Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Stories. Show all posts

2.08.2016

The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers

"Strange is the night where black stars rise,
and strange moons circle through the skies 
But stranger still
is Carcosa."
- Cassilda's Song in The King in Yellow, Act I, Scene 2. 



The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers is a collection of ten short stories, first published in 1895. It has since fallen into the public domain; you can read it here

The first four stories are thematically connected by repeated references to (and excerpts from) a fictional play called, logically enough, The King in Yellow. Although it's a play, it's never performed, as all who read it go insane.

We never learn the plot of the play, only that it references a strange and horrifying land called Carcosa. Chambers took the name (as well as a few other words for its geography) from the Ambrose Bierce story "An Inhabitant of Carcosa." (As well as his "Haita the Shepherd.") H.P. Lovecraft later referenced "The Yellow King" in his story "The Whisperer in Darkness," leading many to mistakenly believe he coined the term.

The first I heard of all this came via season 1 of True Detective.

The show appropriates the Yellow King and Carcosa concept, as well as contributing its own dark and unsettling spin.

Chambers was apparently quite a prolific writer, and based on my enjoyment of these ten tales, I'm definitely interested in reading more from him. To kick off my year-long Short Stories project, I thought I'd take a good gander at the first of the four Carcosa-themed ones. 

"The Repairer 
of Reputations"

What a wild story this is, though it's tough to summarize the plot. Its wiki describes it as " a powerful, weird story of egotism and paranoia." It's certainly that, but let me try and do a better job.

It begins with a few pages of sci-fi - or close to it, anyway - set in the then-future world of 1920, (interestingly enough, after a war with Germany has concluded, one that saw the Germans seize the Samoan islands and invade New Jersey). Prosperity and tranquility are  abundant due (we're told) to "the exclusion of foreign-born Jews as a measure of self-preservation (and) the settlement of the new independent Negro state of Suanee," (needle scratch!) as well as "the checking of immigration, the new laws concerning naturalization, and the gradual centralization of power in the executive branch."

Well then. The past is a different country, of course, and when traveling to it via its literature or arts, I try and approach everything as an anthropologist and not a missionary. Still, sometimes the casual nature of such remarks can be very jarring. It's the same odd mix of overt racism and antisemitism with early 20th century liberalism (state-subsidized arts and opera and "bigotry and intolerance (lain) in their graves and kindness and charity (drawing) warring sects together") that one finds in the speeches of Woodrow Wilson and work of D.W. Griffith. (This isn't an anti-or-pro-liberal remark, you understand. Maybe pro-consistency, anti-confused-juxtapositions, though.)

All of the above is just table-dressing for the appearance of "Lethal Chambers." The Government has acknowledged the right of any man or woman who suffers from physical or mental anguish to end his or her own life and has opened up one of these Lethal Chambers in every town and city across America. The main character (Hildred) is hurrying past an inauguration ceremony of one such Chamber (on the south side of Washington Square between Wooster and South Fifth) on his way to meet Mr. Wilde, occupant of an apartment above an armorer's shop and the "repairer" of the title.


The armorer and his daughter (the betrothed of Hildred's cousin Louis) think Mr. Wilde to be a vicious lunatic, "crippled and almost demented." Let me pause here to relay that Hildred (our first-person-narrator) is recently released from an asylum after a nasty fall from a horse. More importantly, while convalescing, he read the whole of The King in Yellow, something he shares with Mr. Wilde. 

How do you come to read a play that is well-known (as it is in the world of these stories) to cause insanity? Good question. It is apparently only Act II, with its "irresistible revealed truths" that compels the reader to madness: "The very banality and innocence of the first act only allowed the blow to fall afterward with more awful effect."

Hildred tried to throw it into the fire after reading the first act, but it struck the barred gate and fell open to Act II:

"With a cry of terror, or perhaps it was of joy so poignant that I suffered in every nerve, I snatched the thing out of the coals and crept shaking to my bedroom, where I read it and reread it. I wept and laughed and trembled with a horror which at times assails me yet. This is the thing that troubles me, for I cannot forget Carcosa where black stars hang in the heavens; where the shadows of men's thoughts lengthen in the afternoon, when the twin suns sink into the lake of Hali; and my mind will bear for ever the memory of the Pallid Mask. I pray God will curse the writer, as the writer has cursed the world with this beautiful, stupendous creation, terrible in its simplicity, irresistible in its truth—a world which now trembles before the King in Yellow."

Mr. Wilde - who lives with a vicious cat whom he provokes so that it launches itself at his face, tearing it frequently to ribbons - and Hildred discuss the coming Imperial Dynasty of America, which (Mr. Wilde assures Hildred) ends with his marriage to the armorer's daughter. The Yellow King, we are assured, needs nothing; we are all his subjects. But his trusted advisors can rule this world with whatever accoutrements they desire.

Mr. Wilde is a curious character, and not just for the relationship he keeps with his cat. Obviously he's as insane as Hildred, and yet he knows things that are seemingly impossible, such as the location of a famous set of armor, long believed to be lost, or the true identity of the armorer and his daughter (a plot point introduced but not followed up on anywhere else, unless I missed it.) "His mind is a wonder chamber from which he can extract treasures that you or I would give years of our life to acquire." And when Hildred meets with Mr. Wilde, the latter angrily dismisses a caller that turns out to be the owner and editor of New York's greatest daily newspaper.

Or is he? One of the delights of the story is trying to work out what is actually happening vs. what Hildred tells us is happening. For example, there are the contents of the steel safe he keeps in his bedroom:

"The three and three-quarter minutes which it is necessary to wait, while the time lock is opening, are to me golden moments. From the instant I set the combination to the moment when I grasp the knobs and swing back the solid steel doors, I live in an ecstasy of expectation. Those moments must be like moments passed in Paradise. I know what I am to find at the end of the time limit. I know what the massive safe holds secure for me, for me alone, and the exquisite pleasure of waiting is hardly enhanced when the safe opens and I lift, from its velvet crown, a diadem of purest gold, blazing with diamonds. I do this every day, and yet the joy of waiting and at last touching again the diadem, only seems to increase as the days pass. It is a diadem fit for a King among kings, an Emperor among emperors. The King in Yellow might scorn it, but it shall be worn by his royal servant. I held it in my arms until the alarm in the safe rang harshly, and then tenderly, proudly, I replaced it and shut the steel doors." 

Later, though, he has placed the diadem on his head and is admiring himself (as much as one can while reliving the perpetual horror of Carcosa) in the mirror:

"The alarm bell in the safe began to whirr harshly, and I knew my time was up; but I would not heed it, and replacing the flashing circlet upon my head I turned defiantly to the mirror. I stood for a long time absorbed in the changing expression of my own eyes. The mirror reflected a face which was like my own, but whiter, and so thin that I hardly recognized it. And all the time I kept repeating between my clenched teeth, "The day has come! the day has come!" while the alarm in the safe whirred and clamored, and the diamonds sparkled and flamed above my brow. 

I heard a door open but did not heed it. It was only when I saw two faces in the mirror, when another face rose over my shoulder, and two other eyes met mine. I wheeled like a flash and seized a long knife from my dressing-table, and my cousin sprang back very pale, crying: "Hildred! for God's sake!" then as my hand fell, he said: "It is I, Louis, don't you know me?" I stood silent. I could not have spoken for my life. He walked up to me and took the knife from my hand.

"What is all this?" he inquired, in a gentle voice. "Are you ill?"

"No," I replied. But I doubt if he heard me.

"Come, come, old fellow," he cried, "take off that brass crown and toddle into the study. Are you going to a masquerade? What's all this theatrical tinsel anyway?"

I was glad he thought the crown was made of brass and paste, yet I didn't like him any the better for thinking so. I let him take it from my hand, knowing it was best to humor him. He tossed the splendid diadem in the air, and catching it, turned to me smiling.

"It's dear at fifty cents," he said. "What's it for?"

I did not answer, but took the circlet from his hands, and placing it in the safe shut the massive steel door. The alarm ceased its infernal din at once. He watched me curiously, but did not seem to notice the sudden ceasing of the alarm. He did, however, speak of the safe as a biscuit box.

Apologies for the lengthy excerpt, but I quite like the writing there, and it effectively demonstrates that what our narrator sees as a diamond-encrusted crown in a time-combination steel safe might instead be a Cracker Jack prize in a biscuit box.


Camilla: You, sir, should unmask.
Stranger: Indeed?
Camilla: Indeed it's time. We all have laid aside disguise but you.
Stranger: I wear no mask.
Camilla: (Terrified, aside to Casilda) No mask? No mask!
The King in Yellow, Act 1, Scene 2.


I won't ruin the ending for you, but suffice it to say, Hildred has some difficulty getting his cousin to understand his part to play in establishing the Hidden Dynasty of Imperial America. (And yes, Lethal Chambers play a role in the resolution, lest you wonder why I even brought them up.)

Each of the Carcosa-themed stories is a minor masterpiece in atmosphere and tension, but "The Repairer of Reputations" is perhaps the most fully-realized of them all. (Either that or "The Mask.") In each of them, artists of some kind or another are the main characters, with a theme of unrequited love running through them all. The whole book is worth reading, not just the Carcosa stories, if your taste runs to this sort of American horror writing post-Poe, Pre-Lovecraft.

Will reading any of them illuminate anything in True Detective? Not really, but of course that's not what they were designed to do.


"We had been speaking for some time in a dull monotonous strain before I realized that we were discussing the King in Yellow...
It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God!"

1.05.2016

Reviews and Overviews (Books and Short Stories)


Ah, New Year's. That time of year when we make our resolutions (drink less, exercise more, use fewer clichés) and then sit down and plot out the year's blogging.

Not your family tradition?
What's that? Not even my family tradition? I see. Well, let's carry on just the same.

I enjoy making these Table-of-Contents sort of posts. They're very useful for me personally, though I don't know how many other people actually use them. I'm not a smart-phone / Droid / tablet user, and I don't believe Blogger is optimized for mobile viewing. Which means the Table of Contents posts (under "Favorite Posts" on the top right of the page) might not even be visible for those readers who look at this on their handheld. Is that the case? Who knows. Either way, it's all good in my book. Who knows how long Google will even host these things, anyway? As a certain Starfleet captain once said, "Gentlemen - we're debating in a vacuum." Blogging, like life, and spore-induced euphoria, is an all-too-ephemeral affair.

Anyway, I decided rather than just the usual list of things I intend to get to in the year ahead (and a couple of things already gotten to), I'd offer up an annotated version. I usually prefer a "clean" Table of Contents look. I figure if people were to click on something called "Reviews and Overviews (Books and Short Stories)" I want them to find their way to what they want to look at with as few asides and obstructions as possible. But hey! Special occasion. Consider the champagne uncorked and my tour-guide-cap sitting crooked upon my brow.
I'll likely delete a good deal of this preamble once all the links are active.

I still have some posts to finish for my From Novel to Film and Friday Night Film Noir series as well as some for Comics and practically all of the Film overviews. Hell, the TV Tomb series, too. Might as well list them all. All hyperlinks will be active by today's date, 2017.


~
The Adventures of Richard Blade in Dimension X


Pt. 1 - Pt. 2 - Pt. 3

Who? Richard Blade, special-agent-supreme of MI6-A, teleported for dubious objectives at the beginning of each novel into Dimension X, an umbrella-term for a multiverse of random alternate realities that all resemble sword-and-sorcery versions of medieval England (mainly). Blade always has absurdly explicit sex at least twice, sometimes more, and kills dozens of people, before he's whisked back to Home Dimension at novel's end.

What? A series of 37 adult pulp fantasy novels published by Pinnacle Books between 1969 and 1984.

Why? Well, my older brother had a few of these when I was growing up, so that's how they got on my radar. But the real reason they're on this list is a longer story. When my buddy AJ Klum caught the last train out in 2014, a friend and I were talking about how MTV-documentary-esque much of the social media reaction was for that unhappy occasion. It was easy to picture everyone delivering their memories of him right to the camera, intercut with all these pictures and grainy footage over Dawson's Creek-type music. 

Now, AJ was not the kind of person to be moved by such things. Too-immediate appeals to sentimentality provoked a different sort of reaction from him: an urge to puncture the sanctity of the occasion with something inappropriate. We had this in common, actually.

We both observed a Scale of Puncturing Effectivness. On one end was something like farting or something at a funeral - the broadest possible interpretation. Towards the other is something that kept occurring to me in the month after his death: what if my interview in this imaginary tribute had a bookshelf in the background lined with the paperback adventures of Richard Blade? There I'd be in the foreground, red-eyed and wearing black, with my name along the bottom, and on either side of my head would be The Killer Plants of Binnark and such. Extra points if I really dragged it out, forcing the viewer to focus attention on the weird books behind my head. It struck me as the kind of thing AJ would have appreciated immediately, even not knowing the Blade books and in spite of it undermining his own memorial. (I say undermined but I mean "enhanced.")

So I started looking around for the Blade books. They're long out of print, so a complete set was too pricey. Not unreasonably so, just more than I was willing to spend for a joke for a fake documentary. But I already owned a few, so I picked up a few more, and I'll be reviewing those. I'd like to say it's all a tribute of some kind, but there's really nothing in them that reminds me of Klum. At least so far. But to honor my Klingon ancestors and his, I need to see this joke through, however dubiously related, in my own fashion.

I figured I'd put this stuff up on here, since when I get to the books there's not going to be any room for anything but observations of the "Did Blade actually just bang the queen of the centaurs again?" variety.
~
American Science-Fiction: 9 Classic Novels of the 1950s


Not much to this one, I've just been looking at them unread on the shelf too long. The books anthologized are: 

The Space Merchants by Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth - More Than Human by Theodore Sturgeon - The Long Tomorrow by Leigh Brackett - The Shrinking Man by Richard Matheson - Double Star by Robert A. Heinlein - The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester - A Case of Conscience by James Blish - Who? by Algis Budrys - The Big Time by Fritz Leiber.

For years I've said "I'll get to it right after I read The Space Merchants" when people have recommended something I don't want to look at. (If you've never heard that response, then please keep up the good work.) I guess at some point in 2016 I'll have to give that one up.

~
Bond... James Bond


I'll put together a Table of Contents post for all the Bond stuff, too, just waiting to finish the Raymond Bensons before doing so. When that happens, I'll replace all of this verbiage with a single link.


There might be more. I'm on the fence about reading the Young Bonds and The Moneypenny Diaries. 

~
Deities and Demigods 
by James M. Ward with Robert J. Kuntz


I'm unsatisfied with the overviews of this I've seen online. Maybe I just haven't seen the right ones. But even though my only active Dungeons and Dragons period was back in the Reagan/Bush-the-First era (minus one return to the game which ended in complete disaster in 2004) I've been reading and admiring this book as its own separate entity since I got it as a Christmas present in the early 80s.

Some might scoff at the idea of reviewing what is essentially a game accessory and rulebook as its own piece of media, but those people probably don't collect Boy Scouts Manuals of different eras, either. Maybe I'll go ahead and blog all of those up, as well. Try and stop me!

~  
Elric by Michael Moorcock


"And then it leapt from the Earth and went spearing upwards, 
its wild voice laughing mockery at the Cosmic Balance; 
filling the universe with its unholy joy."

~
Garrison Keillor


When Garrison Keillor is discussed, it's almost always exclusively via Prairie Home Companion. Understandable, that, but what about the books shown above? Most of the folks I meet don't seem aware of his career as a novelist nor his long tenure at The New Yorker, where he helped shape the literary taste of the very crowd that ignores his work. As this is the year he retires from PHC, I felt it a prudent time for a tip of the ol' blogging cap. I'll look at all of it, as well as my theories as to why he's not revered as one of America's greatest living writers. 

~
 Short Stories

Someone once referred to James Michener  - whose work I very much enjoy. I considered him for this stuff-I'll-be-rereading-in-2016 list but his page counts are incompatible with my commute. Unless I re-bought everything I already have for the Kindle or something, which I'm not going to do. Anyway - someone once referred to him as the author of "Grandfather Clock" books. I think it was meant disparagingly, but I think it's actually pretty accurate. Grandfather clocks are intricately designed (with some of the mechanics on display through the glass), hard to move, timeless, and beautiful.

I also like this description because I always think of short stories as wristwatches. And just as wristwatches come in many varieties and price ranges, short stories can range from the cheap, breezy, and fun (that Batman-swatch you got at the mall), to perfectly serviceable (that Timex for J. Crew your aunt got you) to expensive portraits of perfection (the Omega Speedmaster Apollo 11 Moonwatch).  


We'll cover a little bit of everything as I pay tribute to some collections from my personal library. You won't be getting a story-by-story breakdown of any of the below, just some thoughts and remarks on my favorite ones and any memorable quotes I remembered to write down.

Brian Aldiss, Supertoys Last All Summer Long (2001) - Margaret Atwood, Wilderness Tips (1991) - Clive Barker, Books of Blood (1984 - 1986) - Robert Boone, Forest High (2011) - Pierre Boulle, Time Out of Mind (1966) - Octavia E. Butler, Bloodchild (1995) - Robert Chambers, The King in Yellow (1895) - Dan Chaon, Among the Missing (2001) - Guy de Maupassant, Selected Short Stories (Penguin ed., 1971) - Harlan Ellison, I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream (1969) - F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Pat Hobby Stories (1962) - Nadine Gordimer, Jump and Other Stories (1962) - Charles L. Harness, The Rose (1966) - Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Great Stone Face and Other Tales of the White Mountains (1889) - M.R. James, Collected Ghost Stories (1931) - Owen King - We're All in This Together (2005) - Rudyard Kipling, Collected Stories (1994) - Juhmpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies (1999) - Ursula K. LeGuin, A Fisherman of the Inland Sea (1995) - Doris Lessing, Stories (1978) - Bobbie Ann Mason, Shiloh and Other Stories (1982), Zigzagging Down the Trail (2001) - Michael Moorcock, Dying for Tomorrow (1978) - Lorrie Moore, Anagrams (1986) - Breece D'J Pancake, The Stories of... (1984) - Stacey Richter, My Date with Satan (1999) - Voltaire, Micromegas and Other Short Fictions (Penguin ed. 2002) - Tobias Wolff, The Night in Question (1996)
 
And Dangerous Visions (1967) edited by Harlan Ellison and Dead Reckoning: Tales of the Great Explorers 1800-1900 (2005) edited by Helen Whybrow

~
Stephen King


From May of 2012 to February of 2013, I made my way through (almost all of) Stephen King's work and blogged the journey in a series I called "King's Highway." Here's how it all broke down. 

This already has its own Table of Contents/ Favorite Posts entry, but I figure it belongs on this list as well. 

~
The Three Investigators


When I was a kid in then-West-Germany, I was fascinated with these books in the library of my elementary school on Rhein Main AFB. My friend Charlie and I read them all over the course of two summers and for a while there in 4th grade, The Secret of Terror Castle was my Best Book Forever. I could never figure out, though, why the ones in the library featured the Three Investigators working for Alfred Hitchcock while the ones I could order through Scholastic Book Service featured some guy called Hector Sebastian. Had this not been the pre-internet days, I could have just found the answer at a site like this; instead, it was an unsolved mystery for me for over 20 years.

Flash forward to a couple of years ago and I catch half of The Three Investigators and the Secret of Terror Castle on Disney XD. What? When did they start making movies of these things? Turns out they never stopped being popular over in Germany, and StudioHamburg has put out two English-language versions. Neither of which are easily available in the US, unfortunately. 

Anyway, I'm always on the lookout for these things - the original editions, that is. (Long story short - after Hitchcock's death, they lost the right to use his likeness/ fictional avatar, so they wrote him out of the reprintings altogether. This started a succession of reboots that significantly confused the brand identity, at least in the US.) I don't have a complete set, but I've toyed with the idea of reviewing a few of them here on the Omnibus. And lucky you! 2016's the year I'm pulling the trigger.

And speaking of Boys Adventure Stories:


~
Travis McGee by John D. MacDonald

"There was a preponderance of poodles. This is the most desperate breed there is. They are just a little too bright for the servile role of dogdom. So their loneliness is a little more excruciating, their welcomes more frantic, their desire to please a little more intense. That's what they try to talk about. One day there will appear a super-poodle, and he will figure it out. He will suddenly realize his loneliness is merely a by-product of his being used to ease the loneliness of his owner. He'll tell the others. He'll leave messages. And some dark night they'll all start chewing throats."


A by-product of the King's Highway project was tracking down all the Travis McGee books by John D. MacDonald, an author King always speaks highly of. It's easy to see why once you start reading him. I'm not familiar with the non-McGee parts of his catalog, but I have all 21 of his "disposable paperback adventures." I finished reading all of these a couple of years ago and figured I'd do something on the blog with them somewhere down the line, so I've got all the pages dog-eared (so to speak) already. 

~
Author of the 2050 Trilogy


"What ails us? Attachment to our Desire. The grip, the hold, the pursuit, the anxiety, all of it is exhausting and it gives rise to behaviors meant to mitigate the situation but only make it worse, like excessive smoking, drinking, eating, shopping, gaming, and any and all addictive cycles. This is not a moral argument—all of these behaviors are neither good nor bad, but practicing any one or more with an eye towards oblivion is deadly."


~
Last Edited 1/23/2016