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Paul Cowdell Locked account

PaulCowdell@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years ago

Folklorist, Surrealist

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finished reading Selected short stories by W. W. Jacobs (Penguin books -- 1345)

This was rather underwhelming. I've long loved 'The Monkey's Paw', but Jacobs's weird fiction is very much a minor strain in his work. Aside from 'The Monkey's Paw' and the less successful 'The Well', all the stories here are his benignly humorous tales of village life (which I found uncompelling) and of hapless sailors home from sea. These latter work better, but the overall set-up is usually that of the central characters' gullible foolishness being cheerfully and repeatedly exploited. The funniest lines are usually reserved to irrelevant prefatory asides from the narrators (Claybury's oldest villager, or the dockside night watchman), but it all feels rather dated and quaint. I might just have to find a dedicated volume of his weird tales.

Marcel Allain, Pierre Souvestre: Fantômas (Fantômas, #1) (2006, Penguin Classics) 4 stars

Every Man His Own Fantômas, or, Away With Nostalgia

5 stars

(The Fantômas novels are a delirious whirlwind at the centre of my life. I wrote the following text some years ago for a 'zine called Carterhaugh).

Do you know where the masked gaze of the Master of Terror first burned into you? I was in a second-hand bookshop in Balham. In Edward Gorey’s picture his cape swept over the city, and I felt those demonically empty eyes drawing me in. Gorey compared the characters to Looney Tunes cartoons, and ‘The Silent Executioner’ launched me on a night journey into sheer malicious wonder.

I was entranced.

These evil black pearls were magical and I wanted more. This was my discovery, nobody could ever have heard of Fantômas before, and I soaked up every empty coffin, every rubber-armed disguise, every deadly-perfumed flower. I was frenzied with the poison of these texts, and later with the deadly toxins of Feuillade’s films. I lived …