Interior darkness Selected stories

Peter Straub, 1943-

Book - 2016

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FICTION/Straub Peter
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Published
New York : Doubleday [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Straub, 1943- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
478 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780385541053
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

FIFTY YEARS AND MILLIONS OF WORDS AGO, when Joyce Carol Oates was in her late 20s, she wrote a story about an unhappy teenager named Connie who accepts a ride, unwisely, from a dark, glib young man who calls himself Arnold Friend, and although that story, "Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?," is scrupulously realistic, it is also a classic tale of horror. It is, in its chillingly objective way, scarier than anything in Oates's new collection, THE DOLL-MASTER AND OTHER TALES OF TERROR (Mysterious Press, $24) - which, as it happens, contains a story about another teenage girl who gets in the wrong car. The smooth-talking male predator in this new one, "Big Momma," keeps a very large metaphor as a house pet: the title character is a 20-foot-long reticulated python. There's nothing of the supernatural in either story, or for that matter in any of the "tales of terror" in the present collection, but Oates's brand of horror has never required the invocation of other worlds: This world is terrible enough for her. Everything she writes, in whatever genre, has an air of dread, because she deals in vulnerabilities and inevitabilities, in the desperate needs that drive people like Connie and poor young Violet of "Big Momma" to their fates. A sense of helplessness is the essence of horror, and Oates conveys that feeling as well as any writer around, whether the powerlessness in question is that of a victim or, as in the title story of "The Doll-Master," that of someone who is unable to stop doing harm to others: Obsession can be a kind of vulnerability, too. Lately I've been thinking about what constitutes "horror" in fiction, because the forms the genre takes have become so fluid, so different from the older models of stories about monsters and otherworldly creatures and even malign lingering spirits. Although all those sorts of things still creep and crawl and slither through the popular imagination, and reliably generate the desired fear and loathing in the reader, a lot of fiction these days seems less interested in producing great shocks than in creating a pervasive, generalized sense of unease - monsters that don't so much chase us as surround us, like something toxic in the air. Peter Straub has been writing that kind of fiction for nearly as long as Joyce Carol Oates has, and like her he doesn't always need a ghost or a vampire or, God knows, a horde of zombies to give his readers the willies. In his fat recent volume of selected stories, the perfectly named INTERIOR DARKNESS (Doubleday, $28.95), the supernatural content is relatively light. The book's first, and most horrifying, story, "Blue Rose," is about a psychopathic boy who becomes adept at hypnotizing his little brother; it's about the need to bend the world to the shape of one's own warped perceptions, to wring reality's neck until everything goes blessedly quiet. There are stories here that play with language and time for the purpose, it seems, of recreating the sheer noise of existence, stories that wonder what kind of narrative we can make out in the fog and chaos of words. Even when Straub goes a little Lovecraft, as he does in the late novella "The Ballad of Ballard and Sandrine," the effect he's aiming for isn't quivering terror, but something more like muted awe - an eye-widening revelation of a wrongness at the heart of the universe. In all his stories, the interior and the exterior darknesses tend to leak into each other. Eight years ago, he edited a terrific anthology called "Poe's Children," subtitled "The New Horror," which made a persuasive case for broadening the definition of the genre, or maybe ceasing to think of it as a genre at all. The book included writers as diverse as Kelly Link, Dan Chaon, Elizabeth Hand, Neil Gaiman, Graham Joyce and M. John Harrison, and the stories, different as they were from one another, shared a sense of horror as something numinous and elusive, too tricky to be approached head-on. One of those writers, Brian Evenson, has a new collection of stories called A COLLAPSE OF HORSES (Coffee House, paper, $16.95), which embodies this hard-to-define aesthetic pretty strikingly - or maybe what it's actually doing is disembodying something else. Evenson's fiction is stark and often jaw-droppingly funny. In "The Dust," a nearly conventional science-fiction horror tale, you will find, for example, this sentence: "Orvar was certain, or fairly certain, that he hadn't slit the man's throat himself." Some of the stories here evoke Kafka, some Poe, some Beckett, some Roald Dahl, and one, a demonic teddy-bear chiller called "BearHeart(TM)," even Stephen King, but Evenson's deadpan style always estranges them a bit from their models: He tells his odd tales oddly, as if his mouth were dry and the words won't come out right. "How is he to know where one thing starts and another ends?" asks one of Evenson's characters, and that, in a nutshell, is the nature of horror in his fiction: the condition of being unable to identify any boundaries. A character in the brilliant title story suffers from a sort of epistemological panic: "Not knowing is something you can only suspend yourself in for the briefest moment," he thinks. "No, even if what you have to face is horrible, is an inexplicably dead herd of horses, even an explicably dead family, it must be faced." He puts the people in his fiction through a lot: confinement, mutilation, cognitive blurring and quite a bit of what Daffy Duck once characterized as "pronoun trouble": His characters can misplace their sense of themselves in midsentence. "No, I doesn't sound right. I can't do it: he." They're as mad as Poe's narrators and as stoic as Buster Keaton. Is this horror? I think it is. Or he does. Michelle de Kretser's slender novella SPRINGTIME (Catapult, paper, $11.95) carries the subtitle "A Ghost Story," but it's the wispiest spook story imaginable: a domestic tale in which the ghost seems almost an afterthought, an apparition that frightens only mildly and that haunts only as a metaphor for other varieties of loss. De Kretser, a native of Sri Lanka who has lived in Australia for many years, specializes in a sense of displacement, a feeling of not being fully present wherever you are - even if, like her heroine in "Springtime," you've only moved from Melbourne to Sydney. The story meanders, distracted and digressive, looking at everything but the ghost, taking in the chatter at dinner parties, walks with dogs, games with children, the small dissatisfactions of a partner, until you realize that all these drifting, hovering bits of everyday life are, for this sad woman, the ghost. This is a gorgeous, delicately surprising piece of writing, horror - if it is - at its most melancholy and most elusive. It's like spirit photography, all fuzzy outlines and unaccountable light: a snapshot of something that may or may not exist. THE LONEY (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $25), a first novel by Andrew Michael Hurley, is considerably longer and denser than "Springtime," and it accommodates a few real horror-story jolts, but it, too, seems more interested in creating unsettling moods than in scaring the wits out of its readers. The setting's the dominant element in this book, a bleak, wild stretch of northwest England in which, Hurley writes, "the wind, the rain, the sea were all in their raw states, always freshly born and feral." This forbidding landscape features, improbably, waters that are reputed to heal the sick, like the waters of Lourdes, and to the magic spring a group of Roman Catholics make a pilgrimage, driven by the determination of one devout mother to "cure" her mute, somewhat retarded son. The longtime inhabitants of the region are a weird, unwelcoming bunch who are, in the traditional manner of close-mouthed rural folk in horror stories, obviously up to no good. "I often thought," writes the narrator, looking back on his childhood experiences in this strange place, "there was too much time there. That the place was sick with it. Haunted by it. Time didn't leak away as it should." Another character, in a diary, puts it this way: "It was ... a dark and watchful place that seemed to have become adept at keeping grim secrets." The weather of "The Loney" is English - overcast, thick with ambiguity - and when the heavens open nothing can protect you. It's an atmosphere for ghosts, for slaughtered animals, for pagan rituals, but Hurley, unexpectedly, uses this lowering horror-movie place as the setting for a serious drama about the nature of faith. The terrors of this novel feel timeless, almost biblical: There are abominations here, and miracles. As ambitious as "The Loney" is, though, it's clearly horror fiction, by even the narrowest definition. And no one would be tempted to call Victor La Valle's ingenious THE BALLAD OF BLACK TOM (Tor/Tom Doherty, paper, $12.99) anything else, either: This darkly witty tale is right in the belly of the genre beast. The dedication reads, "For H. P. Lovecraft, with all my conflicted feelings," and La-Valle's short novel is in fact a subversive reimagining of Lovecraft's 1927 story "The Horror at Red Hook," in which the fearsome creatures who ruled the earth before humanity are (perhaps) preparing for a comeback in Brooklyn. Lovecraft's mythology of the Old Ones has proved nearly as durable as the beasts themselves, with hundreds of writers feeding off it like hungry puppies; it's a rich, though not especially healthy, diet. La Valle's "conflicted feelings" are appropriate. Lovecraft's powerful pulp visions are contaminated by racism, anti-Semitism and rabid xenophobia: In "The Horror at Red Hook," black people and immigrants appear to frighten him at least as much as the huge, unspeakable monsters slouching toward Brooklyn to be reborn. LaValle sets his story during the Harlem Renaissance and places at its center a young black con man named Tommy Tester, who gets involved in the occult shenanigans of a rich man who means to raise the "King who sleeps at the bottom of the ocean" and "the Great Old Ones." In this version of the Red Hook story, much more is awakened than a bunch of big ugly monsters, and the emotions LaValle evokes are well beyond what Lovecraft, even at his best, was capable of. The old master could do terror. LaValle can do pity and terror, as some older masters could: The horror of "The Ballad of Black Tom" comes close to tragedy. LaValle's book could, I suppose, be considered postmodern horror, in the way it uses a genre work from the past for radically different purposes. But that sounds a little bloodless, and "Black Tom" is not. The writing is full of rage and passion: love for the vanished culture of 1920s Harlem and love - conflicted - for crazy Lovecraft. There's a whiff of the postmodern in Paul Tremblay, too, as he showed in last year's wonderful "A Head Full of Ghosts," which riffed on "Exorcist"-type novels of demonic possession, and as he demonstrates again in the new DISAPPEARANCE AT DEVIL'S ROCK (Morrow, $25.99, available later this month). This time he cobbles together motifs from Stephen King's boys-book mode (like the story "The Body," which was filmed as "Stand by Me") with the missing-child kind of plot that's now ubiquitous in suspense fiction, and winds up with something that resembles neither. The novel is never, at any point, exactly what you expect it to be, and even when it's over you might not feel you know what really happened to 13-year-old Tommy Sanderson, vanished in a warm New England night. Are there ghosts involved, or merely "felt presences"? In the end, what kind of horror this is, what kind of novel this is, doesn't seem to matter. Like the other writers I've been reading, Tremblay is most interested in the in-between places, in feelings that are indeterminate and perhaps unknowable, like Tommy's teenage sense of neither-here-nor-thereness: "Sometimes," he writes in his diary, "I think that I'm more than halfway disappeared already." His sister, two years younger, lives in that nowhere, too: "The night of her room is fuzzy around the edges, the continued slippage of reality feeling probable, inevitable." And as reality slips and skitters into dark corners, writers like Tremblay keep trying to catch traces of it, in the present and in the past. A mysterious character named Arnold turns up in "Disappearance at Devil's Rock"; his Snapchat user name, a joke and a sly hommage, is "arnoldfrnd." These current horror writers are Oates's children and Straub's children as much as they are Poe's, and in their books you can see both where the genre's going and where it's been. TERRENCE RAFFERTY, the author of "The Thing Happens: Ten Years of Writing About the Movies," is a frequent contributor to the Book Review.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 5, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review

Over a 40-year career, Straub (Mrs. God, 2012; A Dark Matter, 2010) has emerged as one of the horror genre's leading practitioners, receiving widespread acclaim and awards both for his novels and his plentiful short stories. His latest compilation presents 13 tales from previous anthologies along with three previously uncollected stories. A common feature in much of Straub's work that's readily apparent here is how he blurs the lines between fantasy and reality, making many of his premises all-too-disturbingly plausible. The protagonist of Blue Rose is the childhood version of Harry Beevers, a main character from Straub's best-selling Koko (1988), who hypnotizes a younger brother to commit extremes of self-abuse. In The Juniper Tree, a novelist relives the summer he was molested by a drifter. The estate lawyer in Mr. Clubb and Mr. Cuff gets more than he bargained for when he hires detectives to punish his unfaithful wife. This is a must-read for the author's fans and a perfect introduction for anyone new to Straub's brilliantly original and unsettling brand of fiction.--Hays, Carl Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This outstanding collection of 16 reprints highlights what makes Straub such a master of genre-bending horror and suspense, and it's an effective introduction for readers new to his considerable body of work. Each story has merit, though a few of the quickies don't punch as hard as the longer works. In the deeply unsettling and uncomfortable "Blue Rose," a young Harry Beevers (who appears as an adult in 1998's Koko) reacts to his troubled home life by doing very bad things to his younger brother, Little Eddie. In "The Juniper Tree," Straub paints a heartrending portrait of sexual abuse and its lasting repercussions as a young boy finds escape in movies, only to discover a monster lurking in the theater's shadows. "The Buffalo Hunter" is an unnerving story about a man with a very active internal life who discovers he has an unusual ability (and amasses an impressive baby bottle collection). "The Ballad of Ballard and Sandrine" features a couple with unusual and painful proclivities who take a creepy yacht trip down the Amazon River. Straub has a proven knack for black humor, and he coaxes the nightmarish out of the mundane with startling ease. This is a powerful collection from an enduring favorite in literary chills. Agent: David Gernert, Gernert Company. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

These 16 stories by renowned horror author Straub plumb the depth of the human consciousness, bringing to light the darkness that lives in each of us and exposing the secrets we keep-not only from the world but from ourselves. "Blue Rose" depicts the first steps of a child down the path of sociopathy; "Mr. Clubb and Mr. Cuff" reminds us that the old adage "what goes around comes around" is very true; and "Ashputtle" presents a twisted version of one of the world's most beloved fairy tales. Verdict Many critics argue that the short story is a dying art form, and while that idea may be true, what is clear is that writing short fiction requires a completely different mind-set from the one needed to writing novels. It is rare to find an author who can bridge that genre gap and do both well. This collection shows that Straub is among the ranks of those rare few.-Elisabeth Clark, West Florida P.L., Pensacola © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

"Did I say he was dead? What I said was, he isgone." Welcome to an odd world in which the dead never quite go away, and the living arewell, not quite there. Readers of horror know, even if characters in movies and books do not, that it's never a good idea to go up to the attic, even when it's euphemized as "the upstairs junk room." Bad things happen in such dark interior spaces, as the characters in Straub's long opening story learn; in a narrative marked by a tenuous hold on time and an even more tenuous one on reality, an unfortunate young man finds that hypnosis is maybe not such a good idea after all, leading to an event that, the protagonist tells us, "virtually destroyed my family." And not just virtually. Straub (In the Night Room, 2004, etc.), who, this collection ably reveals, has affinities with both Stephen King and H.P. Lovecraft, likes nothing more than a good, taut, psychologically charged yarn that raises more questions than it answers: "I thought of myself as a work of art," a denizen of one fairy tale-like story remarks. "I caused responses without being responsible for them." In a Straub-ian world, proper responses include puzzlement, nervousness, and fear, to say nothing of indulging in coprophiliac moments that are going to ruin some unfortunate housekeeper's day. Denial is also allowed; as another of Straub's characters yelps, bewildered at the thought that Herman Melville's story "Bartleby the Scrivener" should be esteemed enough to be taught in school, "I never went to any college, but I do know that nothing means what it says, not on this planet." That's exactly right, one reason not to trust Straub's narrators, whose worlds include an unhealthy amount of free-floating anger and not a little crazinessthough if anger and craziness can bring a taxi-flattened cat back to life, then so much the better. Dark, brooding fiction from a master of the form. And take our word for it: don't go up to the attic, even if it is just a junk room. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.