Forgotten Books: Darker Than You Think by Jack Williamson (Ed Gorman from the archives)
Let's begin with a tale of woe. Mine.
Years
ago I was asked to contribute a forty thousand word novella to a YA
series about shape-shifters. You know, beings humans and otherwise who
can transform themselves into other kinds of creatures. I immediately
thought of Jack Williamson's The Wolves of Darkness, a grand old pulp
novella set in the snowy American West and featuring enough creepy violence and tangled romance to make it memorable. It even has its moments of sweeping poetry.
Reading
Williamson's piece showed me how to write my own. A few days after the
young editor received it he called to rave. And I do mean rave. The best
of the entire series. Eerie and poetic. Yadda yadda yadda. For the next
forty-eight hours I was intolerable to be around.
It was during this
time our five cats learned to give me the finger. My swollen head was
pricked soon enough. The young editor's older boss hated it. He gave my
editor a list of reasons he hated it. I was to rewrite it. I wouldn't do
it. I said. I'd just write another one, which I did. Old editor seemed
to like this one all right but he still wasn't keen on how my
"characterizations" occasionally stopped the action.
Backstory--verboten.
Shortly after this werewolves began to be
popular. I spoke to a small reading group one night and told them about
Wolves of Darkness and then about Williamson's novel Darker Than You
Think. Everything I love about pulp fantasy is in this book. The
werewolf angle quickly becomes just part of a massive struggle for the
soul of humanity. As British reviewer
Tom Matic points out:
"According
to its backstory, homo sapiens emerged as the dominant species after a
long and bitter struggle with another species, homo lycanthropus, whose
ability to manipulate probability gave it the power to change its shape
and practise magic. These concepts, fascinating as they are, might
make for dry reading were they not mediated via a gripping thriller
riddled with startling plot twists, that blends scientific romance with
images of stark bloodcurdling horror, such as the kitten throttled with a
ribbon and impaled with a pin to induce Mondrick's asthma attack and
heart failure, and the pathetic yet fearsome figure of his blind widow,
her eyes clawed out by were-leopards. With its scenes of demonic mayhem
in an academic setting and the sexual and moral sparring between the two
main characters, it almost feels like a prototype of Buffy, The Vampire
Slayer in a film noir setting."
Williamson couching his
shape-shifters in terms of science fiction lends the story a realistic
edge fantasies rarely achieve. The brooding psychology of the
characters also have, as Matic points out, a noirish feel. And as always
Williams manages to make the natural environment a strong element in
the story. He's as good with city folk as rural. And he's especially
good with his version of the femme fatale, though here she turns out to
be as complicated and tortured as the protagonist.
This is one
whomping great tale. If you're tired of today's werewolves, try this
classic and you'll be hooked not only by this book but by Jack Williamson' work in general..
8 comments:
An excellent review to dig back out, Patti.
This isn't a genre that really appeals to me as a rule, Patti. And that's why your review is doubly appealing - it makes me want to read the book. Thanks, too, for sharing your own story. I really think too often writers think they're alone in dealing with the ups and downs of the writing life.
I read DARKER THAN YOU THINK when I was a kid and loved it. I need to reread it again.
I need to read it too. Ed Gorman was a terrific writer himself, and was excellent as a reviewer.
Love Ed's reviews, thanks for reposting this one, I don't remember reading this review of his before. Now I'm off to find the book.
I love this review especially because there is so much of Ed here.
And Williamson was a great writer. First published in 1928, his last novel came out in 2005, just a few years before his death -- a career that spanned nine decades! The Science Fiction Writers of America named him their second Grand Master (right after Robert A. Heinlein), an honor most deserved.
Excellent book, a real work of imagination and originality. Not mentioned in Ed's review is this book is one of the earliest novels to blend werewolf legends with biological origins. So it's more science fiction than fantasy though it still has horror/fantasy elements, including some witchcraft. I, of course, loved it. Sticks in one's brain for sure. I remember many scenes and characters to this day.
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