The first tale of the collection, Ravissante tells of a curious manuscript of a painter that is being read by our protagonist upon the painter's death. It tells of a strange episode in Belgium, where the artist is visiting the elderly widow of one of his favorite artists. The story seems to thrive on alienation between the characters, nothing can be perceived until it’s too late. Aickman’s prose and turn of phrases through the story create an atmosphere that is so unbelievably unsettling, it’s almost hard to read on at a certain point. Details present themselves after finishing this tale, but they all hint at something far more terrible under the surface. I can actually not remember being this badly shaken by a short story before.
The Inner Room tells of a strange childhood gift, an ornate dollhouse filled with eerie dolls, but seemingly sealed. There is something off about the geometry of the house, a hidden room that will have some cryptic meaning for our protagonist in the future.
Never visit Venice has a dark pessimism lingering over it, not only of the state of Venice and the tourists that are slowly ruining the city but towards life itself. The protagonist seems lost within his own mediocracy and trapped within an introverted state that he seems unable to fathom. Seeking consolation in the company of women, he cannot seem to open himself to them either. What he seeks is a dream, an illusion without a clear purpose. He cannot clearly see the beginning of it, but there is a vague sense of familiarity over the looming dreadfulness of the ending.
The Unsettled Dust takes place in a curious and forgotten corner of England, where two elderly sisters live in a large home, immaculately kept, except for the dust everywhere. Here Aickman draws forth something wonderfully eerie from his keen sense of place, and the notion of something unresolved in the past. It struck me as poignant in the tale of a small river running through the landscape, so obscure that the people who live there haven’t even heard of it. There is a notion here that some people would rather forget than try to mend the ravages of time.
The Houses of the Russians show how masterfully Aickman played with the reader's expectations, the oncoming denouement, and the supernatural in his tales. Here as in many of his other stories, there lurks something more horrifying than is let on through the narrative somehow, a deeply disturbing clue that evades the reader’s attention.
No Stronger Than a Flowerexplores the complex expectations of a relationship. Where a cruel demand is suddenly met and one part of the couple experiences a loss of control and strange new urges arise from it. A makeover will bring change, total change sometimes not only physically but psychically as well.
In The Ciceronesa tourist's urge to experience something holy, something beyond a mere tourist attraction in a cathedral in Belgium. Suddenly he finds himself trapped within something exalted, in communion with something he doesn’t understand. I’m not sure I understand either, even upon the second reading of this eerie tale.
Into the Wood tells of a strange sanatorium nestled within the Swedish woods. Filled with insomniacs, an English housewife experiences something strange during her 2-day visit to the place. It is as if the lack of sleep attunes them to something, another meaning found within the labyrinthine forests that surrounds the sanatorium.
The strangeness that lies over Aickman’s stories is hard to shake, some of them lingered with me for days in the back of my mind like a bad dream. The prose is as complex and razor-sharp as ever, each word seems carefully placed and works perfectly together to create his unique brand of terrifying mystery. His incredible sense of place, characters, and strange situations cement him as one of the very greatest practitioners of the uncanny and ghostly, and Sub Rosa is one of the finest short story collections I’ve come across period.