BOOKS OF BLOOD VOLUME I [2014] By Clive Barker
My Review Four Stars Out Of 5
“I have seen the future of horror and his name is Clive Barker.”- Stephen King
BOOKS OF BLOOD: Volumes One to Three (Books of Blood, #1-3) by Clive Barker were assigned for the month of April’s Book Read Discussion. Clive Barker’s “Books of Blood” comprised a series of six horror anthologies which were penned by him in 1984 and 1985. He had been a playwright prior to the publication of “Books of Blood” and this marked his debut as an author and spearheaded his success as a novelist. It could be said that it was Barker’s anthology series that sowed the seed which grew his fanbase of adoring horror fans around the globe.
First, I would like to thank Crossroad Press for presenting Barker’s “Books of Blood” in digital format. I was able to rent the first volume in the series of six (eBook format) released in 2014. The Kindle Edition sports 306 pages. I was not a fan of Barker’s in the ‘80s but in good book club spirit I decided to read the first volume, and then reassess both my eagerness to read additional volumes and the amount of time I had left in the month of April to read the novels my other book club memberships had recommended.
That said, I found that I did enjoy reading the introductory anthology in Barker’s classic series. I was unable to read the second anthology because unlike book one it was in an epub format. It was just as well because talk about time management! This month has been horrible for daytime problems, scheduled appointments, and sleepless nights. I am finding myself conked out with my tablet slid between me and the cat. But as Hannibal said “Okey Dokey, then”.
Fans of Barker’s know that his tagline for the anthology was:
"Everybody is a book of blood; wherever we're opened, we're red."
The first story entitled “The Book of Blood” is an introduction to the entire series. It is much more than Barker weaving his own conception of a haunted house tale. The story was exquisitely written and as the narrative unfolded the reader was sympathizing with the female protagonist Mary Florescu. She was in a cursed dwelling which was situated along the highway of the dead. She was in a state of longing for the young man who occupied the space in the house above her. He was a pretender, a performance artist who professed to be a psychic. In my interpretation of the story, it was Mary who was revealed to be the true psychic, but in any case, the malevolent spirits attacked the terrified boy. The cursed hands of the vengeful spirits decisively remade the young man into a true messenger of the dead. The entirety of his unblemished skin was rendered a blank tableau upon which the spirits of the dead wrote their stories on his body. A book of blood, made of blood, and painstakingly written on his skin in blood. The boy Mary longed for became a book of blood and she was cast in the role of his sole translator as she led him naked into the blackness of the night. Then there is the invitation for the reader to proceed and read the tales of horror that are written in this “book of blood”. I enjoyed this story of the young male pretender and his female admirer and benefactor. I rated it 5 Stars.
In addition to the first volume containing the author’s introduction to his horror anthologies, the Kindle Edition contained the original introduction to Volumes I-III by Ramsey Campbell (5 May 1983). The Publisher’s Intro by David Niall Wilson 3/7/2013 was terrific.
“The first volume contains some of the most memorable and unnerving tales the horror genre has to offer.”
Wilson provides a titillating description of the individual stories contained in this first volume in the anthology series. I enjoyed his concise and colorful impressions of the tales to follow. I would add that I use a simple formula for rating an anthology or book of short stories. I rate the individual tales, and then arrive at an average rating which I allot to the novel.
The second story entitled “The Midnight Meat Train” earned another 5-Star Rating from me. Barker’s prose is both artistic and exquisite. I loved his characterization:
“He had seen her wake in the morning like a slut, and pick murdered men from between her teeth, and suicides from the tangles of her hair. He had seen her late at night, her dirty back streets shamelessly courting depravity. He had watched her in the hot afternoon, sluggish and ugly, indifferent to the atrocities that were being committed every hour in her throttled passages.”
A man who is searching for meaning in his life finds it on the “The Midnight Meat Train” and learns all about the “Palace of Delight”.
The third story up is called “The Yattering and Jack” and it is hands down my favorite. An easy 5 Stars. Like the Publisher’s Intro says this one is not as “over the top” as other stories in this Volume I of Books of Blood. The Publisher practically offers up a synopsis on this one. But that cannot match the sheer entertainment of reading it. Loved it.
“Pig Blood Blues” came up to bat in the fourth position and put a heavy foot down on a string of 5-Star Ratings. The Publisher’s comments are respectful and admits that this one comes across at first “like pure, straightforward horror”. Ultimately, I was not sure exactly HOW I felt about this chilling narrative which tells the tale of an ostensibly caring but misguided ex-cop named Redmon and his short stint of employment at a boy’s reformatory. A bit of Nietzsche, cultism, ritual blood sacrifice, cannibalism, suppressed pedophilia, and even sick strategies for immortality made for some stomach-churning reading It eked out a Rating of 3 Stars from me.
“Sex, Death, and Starshine” behind door number five did not ring any bells for me. Remember that Barker was a playwright before he was a writer, and I would posit that he has a place in his heart for the great Shakespeare. Though it would take a Taser to get me into a theater seat for a play, and perhaps a firearm AND a Taser if it was Shakespearean, I grudgingly admit that I felt that the tale was refreshingly original and sap that I am, it was also poignant in places. I will not offer up a “Spoiler” to quantity why original and why emotionally touching to me. Rated 3.5 Stars.
The last story at number six in this Volume I of Barker’s famous anthology series is titled “In the Hills, In the Cities”. It is the tale of two mismatched lovers (Judd and Mick) traveling by automobile through the countryside to enjoy the scenery. These two quarreling partners crisscrossing Europe for entertainment is an example of the old saying “Be careful of what you ask for”. The Publisher had rather a lot to say about this one. He does declare it to be “one of the most outlandish, and intricately woven tales in the whole of the form”. I would second that emotion. Frankly I am chagrined that I was unable to get over the hump of “outlandish”, or to use another word “unbelievable” in this one. It is my opinion that the reader is supposed to discern Barker’s deeper meaning in this one, much like you analyze your crazy-arse nightmares when you awake in a cold sweat. I awarded 2.5 Stars reluctantly because of the rich characterization of the lovers, and my heavens, Barker’s narrative style is both sensationally descriptive but also poetic and moving when it is against all odds that it should be.
In the final analysis, Clive Barker’s Volume I of his lauded “Books of Blood” earns a respectable overall Rating 4 Stars Out Of 5 from this reader. Time does not permit my strategizing this month how to manage reading another two volumes in April.
My thanks to the voters and the Moderator of HORROR HAVEN. I enjoyed this book and respectfully acknowledge I would not have sought it out without a nudge from the club members.
BOOKS OF BLOOD AN ACKNOWEDGED TREASURE FROM EARLY BARKER