JETER, K.W., The Dark Seeker,
TOR Books/Tom Doherty Associates, Inc., New York, NY, USA, 1987.
Octavo;
paperback, illustrated embossed wrappers; 317pp. Mild shelfwear and a
cancellation hole-punch to the covers; spine creased; light toning of the
pages, else fine.
I’d
heard a few whispers along the grapevine about Jeter – that he was a good
writer and worth checking out – but the opportunity to investigate didn’t arise
for quite awhile. When I finally picked up a copy of this book, I almost didn’t
buy it, because the cover artwork and design are so awful. But I decided that I
shouldn’t be cover-judging and forked over my cash for it. I’m extremely glad
that I did.
The
story involves a group of researchers who dabble with an experimental drug,
allowing them to mesh consciousnesses, with a view to applications in
battlefield situations, where the formation of a gestalt-mind between
combatants would be of practical value. However, the drug also releases the
darkest, innermost tendencies of those taking it, pushing them towards acts of
depravity and wanton destruction. The action takes place some years after the
experiments, when the researchers are on heavily-regulated prophylactic
chemical inhibitors and have been re-located, found ‘Not Guilty by reason of
Insanity’, after a series of horrific murders which the drug – a discrete
entity they refer to as ‘the Host’ - forced them to commit.
We
follow Mike Tyler, living in Los Angeles with his nurse girlfriend Stephanie
and her son Eddy, idly testing the boundaries of the limits which his
medication places upon him, bridling against the regimen but seeing how far he can
go without it. Things are dull but otherwise fine, until he receives a call
from his former wife Linda who calls him to say that ‘Slide’ - an old criminal
associate of theirs and part of the experiment from the research days – has
taken their child Bryan away from her, the child that Mike thought was dead.
From
here on, the pace is unrelenting as Mike tries to find his son, keeping at bay
the semi-retired detective Kinross, who has a crusade against the researchers,
and the cash-poor journalist Bedell, who squandered a mint made from his book
about the experiment and its crimes, and who has a sample of the drug stashed
in his house. On top of this, Mike has to balance his re-surfaced hysterical
ex-wife and his new love and her child, whilst trawling through the wreckage of
his past and his old – very damaged – associates to try and find the
Host-addicted Slide, before something horrible happens to the son he thought
he’d never see again.
Fans
of Frank Belknap-Long’s “The Hounds of Tindalos” (which I reviewed earlier) will
sense a resonance with this story: the power of deadly and unpredictable drugs
and the depths to which otherwise civilised individuals will descend if the
barriers are removed, is tensely explored. In Long’s story, the “foulness” is
embodied by the Hounds themselves and is the price paid for dabbling; in
Jeter’s tale, the Host springs into “foul” phantom existence from the deep,
dark desires of the gestalt-mind. I’d suggest that any Keeper thinking of
incorporating the Plutonian Drug into their adventures should read this book to
gain some real insights into the effects of these kinds of toxins on the minds
and bodies of the users.
Jeter’s
prose is sharp and precise, sketching to perfection the subliminal flashes,
visual aberrations and mental distortions of the characters involved. As well,
his ability to conjure the locales of the L.A. milieu work brilliantly: the
hard, modern environment really underscores the bleak worldview of the broken
researchers. Actually, I couldn’t think of anywhere else that this story could
have been set, since Jeter is clearly channelling the Manson Murders as part of
his story-telling. I was thinking, as I read, that I could see where things
were tending, but the ending caught me completely by surprise: I enjoyed
afterwards, the fact that Jeter had flagged all of these options as to the
final resolution and had then done something completely unexpected. A masterful
stroke!
Five
tentacled horrors from me!
Today is Jeter's birthday, which is how I found your review. I haven't read any of his horror novels, but this one sounds great!
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