Let's crack open my copy of 2015's The Madness of Cthulhu: Volume Two and read four more 21st-century stories inspired by H. P. Lovecraft that bear the S. T. Joshi seal of approval.
"The Door Beneath" by Alan Dean Foster
Foster's name feels very familiar even though I have read very little of his work during the period of this blog's life; Foster penned the first two Star Wars novels and the Black Hole novelization and I think a lot of his books were at the public library when I was a kid (I was born in 1971 so books like For Love of Mother-Not and Spellsinger would have been in hardcover at the library when I was in my early teens.) A few years ago I read his story "With Friends Like These..." and thought it OK. And I think "The Door Beneath" is similarly OK, maybe a little worse than OK, a standard issue science fiction action story with a little Yog-Sothery sprinkled on it.Our protagonist is the head of safety at an important Soviet installation, the nature of which is kept from us readers. A big wig accompanied by KGB brutes gives our guy a tour of a secret installation under the main installation. Down there we find a huge subterranean chamber where toil an army of scientists and technicians on two unusual objects of tremendous size, a towering hunk of what looks like organic matter bigger than a whale and a bizarre contraption like an abstract sculpture above which shimmers a sort of black sphere. These things were discovered in Antarctica, we learn. As our main characters watch, the white lab coat crew pumps a bazillion gigajoules of electricity into the organic mass and it quivers to life, scores of eyes and pseudopods ending in toothy mouths emerging. And then they see something scary in the black sphere--the sphere, they realize, is a portal to some other world and genocidal monsters are going to come out of it. Our hero hurries upstairs as the monster (eventually Foster just tells us it is a shoggoth) devours his comrades behind him. Upstairs he somehow convinces his colleagues to blow up the public installation they are standing in, which we learn is the Chernobyl nuclear reactor, killing the shoggoth and closing the portal, and thus saving the world.
A simplistic and plodding story in which the characters don't act in ways that are very convincing and which lacks anything like a Lovecraftian tone or spirit and also fails to supply anything engaging on its own terms, "The Door Beneath" is a barely acceptable filler story, with its focus on nuclear power more like a mediocre story from Astounding than something from Weird Tales. (Compare "The Door Beneath" to two stories we read last time from Volume 1 of Madness of Cthulhu--Robert Silverberg's "Diana of the Hundred Breasts," which added good human drama to stereotypical Lovecraftian commonplaces and Darrel Schweitzer's "Warm" which embraced Lovecraftianism wholeheartedly and achieved a real Lovecraftian tone and atmosphere.) Either go all the way with the weird horror goop or give us something new--and good--which integrates some Lovecraftian themes or images; don't give us lowest common denominator science fiction with the most obvious and banal and superficial Lovecraft dressing spritzed on it.
"The Door Beneath" would be reprinted in 2019 in the Foster collection The Taste of Different Dimensions.
"Dead Man Walking" by William F. Nolan
Oy. I compared Foster's story to a below-average specimen from Astounding, but Nolan's is even less Lovecraftian and even less entertaining--"Dead Man Walking" is like a 1970s TV movie written by somebody influenced by somebody who was influenced by what he heard about Dashiell Hammett. I think "Dead Man Walking" may be an unfunny spoof of such TV fare, or perhaps was even based on some script Nolan sketched out that he was unable to sell. Thumbs down!
A writer guy lives in L.A. (I couldn't care less about L.A. and I am sick of always seeing it on screen or reading about it or hearing people talk about it. Who the hell still cares about In and Out Burger and Rodeo Drive and Sepulvedra or whatever the hell it is? Enough already.) Writer guy is working on a nonfiction book about how the supernatural is a load of crap. But then a hot chick whose husband, a sculptor, died, calls him up to ask for his help--she thinks her husband is alive and trying to kill her!
We spend like seventeen pages with the writer, the widow, and a gallery owner who is also some kind of medium or witch or something, Madame Jechiel. Jechiel gave the sculptor a magic ring that allowed him to live forever if he cut a deal with monsters from another dimension--he had to make statues of the monsters and anoint them with human blood and then the aliens would inhabit and animate the statues and take over the Earth. The writer and the woman outfight the sculptor and the aliens in a way that is not scary or exciting and is not convincing in the least.
This story is bad. The characters lack personality and act in ways that are not believable, and Nolan writes in a lifeless barebones style that fails to make anything that happens compelling logically or emotionally--plot developments don't follow each other in a way that makes sense, but seem to exist to set up scenes that have the potential to be visually arresting while not requiring much trouble or expense to film. "Dead Man Walking" is also stuffed with poorly delivered bargain basement jokes, like the writer not liking the nickname his editor has given him and trying to quit smoking and that sort of thing. I kept flipping through pages to see how many were left, the way I used to look at the clock every thirty seconds at school, at my job in a machine shop, at my job in a department store, at my job at a book store, at my job in a government office, at my job in a warehouse....
So bad I am angry. Joshi should have deep-sixed this rough draft.
Looking at the records, it seems I have now read 10 stories by Nolan. That's right, it is links time.
Title TLDR quote from my blog post on the story
"He Kilt It With a Stick" "competent, but pedestrian"
I haven't read as much Nolan as you (though thanks for the literary PTSD of mentioning "Toe to Tip), but I haven't been much impressed except by his ok solo Logan's Run material. I'm not sure what attraction he held for Joshi.
ReplyDeleteOr, for that matter, writer Jason Brock who had Nolan with him (the elderly Nolan lived with the Brocks) at a convention I attended a few months before Nolan died.
As a teller of stories about Rod Serling and Ray Bradbury and Charles Beaumont, Nolan was interesting.
I sometimes get the sense that there are people in the active professional SF community whose written work isn't great but whom everybody likes and appreciates because they are fun to have around and have a good attitude or pitch in on the business side and doing the grunt work that makes conventions come off and gets books published and so forth. I kind of think Lin Carter and Frank Belknap Long and August Derleth are those kinds of guys, and maybe Nolan is as well.
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