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isfdb image of jacket of
Mysteries of Time and Spirit |
Via interlibrary loan I borrowed 2002's
Mysteries of Time and Spirit: The Letters of H. P. Lovecraft and Donald Wandrei, a 400+ page volume edited by S. T. Joshi and David E. Schultz, and have been desultorily sampling bits and pieces of it. The letters are full of interest and entertainment as the foremost of the
Weird Tales gang and one of his young disciples pass judgement on fantastic literature (in a January 11, 1927 letter Lovecraft calls Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wallpaper" "most insidiously potent" and declares that M. P. Shiel's "The House of Sounds" is "the only first-rate story Shiel ever wrote") and architecture (Lovecraft in an April 12, 1927 letter laments that both the Capitol in Washington, D.C. and the Massachusetts State House have "been spoiled by wings") and America's cities; in a February 10, 1927 letter Lovecraft briefly tells Wandrei that he found Washington "delightful" but fills multiple pages with denunciations of New York, where HPL lived for over two years and where he says that "all life"
...is purely artificial & affected--values are forced & arbitrary, mental fashions are capricious, pathological, or commercial rather than authentic, & literary activity & conversation are motivated by a shallow pose, a sophistical concealment of ignorance, & a morbidly charlatanic egotism & cheap assertiveness far removed from the solid aesthetic intensity which ought to underlie a life of art & letters...the "aesthetes" of New York are less interested in art & beauty than in themselves...a case of inferior people trying to be conspicuous somehow, & choosing art as a form of ballyhoo more convenient & inexpensive than business or evangelism or sword-swallowing.
I find this sort of vitriol exciting and amusing, even when directed at my beloved New York City. (I have to admit, however, that Lovecraft's dismissals of one of this blog's heroes, his fellow
Weird Tales writer Edmond Hamilton, had me smh, as the kids tweet.) Wandrei, in a March 21, 1927 letter, expresses his own appreciation for Lovecraft's "pricking of the New York bubble," suggesting that people around the country think NYC is getting too big for its britches but are too afraid to openly criticize The Big Apple!
In their letters Lovecraft and Wandrei talk quite a bit about Lovecraft's "The Lurking Fear" and Wandrei's "The Twilight of Time," published as "The Red Brain," spurring me to read these two stories, which I had never read before.
"The Lurking Fear" by H. P. Lovecraft (1923)
In the February 10, 1927 letter already quoted above, Lovecraft tells Wandrei that "'The Lurking Fear' was done to order for a wretchedly sensational magazine four years ago...." Lovecraft refers to
Home Brew, a humor magazine that described itself as "peppy," "piquant" and "zippy" and "America's Greatest Pocket Magazine;" opinions will differ, I suppose--in a December 11, 1926 letter our man HPL went so far as to celebrate the demise of the "abysmally wretched"
Home Brew. "The Lurking Fear" was serialized across four issues in 1923, and would later appear entire in the
June 1928 issue of Weird Tales before going on to be reprinted in many books. I read the version appearing in my 2001 printing of
Dagon and Other Macabre Tales, which, S. T. Joshi tells us in the introduction to that volume, is based on Lovecraft's typescript.
(You can actually read
Lovecraft's typescript of "The Lurking Fear" yourself, which has been scanned and put up on
the Brown University website, along with a pile of other documents related to HPL, like
a postcard Lovecraft and Frank Belknap Long sent to Wandrei from a whaling museum in New Bedford, Connecticut in August of 1929; Lovecraft jokes that he and Long are "seriously considering" becoming sailors.)
Atop Tempest Mountain in the Catskills sits the abandoned Martense mansion. The mansion, long ago the site of a murder, is considered the sinister haunt of some kind of monster by the hillbillies who live in the area--the monster is connected, they believe, with the violent thunderstorms endemic to the area. (Lovecraft never calls them "hillbillies," instead labeling them "squatters," "witless shanty-dwellers," and even "mountain mongrels," the last of which I found pretty funny.) When a lightning bolt somehow causes a cave in that wrecks a hillbilly village--destroying many "shanties" and killing over two score of that village's inhabitants--the hillbillies insist the monster at the mansion is to blame, but a search of the mansion turns up no clues.
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A 1947 anthology with "The
Lurking Fear" as the title story |
Our narrator is a wealthy guy fascinated by the macabre ("I am a connoisseur in horrors") and, a few weeks after the disaster, when most of the state police and members of the mainstream media have left the area, their investigations having yielded nothing, he launches his own investigation, bringing with him to the Catskills two muscular he-men armed with automatic pistols. The narrator decides that the first step of his investigation will be to spend a stormy night in the room of the decrepit mansion once inhabited by Jan Martense, who was apparently murdered by his family in the middle of the 18th century. The three men are to take turns keeping watch, so that one of them is always awake, his gun at the ready. However, when the narrator is aroused in the middle of the night and witnesses a lightning strike that shakes the entire mountain and casts a hideous shadow against the fireplace, he finds that his two bodyguards have vanished, never to be seen again!
Thus ends the first of "The Lurking Fear"'s four parts. (Here in
Dagon each part is five pages long.) In Part II the narrator joins forces with a journalist and the pair spend weeks interviewing hillbillies and searching the mansion, countryside and surrounding villages in order to learn as much about the Martense family and the monster as possible. Then one day comes another powerful storm, and a lightning strike that causes a landslide. While the narrator isn't looking, his journalist friend is killed--our hero finds the reporter's corpse standing by an open window, through which some creature has chewed off his face.
In Part III the narrator lays on us all the information he and his now late friend (whom he buries secretly in the wilderness, opting to tell the authorities this guy just disappeared) uncovered, and we get a history of the Martense family and their mansion. For reasons I couldn't quite pin down, and perhaps simply because he is going insane, the narrator has come to believe the monster is the ghost of Jan Martense, and decides to dig up Jan Martense's grave. During this fruitless excavation he blunders upon a narrow tunnel and crawls around in it, meeting a monster he can barely see--"The eyes approached, yet of the thing that bore them I could distinguish only a claw. But what a claw!" Yet another of the lightning bolts that figure so prominently in this story starts yet another cave in, killing the monster and ejecting the narrator onto the surface. The narrator later learns that at the same time he was confronting a monster in a tunnel, some hillbillies twenty miles away were attacked by another monster--the country folk had the presence of mind to trap the monster in a shack and set the shack on fire, thus slaying the creature.
You see, one of the "surprises" of "The Lurking Fear" is that for centuries people thought there was one solitary monster when in fact there is an entire population of monsters, hundreds or even thousands, all of them descended from the Martense family and living in a vast network of underground tunnels that radiate from the mansion. The Martenses, Anglophobic Dutchmen, cut themselves off from society after the British took over New Amsterdam (they murdered the wayward Jan because he traitorously became accustomed to English ways while serving in the colonial forces during the Seven Years War) and over the succeeding centuries degenerated into simian beasts (and multiplied into a teeming army that has somehow kept itself secret.) All this, hinted at before, is revealed starkly in Part IV when the narrator searches the mansion for the umpteenth time and finds a tunnel entrance at the base of the chimney and later hides behind a bush during a thunderstorm and watches an army of the monsters, short deformed white apes, stream out of the mansion and into the countryside. He shoots down a straggler with his pistol and recognizes the distinctive eyes of the Martense clan in its monkey-like visage. Then he hires some people to blow up the mansion and mountain and seal the tunnels, presumably ending the Martense reign of terror, but his experiences have damaged his mind and he can't stop worrying that some of these monkey people may have escaped, or that elsewhere in the world similar degenerates may exist. "...why cannot the doctors give me something to make me sleep, or calm my brain when it thunders?"
Lovecraft fans will recognize elements of "The Lurking Fear," like a family living in isolation from society and degenerating, and a climactic parade of semi-human monsters, that would reappear in "The Shadow over Innsmouth." Such elements are used to much greater effect in that masterpiece; here, unfortunately, they are much less convincing and are embedded in a story we can only charitably call a mediocrity. "The Lurking Fear" is not good, suffering many flaws and lacking compensating virtues.
The structure and pacing are bad--the story doesn't flow in a logical or satisfying way, Lovecraft failing to link causes with effects in a convincing chain with the result that characters' decisions don't make a lot of sense. The narrator seems to know all about the mansion and Jan Martense's murder in Part I (he knows what room Jan Martense was killed in, for example) and yet Lovecraft makes a big deal out of all the research into Jan Martense's life and death in Parts II and III; at the same time the narrator pursues courses based on his knowledge of the Martense history, like sitting in the murder room and digging up the grave of the murder victim, that feel arbitrary and yield results only by chance. Wouldn't a better story structure have the narrator discover clues that logically lead him step by step to a single climactic exploration of the mansion in the tale's finale? As the story stands he investigates the mansion again and again and these explorations do little to advance the plot.
Characters appear simply to be killed but Lovecraft doesn't bother to give these victims any personality or relationship to narrator so we don't care that they have been killed. Monsters are defeated in anticlimactic ways. The monsters' relationship to thunder and lightning is unclear and thematically equivocal--sometimes it helps them, sometimes it hurts them, it seems to summon them to the surface and/or drive them crazy, etc. The multiplication of the Martense family and the way lightning is always causing landslides and cave ins just feels too unbelievable.
In their letters, Lovecraft and Wandrei blame the weaknesses of "The Lurking Fear" on the need to conform to the format prescribed by
Home Brew, and I guess there is something to that; the killings of the two bodyguards and the journalist serve as shock endings of Parts I and II, and if Lovecraft had ever revised the story as he suggests he might have in that February 10, 1927 letter ("Some day I may re-write it decently as a continuous unit") maybe he could have eliminated those three characters altogether as part of tightening up the piece. Wandrei, like a good friend, on March 21, 1927 encouraged HPL to revise the tale, expressing great confidence in the possibility of improvement:
...I should like to see "The Lurking Fear" rewritten sometime with all traces and insidious reminders of "Home Brew" taken out....a few changes, I think, are all that are necessary....it seems to me that it might be made into one of your better or best stories.
It doesn't seem that such revisions were ever made, and I have to give "The Lurking Fear" as it appears in
Dagon a thumbs down; this is a component of the Lovecraft oeuvre that can be safely skipped by casual fans.
(Above I noted that opinions will differ, and SF historian Sam Moskowitz, who acquired some of
Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright's records, reports in his 1983 article "The Most Popular Stories in
Weird Tales: 1924 to 1940" that "The Lurking Fear" was best received of all the stories in the issue of
Weird Tales in which it appeared.)
"The Red Brain" by Donald Wandrei (1927)
In 1926, Wandrei's "The Twilight of Time" was rejected by
Weird Tales (see Wandrei's letter to Lovecraft dated February 28, 1927), but it was later read by Lovecraft, Frank Belknap Long and Clark Ashton Smith, all of whom praised the story. Lovecraft wrote to
Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright, recommending Wandrei's work (see Lovecraft's January 29, 1927 letter to Wandrei for this and the encomiums from FBL and CAS) and in short order Wright purchased "The Twilight of Time" and printed it under the title
"The Red Brain" in October, 1927; Moskowitz reports that "The Red Brain" was the most popular piece in that October issue. "The Red Brain" was reprinted in
Weird Tales in 1936, and Lovecraft in a May 14, 1936 letter reports to Wandrei on Robert Bloch's appreciation of the tale. Obviously this is a story embraced by the weird community which I should read.
In a September 8, 1927 letter Wandrei complains that the version of "The Red Brain" appearing in
Weird Tales has had 26 lines removed "from various places by some incomprehensible method of deletion" and in the May 14, '36 letter Lovecraft suggests that the reprint was equally deficient. Hoping to get the best possible text of "The Red Brain," I spent seven bucks on an electronic copy of the 2017 volume edited by S. T. Joshi,
The Red Brain: Great Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos.
"The Red Brain" is the tale of the people of the Antares star system, billions of years in the future, when all of the other stars in the universe have gone dim and even collapsed into dust, along with their planets, so that the universe is a vast ocean of lifeless, lightless dust. Antares, the largest star in the universe, is the last to die, and the civilization on its planet is the last to rise.
By the time of this story the people of Antares have evolved into sexless shape-shifting blobs that are all brain! Because they don't have to waste time on erotic and familial relationships, they have plenty of time to develop super science, and have covered their planet with a dome that keeps out the dust and keeps in the atmosphere, have made for themselves immortal blob bodies, have abandoned any belief in religion and the supernatural, and so on. But one thing they have been unable to do, despite working on the problem for millions of years, is figure out a way to prevent the death of Antares and reverse the spread of the dust and revive the universe which once glittered with burning stars and teemed with vibrant life.
But wait! A new brain has been developed, a brain more powerful than all its predecessors, distinguished by the fact that it isn't a black blob like all the rest, but a blob of a unique red hue! The Red Brain announces that it knows how to defeat the dust! All the other brains open their minds to the Red Brain's message of salvation, only to be destroyed when a psychic explosion of hate erupts from the Red Brain--the Red Brain, the last living thing in the entire universe, is insane!
This is a fun story, with its bizarre images and momentous tone and inconceivably vast scale and over the top downer of an ending. Thumbs up!
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I'm not ready to put my copy of
Dagon and Other Macabre Tales back on the shelf yet; more Lovecraft in our next episode.