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240 pages, Paperback
First published October 1, 2019
It is a little after midday; but the sky is the colour of mud—do you understand?—grey mud! Down from it there hang vast lappets of clouds. Not such clouds as I have ever before seen; but monstrous, mildewed-looking hulls. They show solid, save where the frightful wind tears their lower edges into great feelers that swirl savagely above us, like the tentacles of some enormous Horror. (44)
I know now why we are afraid of the dark. I had never imagined such secrets of the sea and the grave (which are one and the same). (44)
The Gateway of the Monster � (1910) - ★★★★
This is the first Carnacki story of the collection, which means it was my first Carnacki story. At the time, I had the luxury of NOT being familiar with the pattern/similarities between the Carnacki stories and had no idea what to expect. I think that worked in this story’s favor, as I actually liked it. Others seem to disagree with me on this, but I think it builds up quite nicely to a satisfying ending.
So, Carnacki investigates a haunted house. There is something called the Grey Room, lots of slamming of doors and similar bumps in the night. After his thorough investigation, Carnacki performs some curious rituals to deal with the problem. He creates like a water circle, mentions the Black veil case and even makes use of a camera. It’s all pretty interesting and strange and occult. Kind of creepy too.
What’s even stranger, though, is that he at some point drinks coffee just before bedtime!
Mad as a hatter, that one.I was aware in a funny, subconscious, introspective fashion that the ‘creep� had come upon me (�) (63)
The Horse of the Invisible � (1910) - ★★
Two Carnacki stories in a row. When it dawns on you how similarly constructed they are, it gets old pretty fast. “The Horse of the Invisible� reads like a mission report, or a summary of events presented at a dull conference people go to for free snacks.
As you can probably tell, a horse is involved. Someone hears it galloping around the house and stuff like that - like a spectral fiend - and Carnacki is hired to investigate the matter. It starts off as spooky and menacing (is it a ghost or a demon?), but eventually it drags on as the same things keep happening. Carnacki performs some ritual again and the matter is � resolved. I won’t say how, but it’s very unsatisfying.
The Whistling Room � (1910) - ★★�
A third Carnacki story. This one’s pretty cool at first, when Carnacki investigates a room where people can hear a strange whistling noise. The setting is a castle in Ireland, which in turn evokes a gothic feel to the story. Carnacki uses various kinds of occult and scientific tests in the room and becomes increasingly concerned about what might manifest that noise.
Hodgson, I’ve noticed, tends to make the reader nervous by either stripping away his character’s ability to see, or has them hear strange noises. It’s creepy and unsettling, and this whistling noise sounds like “as if a devil or some rotten thing were laughing at you� (108). Despite the recurring repetitiveness, I really liked how he described the noise throughout, and this time I also liked the explanation behind the sound, which is why I gave it three stars.As the door flew open, the sound beat out at us, with an effect impossible to explain to one who has not heard it—with a certain, horrible personal note in it; as if in there in the darkness you could picture the room rocking and creaking in a mad, vile glee to its own filthy piping and whistling and honing; and yet all the time aware of you in particular. (109)
The Derelict � (1912) - ★★★★�
Wow! It's been a long time since a story has made me this uncomfortable. To be honest, “The Derelict� literally frightened me. My heart was pounding so much I had to close the book at some point and just breathe and calm down. I just got so into it, you know, imagining myself on that boat with those men, being in the same situation as them, held down by a feeling of dread as they investigated an abandoned boat out in the open sea. It's officially one of my favorite weird horror short stories! I won’t spoil any other details, I just highly recommend checking this one out.
By the way, I looked up the term for my fear of deep bodies of water, which is called thalassophobia. I think I developed it when, as a kid, my cousin pushed me off a pier into water where someone had discarded a pile of dead fish, which I mere seconds before had discovered. So that might be why Hodgson's maritime horror has had such an effect on me. The setting alone gives me shivers.I could see it for some minutes beforehand, tearing the sea, in the gloom, into a wall of phosphorescent foam (�) (156)
The Thing in the Weeds � (1916) - ★★★★
What is that stench, out here? Out in the open sea? How disturbing! “My imagination began to awaken to horrible discomforts; a thousand dreadful impossibilities of the sea became suddenly possible�. (165) And oh no, what about this creepy mist? “I remember how the lamps made just two yellow glares in the mist, ineffectual, yet serving somehow to make extraordinary plain the vastitude of the night and the possibilities of the dark.� (166)
The Hog � (1947) - ★★�
The fourth Carnacki story. This time, he meets a man who is having recurring nightmares of a pretty peculiar nature; he can hear grunts and squeals and pig howls. And it’s utterly horrible! “It seems to shake everything� It’s like a spiritual earthquake. The howling, squealing, grunting, rolling clamour of swinish noise coming up out of that place, and then the monstrous GRUNT rising up through it all, an ever-recurring beat out of the depth � the voice of the swine-mother of monstrosity beating up from below through that chorus of mad swine-hunger…� (181)
It’s unpleasant and disturbing at first, and then it teeters on the edge of ridiculousness, and then it becomes repetitive and drawn-out again, so that the noises and the creepiness looses some of its effects. It takes frustratingly long to investigate the matter and try to resolve the issue.
The Riven Night � (1973) - ★★★★
A very atmospheric piece. A crew on a boat is on their way home as they find themselves in the midst of a strange weather phenomena with strange lights and colored clouds. I wish Hodgson had written more like this; it’s so eerie and beautiful.“Brighter grew the brilliance of those lights until their vidid green-ness smote intolerably up into the violet impalpableness like two transparent pillars through which played a shiver of lambent flame, and suddenly the murky vastness beneath were heaved upwards into a might wave that drove towards us threateningly.� (235)
Favorite new words:
Lots of nautical terms were new to me, but my favorite is the poop deck (!), which is a deck that forms the roof of a cabin built in the rear of a boat. It’s technically a stern deck, but in my mind, it doubles as a toilet where you’re not allowed to pee.
Halation = a blurred effect around the edges of highlight areas in a photographic image caused by reflection and scattering of light through the emulsion from the back surface of the film support or plate.
Encrustation = a crust or coat of anything on the surface of a body; covering, coating, or scale.