Horror Jag?

Honestly, who knows if I shall ever get to reading the older stuff. The academic in me thinks it would be neat to have the extra background. The reader in me, kinda groans. Eventually, though if you plough, and wrinkle your brow to understand and think about every word, you really do build up "reader muscle" (and you might litterally get a headache). Here's a b*tch, though -- the more you read and more wise you become, the more out-of-touch you get. You can no longer access anything remotely approaching "average readership" anymore. Response-writing has got to be an imaginative feat, but it's all words about words, anyway, etc.

Read one of the Matheson tales. It was "Prey", which as I'm sure you know became a Twilight Zone episode. I forgot about that episode until a read that. Scared the hell out of us as kids (at the same time both slightly funny and terrifying). I wonder how the episode would seem to me today.

T.Z. was really a hell of a show, when you think about it.
 
Wow, just finished "The Man Whom the Trees Loved" by Blackwood. What a story!

I've asked - why didn't Blackwood run with something similar to his awesome master piece, The Willows? Well, while this is highly different in feel and theme, it's one that achieves the same tight artistic focus as The Willows, the same consistency in tone and overall simplicity. Like the The Willows, it's a wonderful, deep layer-cake of ambiguity and possibilities.

This one is distilled Blackwood. It stands on its effects and ideas and psychology - no need for empirical mumbo-jumbo. The most ambitious and successful connection of the *supernatural* (at least one version) to the *real*, I've read! Again, wow! Kind of knocked my sox off. One more to go, Sand. No idea what to expect.
 
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Story Responses -- 7 Pillars of Horror Part I

Algernon Blackwood, from Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Stories

The Man Whom the Trees Loved
Posted 11/06/2020 (v 1.0)

Keywords: Trees, Tree-spirits, Woods, Woods-spirits, Cottage, Art, Artists-painting, Marriage-relationship, Mental breakdown, Nature communion, Nature communion-danger, Wind-supernatural, Moods of nature, Philosophical discussion, Science supporting the supernatural, Supernatural-objective connection, Inner "occulting" process, Peronsality-philosohical transformation, Religious orthodoxy challenged

At last a Blackwood story that can perhaps hold a candle to The Willows! Though it far lags behind that story in action, excitement and in the amped-up fear department, it is a considerably deeper, more subtle psychological exploration. It has the same tight artistic focus, lack of digression and dilution and a clear, simple plot. Of course it is also fundamentally different from The Willows in tone, theme and effect.

It is a longer tale, and at times its limited action, scope and occasional repetitive ideas feel claustrophobic. It is highly concentrated on two characters and above all, it is the story of a marriage. As a plot sequence, it is spare indeed. A husband and wife have a cottage on the edge of an old forest -- David and Sophia Bittancy. David is obsessed with trees and commissions an artist, Sandborne, famous for his masterful tree paintings, to portray a cedar in Bittancy’s front yard. Later Sandborne visits the couple. Strange, and to Sophia, probably sacrilegious ideas about trees and nature are discussed. Afterward her husband’s mania for trees and the woods increases. Spirits of the woods seem to be unleashed. Sophia suffers several stages of mental anguish.

Never was there a more terrifyingly destroyed creature than Sophia. She is bashed, slashed, confined, controlled, drained and finally snapped mentally by a terrible array of forces. Even more than the frightening unknowability of the trees, the main emotional and thematic horror punch is the sheer awfulness of Sophia’s mental disintegration. Her problems include her shell-like, checked-out husband, her burning, woman’s-duty-based need to love and protect him, isolation from all human interaction, transgressions of her core religious orthodoxy, and finally the terror of the woods and its spirits. Even the narrator is against her – reminding us that (like all women) she was ultimately not really that bright.

The injection, though not overwhelming, of brief, explicit sexism here is a mini art tragedy. If the explicit statements had been left off, it would have been a better story, and nothing whatsoever would have been lost. The narrator, while he centers his entire story upon her profound inner struggles, reminds us incongruously — she was a women and women really can't actually think much. The narrator is providing the fancy words for her experience, but she could never conceive of those words herself. It’s implied the reason for this is she’s a woman. She’s meek and clingy, outwardly at least, and it seems we are to take that as a virtue. Unfortunately, these aspects of the story, are not entirely tangential. Her distinguishing characteristic is that her entire existence is lived through her husband. He in turn is sometimes portrayed in vaguely Godlike terms, and her worship of him is almost literal. To a modern reader these indications of her inescapable male-society-brainwashing adds even more to her wretchedness and the hopeless horror of her situation. Though we can assume that this effect was not intended by Blackwood. (?)

Christianity has a delicious dialog with "nature worship" in this story. Sometimes nature’s argument is even bolstered by science. Points are scored on both sides. Centrally, though it’s not about which is correct, but the inner breakdown of Sophia. Blackwood treads with expert ambiguity here, implying a danger in intense nature communion, but also a greater truth. There is virtually no mention of anything overtly occult or even pagan – no folklore, no legendary underpinnings. This is a story an order of magnitude deeper.

His poetic, omniscient narrator, through from Sophia's POV predominantly, knows many things of course about her, she doesn’t know herself. As usual, the consistency of tone and high quality of the languge is impressive. Blackwood mixes a three-part brew. First the possibility of plot as real-life metaphor (David’s obsession for nature could be a stand-in for any husband’s relationship-destroying obsession). Second is a suggested objectivization of emotion. When the mood changes in a room, a shadow enters – but is it real, imagined or metaphorical/poetic shadow? The third is about possibly *real* spooks, things seen, visual double-takes suggestions of hallucination or possibly an empirical supernatural. All three of these are Blackwood’s turf. And he give you a deep, multi-themed, extended, beautifully written, reality-blurrer of a story like no one can.
 
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The mark of great work, it doesn't just suggest multiple readings, it can seem to *work* with them. Did Blackwood unintentionally write a towering scary masterpiece of anti-sexism? Note, that I'm NOT talking about the explicit statements and the fact that we abhor them. I'm referring to the way in which his artistic aim was to capture the torment of Sophia, and a key element of that torment was her submissiveness and gender-based aspects of her orthodxy. She could have just up and chucked the whole thing and left- and she considers it. But she stays, pertified and dutiful, keeps getting more and more terrified, and then snaps like a twig! After the deep, extensive setup, those last few pages were very hard to read -- shocking and sad, horribly pitiable. There's a big psych-horror punch payoff, that much's to see.

Read it recently Randy? Anyone?
 
I think I read it, but so long ago it was before I started keeping track of what I had read, and I don't recall anything about it.
 
Randy, it's a subtle piece and a quiet one. If I had just been reading it as an unknown text for casual fun, I think it might have even seemed a little dull. I would understand a reader's reaction like that. I read it I guess in a receptive mood. His prose is extremely smooth, his figurative language is superb, but he never goes "tour-de-force" on you. His quiet-poetry narrative tone never breaks, it's perfectly continuous, which kinda wows you. It's high order writing.

We all have ridiculous reading lists, so won't bother to ask you to read it. :) Would sure be fun to hear what you think of my analysis though. Want to re-read Smith, Devotee of Evil? It's super-short. Think I'll make it next response.
 
Damn those Smith stories are good! - Yoh Vombis, Ubbo Sathla, Genius Loci.

No one can maintain a string of superlatives like CA Smith, and all flavored so deliciously -- with his weird, dripping, but perfectly integrated vocab and diction. They're not much in characterization, but he gives a fantastic world like Ubbo Sathla a more concrete reality, without spoiling its scariness. He's smooth too, and consistent.

Such a pleasure to read, light, fun but deeply satisfying.
 
I have a problem with the title words, Yoh Vombis. I can't think of it without the song, La Bomba, popping into my head. Yoh-Yoh-Yoh Vombis ...
 
I have a problem with the title words, Yoh Vombis. I can't think of it without the song, La Bomba, popping into my head. Yoh-Yoh-Yoh Vombis ...
Thanks, you just ruined that story for me! (jk) For some reason I kinda hear "zombie" in there. It's gory and graphic. Did you know that story was pub. the same year as Mountains of Madness? There are of course, lots and lots of similarities. Fascinating to know who copied from whom, and what, etc. I understand they both freely borrowed each other's themes, etc. Sorry, but Smith wins this one! Though of course Mountains is a much longer work. Lovecraft wins for "back-story" but Smith wins easily for "story" (artisitc whole dept.)
 
Here comes more trivia.

The friendship of Lovecraft & Smith started in 1922 when Lovecraft wrote a letter to Smith. It continued until Lovecraft's death. This link has many of Lovecraft & Smith's letters. They openly shared many aspects of each others work.

Smith created Tsathoggua, also known as the Sleeper of N'kai who is an entity in the Cthulhu Mythos shared fictional universe. Lovecraft refers to Tsathoggua in "Whisperer in the Darkness"(published in the August 1931 Weird Tales). Lovecraft even tips his hat to Clark Aston Smith as Tsathoggua's creator.

"It’s from N’kai that frightful Tsathoggua came—you know, the amorphous, toad-like god-creature mentioned in the Pnakotic Manuscripts and the Necronomicon and the Commoriom myth-cycle preserved by the Atlantean high-priest Klarkash-Ton." --H. P. Lovecraft, Whisperer in the Darkness

This is how Lovecraft started a letter to Smith on December 3 1929

To Klarkash-Ton, High-Priest of Tsathoggua, Greetings:—
 
Oberon, didn't know quite the depths of the collaboration. It's an interesting "creative situation" with the two of them apparently energizing each other with specific ideas. Nice tidbit. That little pun goes contrary to horror, since it's humorous. But hopefully (?) most readers didn't notice it. Nice to see him having fun with it all. lol
 
If you are interested look into what is known as the "Lovecraft Circle".

One of the other members was Robert Bloch (author of "Psycho"). In Bloch's story "The Shambler from the Stars" (published in the September 1935 issue of Weird Tales) he has a Lovecraft inspired character die. Lovecraft returns the favor in "The Haunter of the Dark"(published in the December 1936 issue of Weird Tales & dedicated to Bloch) by killing off his character named Robert Blake. This story goes so far as to use Bloch's then-current street address in Milwaukee.
 

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