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Mrs. Midnight and Other Stories
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Buddy Read for Easter 2022: Mrs. Midnight
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Bill
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rated it 3 stars
Apr 03, 2022 03:19PM

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I'll be joining you ... I just read this book while away on vacation. Great, great fun & major creepiness.
And yes, the title story was terrific, setting the tone for what follows.

... with more than a touch of Scientology involved ...

"Meeting with Mike" though, what a hoot. Another rollicking tale of Englishman abroad, complete with potshots at the Swiss. (In my youth, one of my favorite activities was making uptight people uncomfortable, so I found this hugely enjoyable.) Even the climactic basement scene dribbled (ahem) with Oliver's black humor.



Yikes. Hope you're ok...

Oh my. I hope you're ok.

I agree.
I found the story entertaining, though I don't consider it one of Oliver's stronger pieces.

"The Brighton Redemption" shares the Brighton setting of "Mr Pigsny", though most of it takes place in a rectory in the 1800s. I liked the sketches of the rector (and his possibly less than honorable motivations), the long-imprisoned murderess, the inscrutable housekeeper with the sordid past, and the hapless narrator caught between them. It's a charming, somewhat old-fashioned story of vaguely supernatural goings-on. It works thanks to Oliver's charm and mastery of tone; the brief appearances of the red ribbon motif are quietly disturbing.


While I found all of the characters in the title story unlikable, it was well structured and I enjoyed the droll humor based on the protagonist's vanity (e.g. tripping over the "gypsy" woman that he encounters over and over).



Yeah, there's relatively little menace in most of these stories. I seem to recall darker fare from Oliver in earlier collections, but I may be hallucinating.

"Mr. Pigsny" was refreshing by comparison. I enjoyed the mash-up of academic/gang family/occult worlds (though some of these are drawn more convincingly than others), and the Pan/Devil motif of course has a rich history in the works that Oliver seems to draw influence from (e.g. Machen, Crowley, etc.).
The religious theme segues nicely into "The Brighton Redemption" which is my favorite story in this collection so far. The dream sequences are unsettling and the style/voice is pitch perfect for the era the story takes place in. The ending feels a bit tacked on, I might have preferred he stop writing after the penultimate diary entry.

"The Philosophy Of The Damned" - back to the theatre, but at least the focus has moved away from the petty dysfunction among the cast. I liked the description of the first night's performance and the manner in which the culminating events were absorbed by a greater historical cataclysm.

"The Look" brings us back to the grotesqueries of the theater, a side of senior sexual depravity, and a dash of colonialism and psychic/magic for good measure. Meh.

Another humorous detail in this story: Lady Drew offers Corcoran a dram of "Glen Gowdie" single malt. While I'm not up on every whisky every produced, I had not heard of this distillery so I did some digging and decided this is Oliver's wry reference to Isobel Gowdie, a 17th century Scottish woman who gained notoriety through her lengthy/detailed confessions of practicing witchcraft.
Linkwood recently produced a 14-year-old, lafite-finished whisky named after Gowdie - would probably make the perfect gift for the author: https://www.cask88.com/shop/distiller...
Authors mentioned in this topic
M.R. James (other topics)Robert Aickman (other topics)