My waking hours usually end with a read until the words get
blurry. I keep at least two books bedside and trade off as the mood strikes: one
is fiction the other nonfiction. Within those broad categories the genres vary,
though scifi and history weigh heavily in the mix. Horror is not a common
selection, but I do make exceptions. Joyland
by Stephen King is a recent one, as is Psycho
2 by the wickedly humorous Robert Bloch. At present I’m halfway through Only Child (published in the UK as Stranglehold) by Bram Stoker Award
winner Jack Ketchum. When asked who is the scariest writer in America ,
Stephen King picked Ketchum.
Ketchum is scary not just because he doesn’t pull his
punches, though he doesn’t. When a plot turns violent or sexual (and it always
does), we get the full unexpurgated picture, but lots of writers are graphic
these days. Few write as fundamentally well as Ketchum though. Ketchum rarely
resorts to the supernatural in his fiction; the only major exception that comes
to mind is She Wakes, in which Hecate makes an appearance – yes, that Hecate. Nearly always his villains
are credibly human and, most disturbingly, in many ways not much different from
us. We understand their motives, even if we ultimately don’t do what they do.
It is this credibility and this nod to our darker selves that make Ketchum
scary.
Ketchum’s career took off when Ballantine Books very
hesitantly took a chance publishing the gory novel Off Season in 1981. Yet, despite the commercial success of Off Season, the same publisher turned
down his very next manuscript Ladies
Night because of violent content. Ladies
Night, in which a chemical spill eliminates inhibitions against murder
(among other things) in women – and only in women – wasn’t published until 1997.
His most successful novel to date is The
Girl Next Door in which a
suburban single mother named Ruth in the 1960s makes Psycho’s Norman Bates look like a paragon of mental health.
Motivated by her deep psychosexual problems, Ruth orchestrates ever more
vicious abuse of a teenage girl in her care. Her sons along with neighborhood
boys and girls participate in the abuse. Even the protagonist, David, basically
a good kid, is drawn in by his dark fascination, albeit as a voyeuristic
observer rather than an active participant. Eventually the abuse gets too
extreme for him to endure witnessing, but by then his own guilt is an issue.
The story is based on the very real 1966 case of Gertrude Baniszewski
who, with the assistance of neighborhood kids, tortured 16-year-old Sylvia Likens for three months until she
died. I’ll have to finish Only Child before
giving it a definitive thumbs up or down, but, along with a frighteningly
credible villain, it has an interesting time structure: it spans decades as the
character Lydia
comes to realize whom she married.
Movie adaptations
of Ketchum have been a mixed bag. Only three really work well, though be warned
that all are deeply disturbing. The
Girl Next Door (not the comedy of the same name), for some reason reset to
the 1950s, is one, and is the one best regarded by critics. Stephen King calls
it a Dark Side Stand by Me. The Lost and Red (not the Bruce Willis movie) are the other two. The rest are
best ignored.
Horror long has been a popular genre – Mary Shelley and
Edgar Allen Poe anyone? It’s not entirely clear why, and there may not be a
single answer. Millennia ago, Aristotle argued that the terrible events on the
Greek tragic stage let the audience feel and then purge negative emotions as a
catharsis. Freud largely agreed, though he put it in psychoanalytic terms: as a
way to access and release otherwise unacceptable thoughts, motivations, and feelings
that have been repressed by the ego. There is some evidence for this. Although
the immediate effect (while the adrenaline still flows) of exposure to violent
media is to increase aggression, the longer term effect seems the opposite: the
proliferation of graphic horror films and violent video games has accompanied a
huge drop in violent crime. There is more to it than catharsis, though. Horror
as entertainment is also a way of coming to terms with life’s real losses and
the certainty of death, and doing it in a playful way. This may be why horror
is especially (though not exclusively) popular with teens: as one ages one repeatedly
faces the real thing. By necessity, we’ve found other ways to cope.
Nevertheless, while I remain a Ketchum fan, after Only Child I think something cheerier will
be on the menu for the next fiction pick. Joe Haldeman’s The Accidental Time Machine is already on the bedstand awaiting its
turn.
An idiosyncratic
review of The Girl Next Door (2007)
I'm certainly a horror fan, and I've heard of Ketchum, but never read his work. I think I'll give one of the ones you recommended a try.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed King's "Joyland". It certainly reminded me of something from his anthology "Different Seasons" which is also an great read.
Jack is definitely worth a read for those who like horror – very well written but definitely not for the squeamish.
DeleteI’m not the biggest Stephen King fan, but I liked Joyland, too. Once again, I prefer my villains all-too-human, and King wanders into the supernatural a lot. Still, that’s not an unbreakable rule – I do like some tales with paranormal elements. HP Lovecraft and F Paul Wilson invoke the other side (though arguably with scifi explanations) and both of them are – as we used to say – a gas.
I think I would enjoy Joyland, I just haven't found a cheap used copy to buy yet (yes, I'm a bargain shopper) , and I've already started several other books. I've enjoy King in the past so I'd expect to enjoy Joyland (love the cover).
ReplyDeleteIf you've not read any Joe R. Landsdale, I'd recommend something by him, maybe start with his book, The Bottoms. Some of his books deals with the supernatural, but others deal with real life people. The Bottoms is a combination of both.
I didn't care for the movie, The Girl Next Door, so I don't know how I'd feel about Ketchum's books. The movie was a bit too graphic (and sad) for me, and seemed a bit like torture porn (and I enjoyed Hostel), which is a bit odd too as I've enjoyed some Clive Barker stories and sometimes Landsdale will get into that territory as well. I guess it all depends on how it is handled. I'll look for some of Ketchum's books though. Thanks for the rec.
Oh, also I might recommend the TV show, Hannibal, it's dark and a bit slow, but I've gotten to where I try and catch it on Friday nights.
I looked up a few by Landsdale on Amazon. Looks promising.
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