcoming and ‘olde
worlde’ and, this being a realm of the Mythos, we readers are left in no doubt
that April’s books will become the property of the Sesquans as soon as the Big
N. has finished with her. And for free!
There
is a tinge of the ‘Bella and Edward’ stench hanging over this story and while
it gets reined in somewhat, later stories aren’t so fortunate. “One Last Theft” shows no restraint
whatsoever, as rent-boy Stefan (it would have to be ‘Stefan’) returns to Sesqua
Valley to be pawed at, ravished and coddled by a selection of old queers before
being taken by Nyarlathotep at an annual festival. It’s all very dreary and
tawdry.
The
enigmatic figure of Simon Gregory Williams hovers over these stories even when
he doesn’t appear in person. We are often told that his features are strange –
like a blending of frog and wolf – but in many instances, having dispensed with
this nod to his hideous unearthly nature, many of the protagonists end up
succumbing to his savage sexual allure. At which point I roll my eyes: either
he’s grotesque and every inch the beast he’s often called, or he’s Edward from Twilight. Pick one: you can’t have it
both ways.
It’s
a crying shame: these stories are couched within an excellent understanding of
the Mythos and carve out a solid branch of new possibilities. There’s a masterly
quality to the writing: it’s definitely new but it has that touch of the
ancient to it which works so well in Lovecraft’s own style; I was often
impressed by the way that dialogue, replete with ‘thees’ and ‘thous’, mostly
didn’t jar or seem forced. Mostly. The descriptive passages are suitably
unearthly and strange, and work well in a community where the Crawling Chaos is
a person in the neighbourhood (a person that you meet each day!).
The
rest is just editing, to which I’ll turn in a minute.
PULVER Snr., Joseph S.,
Ed., A Season in Carcosa, Miskatonic
River Press, LLC, Lakeland, FL, USA, 2012.
Octavo;
paperback, perfect bound in illustrated wrappers; 282pp., with 6pp. of adverts.
Near fine.
The
thing that really underlines the horror in Chambers’ writings is the fact that
very little is explained. There are events – discovery; pursuit; revelation;
madness – but often no rationale as to what’s going on to create the issues.
Nevertheless, the reader gains enough glimpses of the madness beyond to grasp
an inkling of the hideous premise. That’s all that’s required – just a glimpse.
Horror is at its best when this happens: spelling out the mechanics obviates
the fear, and – as a horror writer – that’s the last thing you need.
There
are a lot of stories in this selection and they all represent gung-ho attempts
to splash about in Chambers’ paddling pool and make some waves. Unfortunately,
while most of the authors are down with the ‘don’t explain too much’
regulation, they get too hung up on the phantasmagoria. Pages of psychedelic
description in ponderous prose don’t make for entertainment; whenever your
readers have to brace themselves before diving in (“if I’m not back by page 24,
come get me!”) then - surprise, surprise – you’re doing something wrong.
There’re some very ‘splatterpunk-y’ efforts here, and it’s not difficult to see
that the writers are out to shock, rather than to say anything of especial
interest, and the whole production falls flat as a result.
Which
brings me to editing.
When
I jump into a collection like this, I usually read the introduction just to
gain an insight as to what the editor is trying to accomplish. In this
instance, the introduction is barely legible, peppered as it is with
half-sentences, run-on sentences, bizarre and excessive uses of the exclamation
point (“! !!”) and a wayward, fan-boy focus. I took this as a bad sign. Reading
through the garble, it seems that Joseph S. Pulver Snr. could get no-one to
helm this project so he fell back upon his own resources and then wrangled a
bunch of close friends and associates to write for him (I admit, I could be
reading this wrongly – it’s hard to tell). What Mr Pulver Snr. fails to
recognise however, is that to be an ‘Editor’, one has to ‘Edit’.
The
third story – Don Webb’s “Movie Night at
Phil’s” is so bogged down with typos, errors of writing, and errors of
sense that it’s just painful to read; not to mention that it also suffers from
the splatterpunk need to shock mentioned above. “The principal sent him hose for three days”, “more evil fro the lack of a name”, “he was loosing his thinning hair” and “just else something to hide”: these are a selection of phrases
from just two pages, which should
have been cleared away on even the most sophomoric editing effort.
It’s
interesting that this story is the worst affected, which indicates that maybe
it was shoehorned in before a deadline, or that the writer insisted that it be
left alone. Regardless, with this amount of poor attention to detail, it proves
merely that authors are not best-served by the staff at Miskatonic River Press.
I expect to find some errors when reading from a small press, but the amount of
sloppiness in these two books is unprecedented. You’ll find fewer errors in your
average DAW or ACE paperback.
In
Pugmire’s effort there is also a slew of similar corruption: on pages 55, 62, 65,
70, 82, 91, 106 – the list goes on. This is too much for a book of only 154
pages. Too, there is no such place as the “Cote d’Ivorie” and you can’t summon
the Haunter of the Dark from a shining “trapezium”, no matter how hard you try.
And would it have been so difficult simply to justify the text on each page? Every
now and then, Pugmire becomes so mired in description that his ability to indicate
action, or produce dialogue, falls flat. Try this:
“...I pushed away the
blankets and got out of bed, absent-mindedly knocking the book that I had been
reading and was beside me on the mattress to the floor. I reached for the book
and touched the floor in stocking feet and gingerly opened the door of my upper
bedroom...”
...or
this:
“‘Wait a minute,’ she told
him. ‘The last time you offered me a drink I came to regret it. Damn, what was
in that hooch you gave me in the club? I’ve never hallucinated like that
before. I can’t tell what was memory and what was dream.’”
The
first extract is awkward and repetitive; the second sounds like the sort of
dialogue that regularly appears in Penthouse
magazine’s Forum. These are not the
only instances of this type of thing either.
Why
weren’t these problems addressed? Certainly, every author should recognise that
how they look in print is how they will be judged; the manner of presentation
here is extraordinarily lacklustre. Perhaps, Pugmire is too much of a diva to
accept criticism; nevertheless, a good editor should stick to their guns and
make the alterations and cuts required. If the author doesn’t like it, they can
always go elsewhere.
The
introduction to A Season in Carcosa
attempts (in broken, fan-boy English! !!) to define the material to be included
in the volume; in particular, it asks of the writers that they do not simply
draft a version of the play, “The King in
Yellow”. Nevertheless, that’s exactly what many of the writers try to do:
great slabs of purported text from the work appear, especially in Edward
Morris’s “The Theatre and Its Double” (along
with the residuum of a semester in theatre studies). Again, an editor in charge
of such a project should draw a line in the sand and choose to exclude material
which doesn’t fit the bill. At 21 pieces, the collection is not exactly
slender, so some judicious excisions might have trimmed the unwanted fat.
Nevertheless,
amidst the splatter, the writing as if one was texting to a friend, and the appalling editing, there are some gems: “Ms. Found
in a Chicago Hotel Room” by Daniel Mills was a pleasant surprise; as was “it sees me when I’m not looking” by
Gary McMahon (although someone should have just bitten the bullet here and
presented the thing entirely in lower case).
The
bottom line for a publishing outfit should be a reputation for presenting a
particular range of material in a format that is pleasing and for which the
punters are willing to pay. These two products are choppy and difficult to wade
through; whilst stemming from the Mythos and associated weird fiction, they
fail to adequately define their own parameters and butcher the presentation
along the way. Each time that the reader is forced to stop and disentangle a
mangled sentence is a moment when the journey has been lost; the adventure
stops; the excitement is well and truly killed. Repeat sales are not being
promoted here.
Due
to its indulgence and laziness, I’m giving three tentacled horrors to “The Strange Dark One”, a book that
really could’ve been so much better; due to its sheer incompetence in terms of
editorial support, “A Season in Carcosa”
gets only two.
PS: I have just read online that Pugmire has revised his book since this 2012 edition, so maybe he was just as appalled at the initial result as I was. Hopefully the re-write makes for a better book!
PS: I have just read online that Pugmire has revised his book since this 2012 edition, so maybe he was just as appalled at the initial result as I was. Hopefully the re-write makes for a better book!
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