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These books played a key role in my preteen literary soundtrack, when fantasy, horror, and sci-fi writers like Edgar Rice Burroughs, Clive Barker, James Herbert, H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, and Stephen King ranked as must-buy, must-read affairs. My preferences also coincided with my interest in becoming a writer, one who'd presumably follow my heroes into the upper echelons of fantasy and weird fiction stardom.
Ducking and dodging Herbert's giant, flesh-eating rats seemed like a more enjoyable pursuit than cranking out the next Great Expectations, or Great Gatsby -- which also grabbed me. But those works featured characters and settings that seemed distant and remote (the 1800s and 1920s, respectively). Like most 13- or 14-year-old boys, I felt too impatient to do the heavy research that such classic masterpieces invariably demand.
The small screen had heated up, too. Revivals of classic shows like The Twilight Zone, and upstart series like Tales From The Crypt -- essentially, the horror equivalent of "The Love Boat," where many an out of work actor popped up -- were drawing viewers, and turning heads. Horror, sci-fi and weird fantasy were big business again, thanks to stronger storylines, and rapid advancements in special effects.
Herbert intercuts Holman's detective forays with interludes of people doing unspeakable things to each other -- such as lesbianism, or so I conclude, after revisiting Chapter 10, which opens with a distressed young woman, Mavis Evers, as she's contemplating suicide on the beach, in the coastal resort town of Bournemouth.
The reason, we learn, stems from the manipulative cruelty of Ronnie, a childhood friend who wastes little time initiating Mavis into the wicked, wicked ways of Sappho -- as an impressionable eleven-year-old. (Ronnie's a year older, which seems sufficient to cast her as the dominant partner.)
We're then treated to a brief scene of mutual masturbation, with overripe language that wouldn't feel out of place in Penthouse Forum ("Ronnie had suddenly asked Mavis if she had ever touched herself. Perplexed, she had asked where?"). It's creepy, and distasteful, but thankfully, Herbert doesn't linger on it for long.
Once their sexual frolics cool down ("Mavis had been surprised and excited by the strange tingle that had run through her"), the steelier, worldlier Ronnie heads off to London, where Mavis encounters her again -- this time, as an impressionable 21-year-old who can't find a flat, or even a friend. Without missing a beat, Ronnie cheerfully invites Mavis to spend the night. Why, you might well ask, when they haven't seen each other for several years?
What's notable is how long Herbert leers over these proceedings, which ramble on for several overheated pages -- a luxury that he doesn't allow his other major characters (at least, in these books). Even if you accept this scene as a means of fleshing out Mavis and Ronnie's backstory, it's still a jarring interruption. The Fog would fare just as well without it.
Once this final bit of softcore porn concludes, Herbert speeds the story off to its inevitable, stereotypical conclusion. Ronnie gradually begins to withdraw her affections -- at one point, even knocking Mavis to the floor, "screaming that she must never touch her again" -- before she lowers the boom on her clueless, largely passive partner, whom she's ditching for good. For a man, as it happens.
Philip, it seems, is waiting for Ronnie in his car, blissfully unaware of the double-dealing bedmate that he's about to inherit ("He doesn't know about us, and I never want him to"). Cue one final kiss-off from Ronnie, which is revealing for what she doesn't say, once you've read between the lines: "Believe me, Mavis, I didn't want this to ever happen -- I didn't know it ever could -- but it's the right thing. I think we were wrong. Forgive me, darling. I hope someday you'll find what I have."
As the water grows colder, darker, and deeper, Mavis experiences a change of heart -- but, in the end, her renewed will to live means nothing. She drowns anyway, unable to escape a final trampling amid countless other fog-crazed human lemmings ("She fell to her knees again, and this time, as she attempted to rise, other bodies fell on top of her. She squirmed around beneath the water, becoming entangled in other arms and legs").
Of course, we already got a suitable whiff of the epitaph, several pages beforehand: "She finally recognized their affair for what it was -- two women living together in an abnormal relationship. She had never accepted the fact that she was homosexual, but somehow, Ronnie's leaving took away all the sensitivity of their mutual inclinations and revealed Mavis in her true light. A lesbian!"
There you have it. This type of relationship is unhealthy, and if you desire one like it, you'll end up on the bottom of some English seabed or other. See, you don't have it so bad, boys and girls, Herbert suggests, with a wink, and a nod. Aren't you glad you're boring and normal, after all? But it's not the first time that he's stacked the deck this way, as we'll see in our next section.
No such pleasures await Henry Guilfoyle, a deeply closeted paper company salesman who loses his job after colleagues learn of his relationship with a much younger co-worker, on whom he's laser focused ("And then he knew -- oh, that glorious moment when he really knew").
In just over six pages, Henry goes from a promising management candidate ("large orders were coming in, and he saw Francis most every day and most evenings"), to a total outcast, targeted by crude bathroom graffiti ("How could they? How could they destroy their precious love like this? Dirty little minds coming in here, sniggering"). Today, we'd call this an example of outing, the popular term for a revelation of gender and sexuality without the affected person's foreknowledge, or agreement.
He even squeezes in the odd evening of light entertainment, though it's one that has more in common with the disgraced Pee Wee Herman's antics: "At one time he'd been able to fill his sexual needs in dusty old cinemas, sitting next to men of his own kind. Only twice had he been threatened, once very quietly with menace, the other time with much shouting and fist-waving, as eyes in the cinema centered on his shame."
The Dark focuses on Chris Bishop, a paranormal investigator who's looking into a malevolent darkness inhabiting a deserted house, that -- surprise! -- drives people to orgies of feral, amoral behavior, such as a stadium savaged by beserk soccer fans. (Hang on, doesn't that happen regularly over there? Right, never mind.) Sounds very much like The Fog, only crossed with a touch of The X-Files.
Ash (2012), his final offering, plunks the late Libyan dictator, Moammar Gadafi, down in a Scottish castle with Lord Lucan, press baron Robert Maxwell, Princess Diana, and her secret love child. Hmm... Maybe I should seek that one out, since it sounds rather different than his standard fare.
Whatever you take away from his books, though, don't expect much help from the author. The 23-minute Terry Wogan clip (see below) typifies the challenges that I encountered in trying to get the measure of the man -- who comes off as earnestly bland, low-key, a little vanilla, even.
The first half drags on, amid the usual banal shop talk ("If I'm in the study all day working, I'm 'James Herbert'" -- get this man the hook, Igor!). However, the temperature starts to rise when they're joined by a pair of mediums -- who plop on the couch, and argue passionately that they really can speak with the dead. For his part, Herbert mostly hangs back, though he tosses out an understated retort or two ("I'm not sure if it's quite the way you say it is").
It's left to Clive Barker, his younger, gayer counterpart, to inject whatever edge that the show has conspicuously lacked so far ("I don't argue that we go on," he tells the mediums. "Why do we hang around? That's the bit I don't understand"). Despite my best efforts, I haven't found out what Barker thought of his fellow author's depictions of "his own kind." But I can probably hazard a guess.
My discoveries of punk, postpunk, and garage music also coincided with a family member struggling to cope with severe mental illness, an ordeal that lead to several hospitalizations during the late '70s and mid-'80s. Suddenly, the 3-D graphic scenarios of those books seemed so quaint, just so much old hat. They didn't resonate anymore for me.
Unlike those offenders, Herbert instinctively grasped that less is more, which I consider an outgrowth of his pre-fame career in advertising. Getting people to open their wallets is the game, so every image and syllable has to work toward that end. If your idea doesn't get people to buy, your boss won't let you try it again.
For all the graphic energy that he pours into his gross-outs, Herbert often spaces out on surprisingly basic details. It's a tradeoff that only works if you don't think too hard -- for instance, just how exactly does Mavis make it to Bournemouth, without showing any ill effects of the fog?
At other times, he struggles to breathe flesh and blood life into his characters. The stereotypical likes of Henry Guilfoyle, or Mavis and Ronnie, simply wouldn't fly in a pop culture where gays and lesbians now occupy major chunks of film and TV time.
I get a similar vibe from heroes like Holman -- tough, practical men of action, who also seem cast of solid cardboard, unlike the clammy bureaucrats that they encounter, in book after book after book, when they're not rescuing girlfriends who seem little more than neurotic, needy accessories.
Links To Go: Hurry, Hurry,
Those Rats Are Right Behind You...
Book Review: The Fog: Lee Durbin:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QY8-QsFQG0Y
Google Books: The Fog, Chapter 10:
https://books.google.com/books?id=dEgroWQcTxIC&pg=PT147&lpg=PT147&dq=james+herbert+mavis+and+ronnie+the+fog&source=bl&ots=4Pg__v37ev&sig=ACfU3U2tDWMtgXpeyJ5tfgL1o52BORRVww&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjLyp3Bj-L_AhVOhIkEHXNFB78Q6AF6BAgWEAM#v=onepage&q=james%20herbert%20mavis%20and%20ronnie%20the%20fog&f=false
Google Books: The Rats
https://books.google.com/books?id=DJN_72oR4gkC&pg=PA3&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxRJuUF4rXc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgIMMtcLKWg