Creatures of the Pool by Ramsey Campbell (2009): Gavin Meadows, self-employed as a walking-tour guide of historic Liverpool, finds out more about the city's long (founded in the 13th century) and somewhat bizarre (even in non-fiction) history as he searches for his missing father.
Ramsey Campbell grew up in Liverpool, and a number of his previous novels have been set either there or in his early-career Liverpool stand-in, Brichester. Here, he visits all-out historical horror on his home, blending real and fictional in an unnerving, escalating fashion that builds upon the quasi-documentary accumulation of detail so central to H.P. Lovecraft's best work.
Campbell uses first-person narration here as he did in his previous novel, The Grin of the Dark. As first-person narration had previously been rare in Campbell's long-form output, I wonder if he had more ideas related to unreliable narration than The Grin of the Dark could profitably address. Gavin Meadows is much more reliable than the narrator of the previous novel, but we do get some (self-doubting) moments as Meadows tries to wrestle with whether or not what he's glimpsing is real or somehow an ongoing hallucination brought on by stress.
See, Liverpool was built partially on reclaimed marshland and, indeed, a reclaimed pool. Beneath the ground, ancient tunnels proliferate, some now being rediscovered, some still hidden. Above the ground, the rain seems to fall incessantly. And everywhere and increasingly, Gavin starts to see things that don't appear to be quite human, even as the police seem to take his father's disappearance lightly. And as Liverpool gradually succumbs to a rising damp, Meadows struggles to keep his own thoughts straight against the onslaught of historical facts that sometimes threaten to overwhelm his reason.
Long-time horror readers will recognize Campbell's nods to Lovecraft's "The Shadow over Innsmouth" and "The Festival", though this is in its own odd way a much 'gentler' story, or at least a more ambiguous one related to the malignity of Liverpool's 'other' residents. Still, if you're ever in Liverpool, you may want to avoid drinking the water. Or bathing in it. Highly recommended.
Horror stories, movies, and comics reviewed. Blog name lifted from Ramsey Campbell.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
Woe!
Best American Comics 2007 (collected from mid-2005 to mid-2006), edited by Chris Ware and Anne Elizabeth Moore:
Contents:
Jerry Moriarty. Dad Watches (Endpapers) from Kramer’s Ergot
ii : Ivan Brunetti. The Horror of Simply Being Alive from Schizo
* iv : Art Spiegelman. Portrait of the Artist As a Young %@#*! from Virginia Quarterly Review and The New Yorker
xii : Anne Elizabeth Moore. Foreword
xvi : Chris Ware. Introduction
* 1 : R. and Aline Crumb. Winta Wundaland from The New Yorker
4 : Sophie Crumb. “Hey, Soph, Whazzup?” from Mome
* 5 : Alison Bechdel. The Canary-Colored Caravan of Death from Fun Home
33 : C. Tyler. Just A Bad Seed and Once, We Ran from Late Bloomer
* 40 : Lynda Barry. Ernie Pook’s Comeek (Excerpt) from Ernie Pook
44 : Lauren Weinstein. Skate Date, Waiting, and John and I Go to the Movies from Girl Stories ix
49 : Vanessa Davis. Untitled Diary Strips from Kramer’s Ergot
* 53 : Gabrielle Bell. California Journal from Mome
65 : Ivan Brunetti. Six Things I Like About My Girlfriend from Schiz0
66 : Jeffrey Brown. These Things, These Things from Little Things
75 : Ron RegĂ© Jr. fuc 1997: We Share a Happy Secret, But Beware, Because the Modern World Emerges from Kramer’s Ergot
91 : John Porcellino. Country Roads—Brighton from King-Cat Comics and Stories
95 : Jonathan Bennett. Needles and Pins from Mome
* 106 : Kevin Huizenga. Glenn in Bed from Ganges
118 : David Heatley. Sambo from Mome
* 121 : Sammy Harkham. Lubavitch, Ukraine, 1876 from Kramer’s Ergot
* 132 : Miriam Katin. Untitled (The List) from We Are on Our Own
144 : Ben Katchor. Shoehorn Technique from Chicago Reader
* 156 : Adrian Tomine. Shortcomings (Excerpt) from Optic Nerve
175 : David Heatley. Cut Thru and Laundry Room from Mome
* 177 : Gilbert Hernandez. Fritz After Dark from Luba’s Comics and Stories
* 201 : Kim Deitch. No Midgets in Midgetville from The Stuff of Dreams
219 : Anders Nilsen. Dinner and a Walk from Big Questions #7: Dinner and a Nap
* 230 : Charles Burns. Black Hole (Excerpt) from Black Hole
240 : Gary Panter. Untitled (Discrete Operations Vehicle—Burning Gall) from Jimbo’s Inferno
251 : C.F. Blond Atchen and the Bumble Boys from The Ganzfeld
263 : Ivan Brunetti. My Bumbling, Corpulent Mass from Schizo
264 : Tim Hensley. Meet the Dropouts from Mome
267 : Paper Rad. Kramer’s Ergot from Kramer’s Ergot
280 : David Heatley. Walnut Creek from Mome
* 285 : Dan Zettwoch. Won’t Be Licked! The Great ’37 Flood in Louisville from Drawn & Quarterly Showcase
315 Contributors’ Notes
326 100 Distinguished Comics from August 31, 2005 to September 1, 2006
Endpages Seth, Wimbledon Green
Chris Ware (Jimmy Corrigan, Acme Comics Novelty Library) may need to be kept away from the editing desk. He's a brilliant writer/artist, but his writerly tendency towards tales of woe pretty much informs this entire collection. So too does an overemphasis on autobiographical comics -- and autobiographical comics dominate the Indy comix scene in much the same way that superheroes dominate the mainstream. Fine, non-autobiographical stories by Kim Deitch and Gilbert Hernandez surface towards the middle of this collection like welcome oasises of comedy and sorrow.
There's other good work here, though I'm not a fan of excerpting longer works to shoehorn them into a collection like this. There's also some truly godawful experimental comics work included, Kramer's Ergot being the worst offender -- it's like a Victor Moscoso piece as translated by an unartistic child. I'd forgotten that Gary Panter had disappeared for awhile. The piece here reminds me why this was a good thing. I've starred the stuff I liked. For the most part, the best pieces avoid the obsessive and often humourless navel-gazing of a lot of autobiographical comics, through talent or subject matter or both. Lightly recommended.
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