That
said, the reviews were good, it had a forward by S.T. Joshi, who is no slouch
when it comes to identifying good weird fiction, and the publisher PS
Publishing tends to put out good stuff, so I decided to give it a go. I’m
really glad I did.
As
it turns out, ‘The Dulwich Horror’, which leads off the anthology is one of the
best pieces of weird fiction I’ve read in a long time. It is Lovecraftian, but
Hambling puts enough of his own spin on it to keep it from being pastiche. Partly
this is achieved by the setting, 1927 London, and the characters, a bunch of
newly-graduated Oxford intellectuals, and partly through his particular way of describing
Cthulhu and other Great/Old/Ancient/Alien entities. He really managed to
convince me that these creatures could be living just outside our reality,
almost hiding in the cracks of our mathematics and science. Hambling is a skilful
writer.
While
it is true that none of the rest of the stories can quite live up to that first
one, there is not a bad story in the lot. All of the stories are vaguely
connected, but the book is at its best in the three stories that are connected
by the central character of The Dulwich Horror. It is unusual to see reoccurring
characters in true Mythos fiction (or obvious reasons), but again, Hambling
pulls it off, and even provides a believable and unusual ending. In fact, I
think the book could have just included those three tales, and I would have
been just as happy.
It’s
a good anthology and would stand proudly on any weird fiction collector’s
shelf.
Thanks, so glad you enjoyed the collection.
ReplyDeleteDo let me know if you're interested in the Harry Stubbs series, set in the same milieu in the 1920s
A very good article. Thanks to the author.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the review, sounds like a book I may like.
ReplyDelete