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Another Dimension
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April 2018
Title: The Devil and the Deep: Horror Stories of the Sea
Editor: Ellen Datlow
Publisher: Night Shade Books
Ellen
Datlow wades into delightfully murky waters In The Devil and The Deep,
gathering fifteen horror stories—mostly of novelette and
novella length—ranging, as she notes in the Introduction, “from
obvious monsters to the mysterious; there are tales of shipwrecks,
haunts, monsters—human and inhuman—one story even taking
place on what was once an inland sea, long gone.” I mention the
length of the stories because almost invariably they work to the
advantage of the narratives in question, creating space for plenty of
ambiance and character development, two requisites for strong horror.
As
usual with anthologies, there is a variety of styles and techniques
on display, and though I didn’t think any of these stories, em,
tread water, five or so certainly create the illusion of walking on
it. My favorite is Steve Rasnic Tem’s heartbreaking, enigmatic
and profoundly disquieting “Saudade,” in which widower
Lee reluctantly boards a senior cruise ship at the behest of his
daughters, and amid this somewhat tacky setting is taught by a
mysterious woman about the “melancholic longing for an absent
something or someone one loves.” The banal, artificial
happiness of the cruise ship setting, finely rendered by Tem, brought
to mind David Foster Wallace’s rollicking essay “Shipping
Out,” but this is merely Tem’s starting point. Within
pages, Tem is creating disturbing effects through minimalist
descriptions: “If he stared into the water long enough he could
distinguish blacker areas within the black, moving independently.”
Lee’s struggle to articulate how he feels, and his increasing
disorientation, are in direct inverse proportion to Tem’s
precise prose rhythms; the story’s final five words gave me an
icy frisson of terror shot through with heartbreak.
Also
outstanding is Lee Thomas’s “Fodder’s Jig”,
which sensitively chronicles the effects of a mysterious
sea-creature-borne virus on a late-in-life romance between George
Caldwell and the story’s narrator. Thomas effortlessly switches
between past and present, smoothly channeling a real sense of
emotional intimacy along with the psychological backstory. The ending
surprised me. Simon Bestwick’s “Deadwater,” the
anthology opener, is a likewise quiet but elegantly-honed tale in
which narrator Emily learns through her boyfriend, a police
constable, that her ex-lover Robin appears to have committed suicide
by cuff-linking himself to an outfall pipe and then waiting to be
drowned by the tide. Of course all is not what it seems, and Emily’s
investigation takes her far beneath the surface.
Two
more stories that blew my expectations out of the water. Michael
Marshall Smith delivers a tonal sea change with the unexpectedly
hilarious and simultaneously gruesome, gore-filled romp “Shit
Happens,” wherein a drunk employee of a multinational tech
company finds himself in a truly outré and absurd—yet
life-threatening—situation. My enjoyment of Smith’s
slightly madcap, gonzo outing may have been enhanced by my having
attended the 2017 StokerCon aboard the Queen Mary
in Long Beach, which is the story’s setting. There I observed
Smith in the area outside the main bar, “which not only had a
great view over the bay but you were allowed to smoke there while
drinking, which meant there was basically no good reason for me to
leave it, ever, or at least for the duration of the conference.”
I’m glad I didn’t intrude! Siobhan Carroll, by contrast,
brings the anthology to a close with a thoughtful, dignified, and
brilliantly-researched historical narrative about an 18th-century
vessel’s “Haunt” by the cruelty of men and the
forces of nature. Carroll’s attention to detail, and use of
historically appropriate English, make for a compelling,
one-of-a-kind read, technically on the level of William Golding’s
To the Ends of the Earth (1980–1989) trilogy, though more thematically restrained.
Ray
Cluley’s “The Whalers Song,” about a Norwegian
whaling boat that goes down, stranding its crew on an island littered
with whale bones, swirls with rich ambiance and pulls one under with
its tension. Alyssa Wong’s “What My Mother Left Me”
is a hard-hitting, viscerally-felt story about loss, the discovery of
the past, and the embracing of the monstrous both without and within.
Familial trauma likewise propels Seanan McGuire’s “Sister,
Dearest Sister, Let Me Show to You the Sea”, in which one
sibling attempts to murder another by drowning, with unimaginable
results. A. C. Wise’s “A Moment Before Breaking” is
a powerful journey of transformation by the sea, beautifully
repurposing the alleged innocence of a fairytale into something far
darker. Bradley Denton’s “A Ship of the South Wind,”
with its fascinating historical Native American setting and
stripped-down aesthetic, is another standout. Stephen Graham Jones’s
“Broken Record” surfs on a kind of virtuoso, surreal,
zany logic. (Golding again came to mind, this time Pincher
Martin [1956]). There’s also solid work here by Brian Hodge, John
Langan, Christopher Golden and Terry Dowling.
The
storytellers assembled in The Devil and The Deep
expertly weave sea-spells both familiar and exotic, from pure abyssal
terror to abstract metaphysical dissolution. The bends never felt
this good.
Title: Guardian Angels and Other Monsters
Author: Daniel H. Wilson
Publisher: Vintage
This
debut collection by Daniel H. Wilson gathers fourteen stories, with
an even split of seven reprints from various magazines and
anthologies and seven original pieces, including one set in the world
of Wilson’s popular novels Robopocalypse
(2011) and Robogenesis
(2014) and one that unfolds in the same universe as his more recent
novel The Clockwork Dynasty
(2017). As the collection’s title suggests, guardianship—both
familial and across different types of sentient beings—is a
recurring theme. In the opener, “Miss Gloria,” the
protector is one robotic Chiron and the protectee is the eponymous
six-year-old girl:
Of
primary concern to Chiron is, of course, Miss Gloria’s physical
safety. After that comes her emotional development, confidence, and
self-esteem. He intends to ensure that Miss Gloria someday realize
her full potential as a grown woman.
Chiron
is well aware that he will be discarded long before reaching this
goal, and he is content. He knows that before a sculpture is
completed, the scaffolding must fall away.
This
summarizes the sort of pathos inherent in the mythically-named robot,
who encounters ever-increasing violence at the hands of kidnapper
mercenaries intent on claiming Gloria but, like the famous film
cyborg Terminator, reboots and keeps coming back. Unlike the classic
Isaac Asimov story it clearly references, “Robbie”
(1940), this tale boasts action in spades, and I enjoyed its twist
ending, but perhaps the baddies’ motivation felt slightly
undercooked.
In
“The Blue Afternoon That Lasted Forever,” a devastating
spatial phenomenon threatens to rip apart the Earth itself. In the
midst of the madness, a single dad and dedicated physicist, whose
knowledge of esoteric cosmic phenomena provides him with a unique
understanding of what is to come, attempts to keep his daughter Marie
calm and to protect her as long as possible. The story convincingly
presents the end of life as we know it in a way that reminded me of
Stephen Baxter’s “Last Contact” (2007), but derives
its greatest effect from the exploration of the physicist’s
internal landscape. Also in this vein, a father in desperate need of
helping his ailing daughter must solve a riddle created by the
long-deceased patriarch Arkady; the riddle is now dispensed by an
artificial “Executor.” If you think you might like a
short hybrid of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
with your favorite Mafia movie, you’ll probably enjoy this one.
“Helmet,”
in which a slum-dwelling boy is entrapped by a seemingly sentient
suit of armor, and “Blood Memory,” in which a woman uses
extremely risky teleporter technology to allow her daughter to come
to term, are tonally closer to horror and more attuned to the And Other Monsters
part of the collection’s title. “Helmet” nods to
Harlan Ellison’s fatalistic “I Have No Mouth, And I Must
Scream” (1967) but is less relentlessly grim, focusing on a
sibling relationship and the importance of storytelling. The
weaponizing of teleportation in “Blood Memory” brought to
mind David D. Levine’s recent “Command and Control”
(2017), the mother-daughter story itself evoking shades of The Babadook
(2014) and Rosemary’s Baby
(1968). Also drifting into horror, “Foul Weather” sings a
chilling narrative melody with the refrain “foul weather breeds
foul deeds”, and in one key scene reminded me of The
Twilight Zone episode “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” (1963); its ending may
seem overly didactic or explanatory to some. “God Mode,”
like “The Blue Afternoon That Lasted Forever,” explores
the psychological reality of a disintegrating world, albeit in a more
impressionistic and poetic mode. “Jack, the Determined”
offers an intriguing setup; I imagine many readers will guess the
ending, but still enjoy the ride.
While
some of the above stories share certain stylistic trademarks—precise,
first-person narrators, immersive sensory descriptions, and so
on—Wilson offers a few surprising and welcome deviations. “The
Nostalgist” is a more Hemingway-esque, bare-bones exploration
of the relationship between a Grandpa and his grandson and the role
of augmented virtual reality sensors in their lives. In the episodic
and somewhat picaresque “All Kinds of Proof,” a drunkard
must train a mail-delivery robot, with many small-town shenanigans
ensuing. “One For Sorrow” offers a nice change of pace
through its historical setting.
Wilson’s
background in robotics clearly informs his work at every step of the
way, and it’s fascinating to see him ring ingenious variations
on familiar tropes. The narrator of “Garden of Life,”
sounding a bit like Jurassic Park’s
(1993) Malcolm, reminds us that, “Life likes to break free and
spread.” Some of my favorite moments in these stories occur
when this proposition is pitted against the difficulties of finding
one’s place, such as in “Special Automatic,” or the
ultimate cataclysms of nature, such as that presented in “God
Mode”: “The rules of physics are splintering and the
foundation of rational thinking is dissolving like a half-remembered
dream”. This clash between life’s—mind you, not
necessarily human life’s—resilience and the ravages of the world makes for
poignant and memorable narratives.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro