Adventureland is a 1990 debut horror novel by British author Steve Harris (1954-2016) who would go on to publish 7 hefty novels during the decade. It starts as young Tommy Cousins goes missing without a trace at a funfair. He's never found, and eventually the fair continues on to the next town, real-life Basingstoke, where 19-year-old Dave Carter is hanging out with his girlfriend Sally and his mates while dodging Roddy the violent bully and his cronies.
Dave witnesses several strange and unsettling events, in retrospect heralding the arrival of the carnival in town. The group visits the AdventureLand funfair, where a ride on the Ghost Train becomes an impossibly long underground nightmare journey, at the end of which Dave's friends Phil and Judy go missing. Dave and Sal go full Scooby Doo on the fair, discovering there's far more to the funfair than just the mystery of a few missing persons.
Adventureland is a nineties' novel, and as was popular in the wake of Clive Barker it begins as horror but takes a hard turn to dark fantasy. While the first half is firmly rooted in realism — it's set in Harris' home town of Basingstoke, and all the mentioned street names and car parks are accurate, I checked — the second half takes a deep dive into imaginative otherworlds with their own strange laws of nature, the Ghost Train being an entry point into these secret dimensions. The big bad is trying to upend the delicate balance that holds the other worlds and our real world in a delicate balance. It's all a bit cosmic, with Dave and Sal receiving magical crucifixes and other assistance from mysterious folks who want to keep things steady.
As an idea it's a hard sell, but Harris pulls through, going for broke with his ideas no matter how loony they might seem. There's a lot to digest here, from hellish landscapes to a shadowy limbo version of Basingstoke, a precursor to the Stranger Things' UpsideDown, if you will. But every strand is accounted for, somehow building up into a fun, fast and hugely imaginative narrative. It may be a case of a little too much of the good stuff in the last couple hundred pages, but for the most part Harris' own enduring enthusiasm for the material shines through. He's not slacking, every fight is visceral, with Dave barely escaping with his life numerous times, constantly taking more damage than seems humanly possible. The characters are far from heroes, often failing at their attempts, a scenario that repeats perhaps one or two times too many, although I assume it might be an essentially British trait for the characters. Dave and Sal are, however, very well written, with Dave as the reluctant hero and Sal as the sassy go-getter, somehow pulling themselves up by their bootstraps even in the most dire circumstances. The monsters, led by the ghastly impresario Fred Purdue are deliciously nasty. Eating the skin of a victim while keeping them alive? Or how about a giant grubby moth under the bed, anyone? The arch of one of the bullies, Roddy, is also noteworthy and deeply tragical, with Harris turning a one-dimensional bully into something fairly complex, with even a shot at redemption at the very end.
There are lovely references to 90s Britain, with Dave fiddling with his Amstrad CPC and the gang stopping for a kebab after the pub. Adventureland was published by Tor in the US with the alternate title The Eyes of the Beast. Presumably the supremely English setting and nature of the characters was a bit too alien for the folks on the other side of the Atlantic, but on this side it feels very familiar. Harris wrote what he knew, but didn't stop there, he just went for the crazy at full tilt. While more related to Barker than King, Harris doesn't exactly own a debt to any of the major authors, instead striking a fairly unique path all his own. Adventureland is a delightful and inventive novel, which perhaps came several years too late, with the horror boom already waning into oblivion in the course of the nineties. Harris was dropped by his publisher after Straker's Island in 1998, and apparently that spelled the end of his short but productive writing career. According to an interview there were a couple of completed novels after that (an extract from The Switch, deemed too violent, can be found on his website through the Wayback Machine), but nothing has yet appeared, nor are any of his published novels available in print or as ebooks. The sheer energy of Adventureland makes me want to read more Harris, with a feeble wish that others might some day be able to do so too.
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