The Inheritors 3: John C Wright

Yes, I’ve lost the titles and numbers plot by now. This week’s main feature is a fascinating interview with John C Wright, author of Awake in the Night Land, who gives us detailed insights into WHH’s work and role as part of the pantheon of truly great writers, as well as answering questions on his own fiction. His interview also includes a fine introduction to the concepts of The Night Land itself for those less familiar with the novel. Not to be missed. (Don’t forget that other related posts and interviews in this tribute can be found by checking the William Hope Hodgson tag down at the bottom of the left hand sidebar).

However, greydogtales is an eclectic endeavour, and so by way of easing you in, we start with another link, the trailer for the Japanese film Matango (1963). This is, of course, based on the Hodgson story The Voice in the Night (audio links in The Voice of Horror, posted here a couple of weeks ago and still on tour in parts of the Northwest Territories).

Matango is a tokusatsu or ‘special filming’ production, a special effects approach which really started with the 1954 Godzilla. The end results are either terribly naff or terribly exciting, depending on your taste, temperament and medication. Or the mushrooms you’ve eaten in this case, I suppose.

As this is a Night Land heavy episode, we should also mention an alternative way to enjoy at least some of Hodgson’s stunning end-of-the-world imagery. Personally we think it’s worth ploughing through the whole damn thing, because the good bits stay with you for years, but we understand that the faux-archaic language drags after a while, and the second half is much harder work than the first. So you could have a glance at the adaptation by James Stoddard, the US fantasy author – The Night Land: A Story Retold.

51inmNUdGWL._SX373_BO1,204,203,200_The Night Land: A Story Retold

Now, we are pleased to welcome author John C Wright who, in addition to producing many other science fiction and fantasy novels, has written four novellas set in the Night Land (see later for more details). For this WHH tribute, he kindly provided us with his views on Hodgson’s writing and Hodgson’s influence on his own work. Rather than pick and choose, we decided in the end to offer the whole interview below.

John_C_Wright

greydog: Firstly, thank you for joining us! Let’s start with your own experiences of WHH’s writing. Many of us are influenced, even if unconsciously, by the books of our youth. Did you know his work way back, or is he a relatively recent find for you?

Wright: You will perhaps not understand me if I say he is a recent find, but then say I came across William Hope Hodgson decades ago. Let me explain.

You see, every bookish person has a certain small number of books encountered in impressionable youth when the imagination is virgin territory, fresh and unexplored. Books that strike deep into the soul will live in the imagination of that person for the rest of his life. Each is, to him, a book of gold.

For those who have a book of gold living in their imagination since youth onward, every book found thereafter seems a recent find – even if, numbering the years, this new book was found long ago. So it was for me.

This is why even people of exquisite taste will adore books that, had they read them in cynical adulthood, they would little regard or remember. Youth does not seek refinement in expression, but raw wonder, heroism, romance, and ideas that exercise the pinions of the mind. (Science fiction is prone to this more so than most genres: it is, by its nature as a genre of ideas, one not given to cleverness of wordsmithing, or stylistic manners. SF from the pulp days is written in purple prose; SF from the days of Heinlein, Asimov and Clarke is written in unadorned journalistic prose.)

For me, the Books of Gold are those into which I entered in my youth, and their influence on my writing is undisguised: THE DREAM QUEST OF UNKNOWN KADATH by HP Lovecraft, WORLD OF NULL-A by A.E. Van Vogt, EMPHYRIO by Jack Vance, DINOSAUR BEACH by Keith Laumer. It was from THE TIME MACHINE by HG Wells I understood the concept of ‘Deep Time’ and from LAST AND FIRST MEN by Olaf Stapledon I saw how ‘Deep Time’ stood in comparison to human history and human evolution. Nearly everything I have written is some offspring or miscegenation of one or more of these seminal books.

Now I had reached an age when the wonder of youth was past me, or so I thought. It happened that I was writing a Lovecraftian pastiche called NIGH-FORGOTTEN SUN, about a world whose sun has died and is being kept alive in the eternal night by magic. A friend of mine thought I had based my idea on a book by Hodgson called THE NIGHT LAND. I answered that I had never heard of this book. Not knowing how momentous it would prove, he gave me his copy.

I cracked the pages, and was startled and rapt. At the first mention of the Towers of Sleep or the Giant’s Tomb – phrases never explained, but redolent with the wild perfume of otherworldy and unearthly glamor – that I knew I had found the lost wonder of youth again. Then, the tragic death of the hero’s true love, his sorrow, and he is visited by dreams of his next incarnation, countless cycles of time into the future, in a land as strange to us as we would be to antediluvians.

The world had died countless aeons ago, and in the midst of a land that has never seen the sun, a seven mile high pyramid of imperishable metal rises, besieged and surrounded by nonhuman horrors, slow as glaciers, terrible as raging wolves, gigantic, or silent and shrouded like hooded ghosts… For reasons never mentioned, it is better to meet these nameless entities with immediate suicide than to fall alive into their power.

And, here and there scattered about the darkened and terror-haunted landscape were remnants from elder aeons long forgotten, such as the heavier-than-air flying machines dating from years when the air had once been thick enough to support their wings. (This is a startling conceit for a manuscript published in 1912 and written years earlier. By way of comparison, the iPhone is as old at the time of this writing as the Wright Flyer was to Hodgson’s publication.) The author casually credits our remote ancestors with superb inventions issuing from a different understanding of the order of nature, things like the Earth Current or living disk-weapons or telepathic spyglasses, or Doors that open into other realms of being, whose origins are as obscure to them as the inventor of the fire-drill or hand-ax is to us. The sheer magnitude of edifice, of time-scales, and above all the hopeless magnitude of evil, was staggering to me, and still is.

To maintain an aura of hushed and malignant horror across the space of a short story would have been an impressive artistic achievement: to do so across nearly two hundred thousand words is an unparalleled prodigy. Moreover, to make this work of the macabre into a paean praising the undying power of love shows a magnificence of spirit, a boldness, I have seen in no other writer in the genre of dark fantasy. Boldly, Hodgson makes his theme the utmost opposite of his mood.

And, again, Hodgson does something I have seen a few other writers following in his footsteps, namely Jack Vance and Gene Wolfe, attempt: to treat the props and settings of science fiction with the mood, theme and glamor of fairyland, so that what might be far-future science or far-distant extraterrestrials are depicted as mystical or unearthly powers and spirits. It is a world where the boundaries between the spiritual and material was blurred. Hodgson invented his own genre: the science-fantasy.

It was a book of gold to me, the first such I had read since childhood. It was childhood dreams, and perhaps nightmares, come again. But I only had the first half of the book.

Ballantyne (1971)
Ballantyne (1971)

What my friend gave me was the Ballantine paperback, the Adult Fantasy series, edited by Lin Carter. I understand Mr. Carter cut out some of the purple passages that annoyed other readers: all I can say is that I was not annoyed. But he also cut the book in two, so that, for years, this haunting book was doubly haunting, because it was as unfinished as Plato’s TIMEAUS. The volume ends at the spot where the nameless narrator stands looking down at the blasted and darkened Lesser Redoubt, and feels the malign spirits dwelling in those now desecrated and darkened halls, and every evidence is that his beloved, Mirdath the Beautiful, despite having found her again after millions of years of endless reincarnations, is lost.

In those days I was a penniless student, nor was there an internet where public domain books could be read free of charge, nor purchased from obscure booksellers across country. I was not to read the second half of the adventure for years – nor was this necessarily a bad thing, since the second half of the book is, in my opinion, weaker than the first, all save the final chapter, descending into sentiment and silliness in places. So the fact that my imagination was unfed – what is more of a torment to the imagination than an unfinished tale? – may have indeed increased my admiration of his book.

I ran a role playing game with my friends in law school set partly in the world of Roger Zelazny’s JACK OF SHADOWS and partly in the Night Land of William Hope Hodgson. Because of this, I had to invent many details of background which might come on stage in a game the authors needed not to fret over, and so I had a thick folder of material, settings and characters and so on, of Night Land material.

Unlike someone who sets a game in a Tolkienesque background, there are not that many writers with a thick folder of material set in a Hodgsonesque background. I dare say I had pondered and dreamed more about the Last Redoubt, and wrote down more, than anyone of my generation. But when law school was over, my friends and I graduated, and the game ended, I put the folder away, perhaps a little sad that so much work would never be used again.

Ah, but then I found out that Andy Robertson was seeking stories set in that background, and I felt the invisible brush of the wings of destiny. Here was the story I was born to tell. The result you know: AWAKE IN THE NIGHT is my homage to Hodgson, and my memorial to Andy Robertson. May he rest in peace.

greydog:  And why do you think The Night Land holds such fascination for writers, over one hundred years later, when so many other Victorian and Edwardian fantasies have been forgotten?

Wright: There are several reasons: first, it is merely because The Night Land is one of the most imaginative settings in all literature. Had Hodgson not attempted to write in a fatuous prose style of faux archaism (an unfortunate blunder) I dare say this book would be as well regarded as any offering by Poe.  Second is the timelessness. By setting the tale so unthinkably far in the future, the author neatly avoids any anachronisms stories set, for example, in the futuristic year of 1984 might suffer when that year comes and goes.

Much ink has been spilled over the question of what defines science fiction, or what the first truly science fictional book is. I will not revisit that quarrel here, but I will mention that one strong contender for the honor of first science fiction tale is HG Well’s THE TIME MACHINE, and for this reason: it has one element earlier writings do not have, not his own nor those of Jules Verne nor Mary Shelly. That element is a sense of Deep Time, that is, a sense of time on a geologic rather than a Biblical scale. This sense of Deep Time is one of the hallmarks of the scientific revolution which severs the modern generations from the worldview of our forefathers. It is as dramatic a dethronement of the centrality of man as the heliocentric revolution of Copernicus. But Wells’ THE TIME MACHINE (1895) was published only 17 years before Hodgson’s THE NIGHT LAND (1912). (By way of comparison, that is the same span as separates the second Harry Potter book or the second Song of Ice and Fire book from the time of this writing.)

The 1912 Edition
The 1912 Edition

If I may betray my partisan loyalty for a moment, I would say frankly that THE NIGHT LAND has aged better than THE TIME MACHINE, since the peevish Victorian fretting over the injustice of the English class system that underpins the ironic point of Wells’ work is a quaint artifact of a bygone age, whereas the simple and mythic theme of a man facing a cosmos of hellish darkness and emptiness to find his true love once again, even beyond the doors of death, is a theme than cannot age.

So Hodgson’s work is timeless in two senses: he has selected a theme that, like springtide, is ancient and yet fresh; and he has worked out a mood, props and setting that is heavily laden with a hoary and archaic savor, but it is an archaism not of an unimaginably ancient past but rather (if I may be permitted a paradox) an archaism one of an unimaginably ancient future.

Third is the striking symbolism. The Last Redoubt is an unconquered but doomed citadel at whose downfall all human life (and, indeed all non-abhorrent life forms of earth) will be extinguished, and the House of Silence reign supreme forever over a world of peering things, giants, living mountains, night-hounds, glowing pits, ice floes, and sleepless watchers.

Each man’s soul stands in this same relationship to all the evils of this sad world: that he will most certainly die is the one bit of knowledge no man can escape. But that the powers of darkness, before that hour, can be kept at bay provided only that they are not invited in. And, again, love is the only thing worth venturing out of your own soul to seek, despite the spiritual and physical dangers. And this is merely only of many symbolic parallels one might see in this striking and appalling image. Any beloved thing threatened is, in its own way, a Last Redoubt.

greydog: One of the trademarks of your own Night Land stories is your integration of classical Greek influences. How did bringing that in come to mind?

Wright: Hodgson introduces only a single word from the post-historical language of his far future world: the weapon of the hero is called a diskos, which is Greek. I wanted to obtain the same mood of far-removed remoteness in time as Hodgson, and thought names from myth would carry the necessary sense of time.

The only names given in the tale are Naani and Aschoff, so I might have used Dravidian or Russian names for the same purpose, but I wanted to name one character Perithoos, after the man that Theseus abandoned alive in Hell.

greydog: You mentioned Jack Vance above, and I have often wondered if he was acquainted with The Night Land. Do you find that aspects of Vance’s Dying Earth series resonate with you as a writer?

Wright: I will answer this by mentioning my short story, ‘Guyal the Curator’ had the distinct honor of appearing in the homage anthology SONGS OF THE DYING EARTH edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois.

Greydog: I understand that you are also familiar with Hodgson’s The House on the Borderland. What, as a reader, strikes you most about that particular book?

Wright: I say again that Hodgson had the honor of having founded his own genre, that of the gothic and anachronistic science fantasy, a genre Jack Vance and Gene Wolfe have also explored. Well, in this story, Hodgson created a niche or sub-genre which was later explored to much greater extent by HP Lovecraft. Now, to be sure, writers before and since have written gothics, macabre stories, weird tales, and dark fantasies. But what Lovecraft did in the main body of his published work, and what Hodgson did here, is capture a sense of scientific horror. I do not mean the horrors created by a misuse of science.

I mean the sense of desolation and inhumanity impressed on the imagination of man by the magnitude of the modern view of the physical universe. The modern Einsteinian discoveries of a vast universe with no special center, where time and space are subject to warps and distortions, where the Hubble expansion and the heat death of the universe promises us that the cosmos will one day be eaten to nothing by entropy, and all life cease with no possibility of emerging ever again – all these things deeply impress the human psyche with a sense of appalling isolation and nihilism. Compared to the sheer inhumanity of Cthulhu of Lovecraft, or the dark gods seen by the recluse in House on the Borderland, something like a ghost or a werewolf or a vampire – all things that had once been human – or a devil from hell – a thing that had once been an angel – is warm and comforting by contrast.

greydog: And finally, might we be seeing more Night Land stories from you in the future, or is that chapter closed for now?

Wright: At present, I have no plan to revisit the Night Lands, no inspirations, no stories left to tell in that setting. As for the future, all these things are in the laps of the muses.

greydog: Many thanks again. John C Wright’s most recent fiction includes the Count to the Eschaton Sequence. Architect of Aeons is the fourth and latest volume in that sequence.

His Night Land novellas are Awake in the Night, The Cry of the Night Hound, Silence of the Night (originally published on the late Andy Robertson’s website – see previous greydog post for The Night Land website update), and The Last of All Suns. All four novellas are now available in one volume from Castalia House, Awake in the Night Land:

21911510Awake in the Night Land

What is there left to say about WHH? Er, well, we haven’t actually given enough coverage to House on the Borderland, the Captain Gault tales, his poetry, his sea horror stories…. it’s all gone horribly wrong. So next week we will try to slam in as much as we possibly can. Sorry, I mean that we’ll offer a range of carefully considered and finely crafted articles to extend your WHH enjoyment for as long as possible. More links, curious articles by James Bojaciuk, and an interview with writer and editor Sam Gafford who, unlike me, actually knows serious stuff about William Hope Hodgson…

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Chicago

Someone was asking for free short horror to read or share. So here’s a standalone episode from me, Chicago.  PDF or scroll-down text, take your pick. The.pdf link is here: chicago

Chicago

by John Linwood Grant

It’s a long way from New York to Seattle on foot.

Maybe I hadn’t appreciated quite how big America was. I’d never been across it before, only seen the coasts. Not that it mattered, because I wanted to be forgotten for a while. No record of where I’d been or where I was going, no trail of hire-cars receipts or plane tickets. All I wanted was the road, and an endless list of small, forgettable towns…

1975 was the year. It was also about the number of miles I had yet to cover. West, always heading west. I only dipped into cities when I had to. In Cleveland I followed my usual fall-back routine. It’s pretty simple. You go somewhere bad, the worst part of town you can find, and you wait around at night until the food looks you up itself. Muggers, rapists, strung-out junkies who can hardly hold the knife steady. Any will do.

I struck lucky on the first night with a couple of low-lives who were ready to cut me up first and check my wallet later.

“You’re dead, man.” said the short one, a moustache like a crayon line across his upper lip. He was sweating badly, and stank, but I didn’t usually care about the wrapping. I smiled.

“Funny you should say that.”

His companion stared at me for a moment, then backed away slowly. “I gotta bad feelin’, Huey.”

Huey was too far gone to listen. He skittered in close, a stolen scalpel in his left hand. I could see the track-marks down his arms, some of the sites already going bad. If I’d fed more recently, I would have walked away myself, and I amended my earlier observation. He was going to taste as bad as he smelled.

One move, and moustache-boy was on his knees, scalpel forgotten. The streetlight showed that I was still smiling, and the other guy ran for it. I let him. One was enough. I would have been doing Cleveland a favour by draining him, going right to the bottom of the bottle, but I’d avoided that path for a long time. I slammed him unconscious instead, and placed my hand on his forehead.

I could smell the hepatitis and septicaemia in him, along with heroin, barbiturates and a few prescription drugs. None of them would affect me, so I concentrated, and called him to me. The essence was there, underneath the crap, and it would keep me going for a week or two at least.

I left him weak but alive. God, or Fate, or whatever would take over once I’d gone. Maybe his mate would come back and ring 999. Sorry, 911. Or maybe he’d finish the job off. It wasn’t my problem.

Cleveland saw me through Fremont and Defiance, even through a town called Hicksville, which amused me. The folk seemed nice enough, though. I had a few beers and let them be. I didn’t interfere again until I reached Chicago, where I met my first genuine Stars-and-Stripes revenant for a long time.

Ella was one of the lost ones. If you can have any sympathy at all for our kind, edimmu, whatever you call us, then she deserved it.

I found her shivering and desperate on a back-street, waiting for a clean, all-American husband to come driving slowly past and wave a handful of dollars at her. I’d seen it too many times.

“Hey, little kitten.” they would call. “Daddy needs some lovin’.”

Daddy, of course, had a decent woman at home, two kids and a cheerful scamp of a dog in the yard. He raised funds for the party and went to church nice and scrubbed up every Sunday…

At least I knew what I was.

I took her arm before the next car rolled past, and pulled her into the shadows. It was instinctive – she emanated loneliness, a hopeless kind of longing. There was no doubt that she was one of those who have no clue as to what to do, where else to go. Most of them fade away over the years, becoming shadows of sorrow, the saddest things.

Even as she struggled against me, I cursed myself, knowing that I should have walked on and left her alone. She fought, but not well or with any enthusiasm.

“I don’t have what you’re after, believe me.” I murmured.

Her little eyes widened. She must have been about sixteen when she was unborn, brought back into the world looking as wretched as she obviously felt. This close I caught the scent of her hunger properly. She needed what the clean men gave her. Desire, disgust, even their self-loathing, if they had any. Those base feelings that set their loins pumping in filthy alleys. She didn’t want those things, but she had to have them.

She vomited, spattering my boots. She must have tried to eat normal food earlier that day.

“Why? Why me?” It was a desperate cry.

I’d had a long time to find the answer to that question. Every one of us who could still form a coherent sentence had a different theory. Some said it was God’s roll of the dice, a second chance. But it wasn’t. I’d been back too long, even then, and I knew the score. We were talking retribution, rejection, or a plan so far beyond our understanding that it made no sense.

“You’ll never know.” I said, giving it to her straight. Maybe that was hard, but I didn’t have a good lie to hand. “Something bad happened, and now you’re what you are.”

A priest once told me that the Lord was patient. Watching the girl, I was inclined to feel that He was rather more vindictive than patient. What could she have done to end up like this at sixteen, seventeen years old, working the cold streets of Chicago?

I would never know that either. None of us remember what has made us this way, what sequence of lies, murders or betrayals has made us what we are.

“I’m Ella.” she said, when the heaving had stopped. “Are you… like me?”

That was a difficult one.

“Yes.” I said, to save a long conversation. “But I’m passing through.”

“Can I come with you? I could… you could, y’know, do me, if you want to. I could help you…”

It was an unappealing offer. I knew that it came from desperation, and I knew that whether we “did it” or not, I wouldn’t be able to help her. Some of us are stuck, and Ella was one of those. The feeling was unmistakable now.

“I doubt it.” I said.

“Please.”

She argued with me for half an hour. She so wanted out of what she’d become, where she was, and she thought that it would be too cruel of me to speak to her and then to walk away. She was wrong.

The real cruelty came at the end, when I gave in.

I told her I was heading west and she could tag along for a while. In the early hours of the morning we headed out of Chicago. I was aiming for a lot of little places with ville in their names, places which called themselves towns and cities but had only a few thousand people in them. Most edimmu would avoid such limited feeding grounds, and I’d decided that Ella was already one more than I wanted to meet.

Two hours out of Chicago, and it began. Ella kept turning, staring back at the city. She stumbled, used my arm to get herself up again. It was nine, ten in the morning.

“I feel… sorta sick.”

Traffic was sporadic, local trucks mainly. We were walking alongside a minor road, Illinois dust clinging to us. I thought that I might get some new boots in the next town. These ones were running out of heel.

“You will.”

Another mile went by. She was stumbling all the time now, and looking back as if something was following her.

“P’haps I need a drink…”

I paused, looked around at the open fields.

“It won’t help. You belong back there, where I found you.”

She had courage. Or she was stubborn. I don’t know. I stood and watched as she tried to carry on, a small, thin figure in sixties clothes struggling along a seventies road. Ten years too late for Ella. She wasn’t the first who’d tried to break out. It never worked. Somewhere near where I’d found her there would be a grave, the epicentre of that sad little earthquake that had brought Ella back. It might have marble over it, might be a scratch of dirt in a disused car park. It would still be her grave, and it intended to hold her close.

When she was crying dry tears and clawing at the badly metalled surface, I joined her, squatting down on the balls of my feet.

“Something happened in Chicago.” I said. “You died, Ella. It owns you, or you own it. Some of us can’t ever leave where it happened. We’re bound, trapped.”

“You’re not.” she said with a whimper.

“Cities and places don’t trap me. Doesn’t make it any better.”

“Seems better.” Now she was really sixteen again, full of injustice and resentment.

“It isn’t.” I straightened up. “If you head back to Chicago, it’ll get easier. I’m sorry.”

“I hate you!” she shrieked.

“You’re not alone.”

There wasn’t any point in waiting.

I headed west, and knew that Ella would go home, however reluctantly. Or maybe she would dig her nails into the road and stay there until she starved, lost any remaining sense of who or what she was. That might be a mercy.

But the odds were on her being back in Chicago by nightfall, her sandals scuffing the kerbside as the big, low cars went by, waiting for the one that slowed down.

Hey, little kitten…

c. John Linwood Grant 2015

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William Hope Hodgson: For the Love of God, Montresor!

Welcome back to the strange, misguided world of our tribute to William Hope Hodgson. Where, oh where, dear Lord, are the fun-filled days of leaping longdogs and writerly wittering? Will this horror never end? Today I am appalled to offer, amongst other nuggets:

  • an exclusive new Carnacki story by author J Patrick Allen
  • twenty more covers up in the gallery under October Horror
  • details of the re-launch of web-site The Night Land
  • a rare French graphic novel mention of Carnacki
  • details of a German language audio version of Hodgson’s The Voice in the Night

I still have more WHH-related  items than I can cram into a month, and have one tiny request. If you have enjoyed any of this so far, do please leave a comment. It would be nice to hear from you. Are you having a good time? Or was this festival a Thing which should never have been birthed?

inheritors

But let us bite the bullet, and… Martha? What’s in these damned cartridges…

Our first feature is, as mentioned above, a brand new Carnacki story written especially for greydogtales! And we are, of course delighted.

jpatrickallen

J Patrick Allen is a Fantasy and Weird Western author out of St. Louis, Missouri. His first novel, West of Pale, arrives Spring 2016 from 18th Wall Productions and his first short story will be coming out this month in The Dragon Lord’s Library.

You can catch a free story every week on his website www.jpatrickallen.com, or you can follow him on Twitter @jpatrickauthor where he blurts out the first thing that comes to mind. Click on the link below the image to read, or tell me and I’ll slam an .rtf version up pronto:

puddle2The Drowning Puddle

We’ve also heard from another writer  Brandon Barrows.  I obviously need to crush these pups quickly before my life-support fails (I suspect arming Willie Meikle is the answer).

The first book to be released under the new Dunham’s Manor hardcover series, The Castle-Town Tragedy features three brand-new tales in which Carnacki the Ghost-Finder faces tortured spirits, powerful other-worldly entities and things that go bump in the night. But, armed with an array of scientific instruments, a vast knowledge of the occult, and fueled by a drive to dispel the mysteries and horrors of the world, Carnacki welcomes the challenge as our world’s best defense against the malevolent denizens of the Outer Circle!

Castle_20Town_20Tragedy_20color_20with_20Sinatra_20font_20low_20res_20final_originalThe Castle-Town Tragedy

Oh well, maybe they’ll take up chartered accountancy instead. Brandon can be found at the link below:

Brandon Barrows web-site

 ####

We move on to good news from Kate Coady, the new The Night Land web-hierarch (she said ‘web-master’, but our alpha female Chilli will have no truck with such terms):

In 1906, William Hope Hodgson published a long, terribly strange book called The Night Land. In 2001 Andy Robertson started a website about it. The front page read:

Argument: That the Night Land, Though Grotesque and Flawed, is one of the World’s Greatest Works of Fantasy.

The site’s content comprised criticism and essays based on The Night Land, and works of art influenced by it: visual arts, multimedia, and stories written by professionals and talented amateurs. These works form the substance of the Argument: The Night Land is great in itself, and great as a source of inspiration.

Later, Mr. Robertson would publish two anthologies of these stories (Night Lands Volume 1 and Volume 2). He planned to published more in book form. But his health began to fail, and in 2014, he died.

The Night Land website didn’t. Brett Davidson (who might be described as Mr. Robertson’s partner in Night Land literary creation) and I are keeping the site going, as previously arranged. The old domain was thenightland.co.uk. We are now at:

teng-violet-fractal-logoThe Night Land web-site

I’ve recently redesigned the site to make it mobile-friendly and easier to navigate, while trying to keep the spirit of Mr. Robertson’s original atmospheric design.

We now have a journal on-site; I’ll be updating it much more often than the old site log. I’ll be posting news and essays concerning Mr. Hodgson and his writing, and some other weird fiction and science fiction. Feel free to email me and tell me about new Hodgson-related works. (nightland -at- starsofwinter.com)

Thanks Kate.

####

Meanwhile, I’m still tripping over cover art for various editions of WHH’s books and stories, so have a look and get in touch if you have any rarities I haven’t included yet. We would be pleased to add them and credit the source. If I get a moment, I might improve the display and put them in some sort of order – chronological, by title, by language or just by the number of tablets I took.

I have one here that is only for the real completists – the extremely appealing La Brigade Chimerique.

chimerique12140589_10204151846631411_3500510009218018694_n

I should warn you, Carnacki has only a passing involvement in this graphic novel, but I loved the art and the concept so much I had to include it. Georges Dodds, who has a far better grasp of French than I do, helped enormously with this, and provided me with his translation of the review in Le Figaro, November 2012. This extract is from the review by Laurent Suply:

La Brigade Chimérique harbours the solution to its own mystery: can Europe and France generate anew some superheroes, some modern myths? The answer is yes. A French interpretation of Alan Moore’s The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, it draws from it the idea of reusing historical or literary individuals. The Chimeric Brigade is a game of mirrors, sometimes demanding for the reader, between Lehman’s obsessions, a rereading of European history, and the pure adventure of comics.

The narration is very solid, planting clues throughout the sequence of episodes for the stunning revelations to come. Gess’ layouts are admirably coloured by Céline Bessonneau. This complete/unabridged edition finally fills the work’s only void: a tendency towards name-dropping, which becomes almost pedantic at times. The bonus materials here instead bring light on the work’s genesis and the many literary and historical references throughout.

A cult graphic novel for a small number of the initiated since it’s appearance in 2009, it has been adapted as a role playing game and more recently, a somewhat anecdotal sequel has appeared by way of the graphic novel “Masqué,” also by Serge Lehman. This complete collection is a perfect Christmas present for any graphic novel, SF or contemporary history buff – basically, lots of people.

La Brigade Chimérique , Editions L’Atalante. By Serge Lehman, with Fabrice Colin. Illustrated by Gess (Carmen McCallum). I think you may have to hunt this one down on eBay.

As we are in France (or French Canada, as I suspect in Georges’ case), I was pleased to find a 2014 French language audiobook of The Ghost Pirates, entitled unsurprisingly Les Pirates Fantomes. I translated that bit myself, I’ll have you know.

fantomesLes Pirates Fantomes

And then lo and behold, a German audio version of The Voice in the Night turned up, which sounds rather good, narrated by Marc Gruppe. How would you ever clog your brain cells up like this without me?

gruselkabinett_69Stimme in der Nacht

That’s it for today. If anyone out there is still alive, yet to come in our blog-fest: features and interviews with author John C Wright, editor James Bojaciuk and WHH scholar Sam Gafford, plus more literary, musical and audio links.

No, Martha, no, I won’t leave the attic yet, I won’t…

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William Hope Hodgson: The Inheritors

For our longdog and lurcher friends, hurrah, only two weeks to go before the end of October Horror! And for our horror friends, hurrah, two more weeks of October Horror yet to come…

inheritors

or The Writer on the Borderland 3

So, my dear ones, what difference did William Hope Hodgson make to the world of weird fiction? Does he actually have a legacy?

We don’t have the space here to cover all those writers peripherally influenced by WHH. It’s a long list, and could include a few surprising bedfellows – China Mieville, Dennis Wheatley and Clark Ashton Smith, for example. Hodgson’s originality meant that he had a surprising impact on many fertile imaginations.

Instead, we start with a range of contemporary authors who have been directly influenced by Hodgson, or who explore his characters and key themes in their own work. Our first feature author is William Meikle.

WMheadshot

What can we say about Willie? A proud Scot, a fellow beard owner and a master of the rollicking, scary adventure. We salute him here because of his Carnacki stories and the Hodgsonian elements in some of his other work, but he has, of course, written reams of strange and terrifying tales. The natural choice for successor to Conan Doyle and Edgar Rice Burroughs, when he’s not off ploughing another furrow with his own brand of original horror stories.

His influence is terrifying, as well. I rarely write Carnacki stories myself because I don’t know if Scotland versus Yorkshire is a winnable match, and his Sweary Puffin is a mean beast. I waited until Carnacki was dead, just to be sure, before I started the main run of Tales of the Last Edwardian. Safer that way.

But he’s a fine and prolific fellow. He takes Carnacki and goes that bit further, with new equipment and new challenges. Faraday Cage, anyone? Willie has talked about his writing with a number of interviewers in the past, but has kindly focussed down on Hodgson for greydogtales:

greydog: Hello and welcome, Willie. Let’s get to the meat straight away. Of all the period characters you’ve revived so successfully, you still return to Carnacki. Is there something about the character and setting that particularly appeal to you?

Meikle: For me it’s all about the struggle of the dark against the light. The time and place, and the way it plays out is in some ways secondary to that. And when you’re dealing with archetypes, there’s only so many to go around, and it’s not surprising that the same concepts of death and betrayal, love and loss, turn up wherever, and whenever, the story is placed.

The ghost story is no different in utilising the archetype of the return of the lost from the great beyond, but a good one needs verisimilitude.

If the reader doesn’t believe wholeheartedly in the supernatural element, even if only for the duration of the story, then they’ll be looking for the Scooby-Doo escape, the man in the mask that means everything before was just smoke and mirrors. Hodgson wasn’t above using the man in the mask escape himself of course, but those ones never appealed to me much. It’s my belief that to pull off a good ghost story, you need to get past that, and engage the reader at an emotional level with their fears.

Carnacki’s meetings with the supernatural resonated with me at that emotional level on my very first reading many years ago. On top of that, several of the stories have a Lovecraftian viewpoint, with cosmic entities that have no regard for the doings of mankind. The background Hodgson proposes fits with some of my own viewpoint on the ways the Universe might function, and the slightly formal Edwardian language seems to be a “voice” I fall into naturally.

Long story short, I write them because of love, pure and simple.

You may notice while reading that Carnacki likes a drink and a smoke, and a hearty meal with his friends gathered round. This dovetails perfectly with my own idea of a good time. And although I no longer smoke, witing about characters who do allows me a small vicarious reminder of my own younger days. I wish I had Carnacki’s library, his toys, but most of all, I envy him his regular visits from his tight group of friends, all more than willing to listen to his tales of adventure into the weird places of the world while drinking his Scotch and smoking his cigarettes.

greydog: A nice Laphroaig in your case, we assume. Speaking of his unusual equipment and inventions, his toys, you’ve recently written a story about the contemporary discovery of Carnacki’s electric pentacle. Do you plan to extend and explore Carnacki’s technological innovations any further, or was this just fun?

Meikle: My new novella, Pentacle (from DarkFuse) was mostly just fun. I was exploring part of a mythos I’m building of goings on in a certain kind of strange house. I wondered what old Carnacki would have made of it, and suddenly my character found the Pentacle in the basement. It just kind of happened 🙂

That said, I do have a couple of ideas bubbling under to do with his colour theory so I’ll no doubt get round to them at some point. I’m a long way away from being finished with Carnacki’s toys.

greydog: We’re glad to hear it – we love stories bending Edwardian technology to new and strange uses. And what of Hodgson’s other fiction? Did his sea stories influence some of your works, or did you write them independently of reading those?

Meikle: A lot of my own work is based at sea or in seaside towns – I live on the coast, and have done for twenty out of the past twenty five years. I was born and raised within 10 miles of the Firth of Clyde, so it was something that came to me naturally anyway. Many of my own favorite books are also sea based, with The Ghost Pirates, Dan Simmons’ The Terror. Tim Powers’ On Stranger Tides and John Wyndham’s The Kraken Wakes all influencing me along the way.

So adding Captain Gault in to three of the stories in the new collection also felt natural. I thought it was about time the two of them met, and I had so much fun with those that I’m pretty sure the old chaps will be meeting again in the near future.

greydog: Would you ever consider exploring The Nightland in your stories, or do you think it too out-dated now?

Meikle: It has appeared in passing in several of my Carnacki stories – there’s a big black pyramid in The Dark Island novella in the first collection, and it appears again in The Parliament of Owls story in the deluxe edition of the new one. And there’s more than a passing reference in Pentacle too. The far future aspect of it, and the sense of cosmic scale is the appeal to me. The archaic language is something I would never attempt, and I’m not really interested in the many creatures – although I do have an unpublished story about the origin of the Swine Things in Nightland that might get an airing some day…

greydog: Thank you, Willie Meikle.

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Willie has two Carnacki collections currently available:

Carnacki: Heaven and Hell at Dark Regions Press

(Hardcover sold out; a nice trade paperback edition still available, complete with Wayne Miller illustrations, and an ebook.)

Carnacki: The Watcher at the Gate at Dark Renaissance

(Limited edition hardcover, with color illos again by Wayne Miller. There will be a paperback and ebook along in due course.)

Several stories have appeared in anthologies and magazines, so check out his website: William Meikle

Carnacki’s newest story The Keys of the Door, will be in The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper Tales, edited by Maxim Jacobowski. (November 2015). We also plan to have a feature interview and showcase session with Wayne Miller, the artist mentioned above, in November.

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But now come back in time with greydogtales. Before Meikle there was… Kidd and Kennett.

Chico Kidd, as A F Kidd, and Rick Kennett shared their mutual interest to produce the first Carnacki rebirth, the result being No. 472 Cheyne Walk. Published by the Ghost Story Society in 1992, this volume containing four stories, described as pastiches.

A decade later, Ash Tree press published No. 472 Cheyne Walk: Carnacki, the Untold Stories with a further eight new tales. Thus Carnacki lived again, and readers were also delighted that Kidd and Kennett went ‘Giant Rat of Sumatra’ on them and wrote up some of the cases mentioned but not described in the Hodgson stories.

No472No-472 Cheyne Walk (e-book)

I was in touch with Chico as part of the WHH blog-fest, and although she has no more Carnackis planned, she is still scribing.

author-chico-kidd

The Captain da Silva stories are her current project, particularly fitting to mention here because da Silva’s first appearance was in No. 472 Cheyne Walk, and Hodgson did love a sea story. Chico described them to me thusly:

“Early 20th century funny-ish noir-ish urban fantasy mashups as the Cap’n and his Scooby gang take on every supernatural nasty you can imagine, and some you can’t. Numerous short stories in anthologies. First 2 novels available on Amazon, ‘Demon Weather’ and ‘The Werewolf of Lisbon’. Coming soon book 3, ‘Resurrection’.”

You can discover more,  including other great ghostly stories, at Chico’s web-site here: Chico Kidd

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I have known David Langford for a scarily long time, and careened off him at many a drunken SF convention. While he has written a number of excellent books, I fear that I’ve gained the most pleasure from his parodies. The Dragonhiker’s Guide to Battlefield Covenant at Dune’s Edge: Odyssey Two began it, and all of Dave’s parodies were eventually collected in the bemusingly-titled He Do the Time Police in Different Voices (2003).

David-Langford

His Dagon Smythe stories are, essentially, contemporary piss-takes of Carnacki. True to British tradition, they commence with a gathering in the pub, not the parlour, where the inner circle hears Smythe’s dubious stories of his latest case, whether they want to or not. And they usually don’t. They also have to buy the drinks.

‘Among our circle that evening was the well-known psychic investigator Dagon Smythe, who preserved his silence but now shuddered theatrically. I recognised the symptoms and took rapid action, crying: “Beastly weather this week, chaps! Would you call it seasonal for the time of year?”

‘But it was too late. Before the razor-sharp wits around the table could pounce upon this always fruitful topic, Smythe interrupted in his peculiarly penetrating tones. “Speaking of prediction… I once dabbled a little in the divinatory arts.”

‘“And you have a tale to tell,” said old Hyphen-Jones with a trace of resignation.’

‘Not Ours to See’, David Langford

There were four initial Dagon Smythe stories, and a number of wicked parodies of Lovecraft, Poe and Conan Doyle (amongst others), plus an extra Dagon in the ebook. It’s good stuff.

timepolHe Do the Time Police in Different Voices

There we have it. Progressions, pastiches and parodies. And it gets even better in the next fortnight!

inheritors

Coming up we have an exclusive brand-new Carnacki story by author J Patrick Allen, more young turks, an in-depth interview with John C Wright of Night Land fame, some surprising articles by James Bojaciuk and lots of extra fun. You’ve come this far, you might as well carry on…

 

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