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 Oh,
as I was young and uneasy under the apple-boughs, horror did seem
to me a ravishingly simple affair. Most fiction alluded to death
in a respectful way, and in a few superior novels you were walked
past the (closed) coffin, but horror opened the lid and climbed
right in there with the main attraction. It was intimate with the
rudest and most brutal of available facts, the ones humanity conventionally
ignores, denies, pretends do not exist, or uses to titillate itself.
What protected horror from charges of titillation was its positively
gleeful willingness to engage with material a lot of people considered
verboten on grounds of both good taste and mental well being. Screw
that, horror said, the concept of “good taste” is inherently
repressive, and actual, adult mental well being really depends upon
a full awareness that death hovers around us everywhere, that the
world is radically unstable, that in an eye-blink we can pass from
a state of health and strength into injury, outright mutilation,
and a hospital bed. All ice is thin ice, horror said, and we, your
genial community of horror writers, have been called as if by vocation
to go around nailing up warning signs.
The warning signs worked best if they were entertaining, and exercising
a moral function is different from delivering sermons. Part of the
ravishing simplicity mentioned above involved the necessity for
creating fictional worlds with, ideally, the solidity and immediate
familiarity of Middlemarch (the village), with maybe some of the
sinister coloration of Dickens’s slums like Tom-all-alone’s
mixed in here and there. Into this solid and three-dimensional world,
a fictional locale to gratify the most demanding of late nineteenth
century readers, the hardworking horror writer inserted men, women,
and children, plus their animal companions, of the same solid three-dimensionality.
Up to this point we might as well have been writing a John O’Hara
or John Updike novel, and we had to do it convincingly, or everything
would spectacularly go to hell in the next stage, when things began
spectacularly to go to hell. For if she had not already been persuaded
that the world of the book was worth caring about, once the Ancient
Curses, Things in Bandages, Bloodsucking Fiends, or Demonic Entities
came into play our dearly beloved reader, she for whom all our labors
had been endured, she whom we most earnestly desired to scare out
of her wits, was going to drop-kick the thing across the room.
As my list of potential horror-maguffins indicates, these novels
gained much of their power, when they had any, by seizing upon some
nightmarish, almost certainly clichéd image of the sort usually
invoked for its metaphoric juiciness and bluntly, insistently demanding
that it be taken as literal fact. (Those guys eyeing that little
boy in the wheelchair aren’t unfeeling narcissists, they’re
vampires!) Because I was and am embarrassingly literal-minded, this
part of the process came very easily to me.
Being literal-minded undoubtedly contributed to the eventual change
in my thinking. (If you can, please forgive the “And then
I wrote…” quality of what is coming up.) Feeling bored
and constrained by my subject matter, I decided to write novels
without any supernatural literality at all, which to some readers
would appear to be thrillers or mysteries but would really be neither
– they’d just be novels that used those basic materials
while letting me get a lot of stuff off my chest. In fact, these
books turned out to be a big, big series of sandboxes, and there
I played away in happy concentration from, roughly, 1985 to 1993.
Eight years, three novels and one collection of shorter fiction:
each time out of the box, I was amazed, chagrined, and a little
irritated when nearly all the reviewers, and this takes in the charitable
and the mean-spirited, the brilliant and the dunderheaded, college
professors and feral children writing for fanzines, began their
treatments of each new book with a variation on the sentence, “Horror
author P. S. is coming around again, his cap in his hand and a damp,
eager look in his eye, trying to sell us a new boatload of horrors.”
Later on, I began to see the upside to this situation, which was
that all these people had somehow come together and agreed that
horror was nothing like what it was commonly supposed to be, that
it existed completely independent of subject matter. I liked that,
it seemed incredibly liberating and inclusive. Around this time,
I was named Guest of Honor at an HWA Stoker banquet, and in my dozy
after-dinner wanderings I paused long enough between jokes to utter
the heartfelt sentiment that “Horror is a house horror has
already moved out of.” When the banquet ended and I finally
made it to the bar, two or three youthfully middle-aged horror writers
of the type that think membership in HWA will further their “careers”
glared at me with wounded, louring eyes.
It’s odd that HWA, of which I am still a member, should have
stayed more or less exactly where it was ten or twelve years ago
when so many of the best horror writers, like many of the best fantasy
and science-fiction writers, have gleefully gone on to demonstrate
the porosity of genre boundaries or to write as though these genres
were defined and redefined every time they published a new book.
That’s the way it should be. I’m thinking of Graham
Joyce, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Kelly Link, Elizabeth Hand, Tim Powers,
Thomas Tessier, some others… writers who know it’s all
about a point of view, nothing more, nothing to do with the specific
gestures.
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