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185 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1957
There is much to say about this collection of 3 stories. I found this by chance at the university library and was very excited to read it since it collects two of my very favourite authors together with another authors whose most well known book (Lord of the Flies) has been read by virtually everyone who has taken a high-school English course.
First there is Golding's Envoy Extraordinary. This is an interesting story about the introduction of the steam engine during the reign of Caesar. the style is light and witty, quite unlike what I remember about Lord of the Flies, and often laugh-out-loud funny! Caesar, who, in my mind, was always painted as quite serious and warrior-like, is quite soft and humourous playing with his guests' wits as a distraction from courtly life. Perhaps,since the story takes place when Caesar is older, this is an image of the Emperor who, no longer in the prime of youthful strength and warrior-hood, has mellowed into wars of the mind. It's a fun story and a good start to the collection, thinking retrospectively.
Next is Wyndham's Consider Her Ways. I have not always enjoyed Wyndham, truth be out. I suppose having to read The Chrysalids in school made it a little less enjoyable as a young'un. It was after I read The Trouble with Lichen that I realized that Wyndham is an author I must read more of. I really enjoyed Consider Her Ways. Wyndham's ability to write strong and interesting women is admirable and rare in a male writer, I have come to understand. At one point I thought Wyndham was going to commit a grievous deed of authoring by using the -and it was all a dream- ending to the story but he avoids it cunningly and creates a truly wonderful mystery of science fiction and possible futures.
The final story is Boy in Darkness and I have to say, I am a big fan of Peake's work, his Titus Groan series, cut short and unfinished by the tragedy of Peake's untimely death, is nothing short of masterful. This story, however, left me a little, I suppose, disappointed. There is so much that is good about it. Peake's prose is amazingly well crafted. Consider this passage
...for there comes a time when the brain, flashing through the constellations of conjecture, is in danger of losing itself in worlds from which there is no return. And so the body, in its wisdom, flies alongside, ready, by means of its own rapidity, to grapple, if the need arose, with the dazzling convolutions of the brain.And that is just one small section of the story! This is what I love about Peake in general. His turn of phrase, vocabulary and syntax are just a joy to read. This story, though, is not very well put together, leaves important detail out, forgets continuity at times, and ends abruptly. The characters are rich and lively, in fact, the main character is Titus Groan of Peake's other books. Titus is a very well developed character in what's referred to as The Gormenghast books but here I think he could be fleshed out a little more for those who haven't read Gormenghast.