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Boy in Darkness and Other Stories
Boy in Darkness and Other Stories | Mervyn Laurence Peake
3 posts | 2 read | 5 to read
Six stories written across a range of genres and settings, including a macabre ghost story, and wry character studies drawn from the author's life in London and on the island of Sark in the Channel Islands.
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Bookwomble
Boy in Darkness and Other Stories | Mervyn Laurence Peake
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"It led on and on; vistas of forgotten metal; moribund, stiff in a thousand attitudes of mortality; with not a rat, not a mouse; not a bat, not a spider. Only the Lamb, sitting in his high chair with a faint smile upon his lips; alone in the luxury of his vaulted chamber, where the red carpet was like blood, and the walls were lined with books that rose up...up... volume after volume until the shadows engulfed them."

Trashcanman 👁️👁️ 6y
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Bookwomble
Boy in Darkness and Other Stories | Mervyn Laurence Peake
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Pickpick

The title story of this collection is fabulous. If the details in Titus Alone weren't enough evidence, the setting of this novella firmly places the world of Gormenghast in some kind of post-apocalypse future in which vestiges of an advanced technology linger in scattered places. In BiD, Peake gives us the horror of the Lamb, able to dominate others by force of will and to bend their bodies into the bestial shapes of their id. Absolutely 5/5🌟

Aimeesue I love love love Peake! I'll have to sea h for this one. 6y
Bookwomble @Aimeesue It's not too hard to find. The centenary edition with other Peake short stories should be readily available. I've also got it in a standalone hardback edition from 1996, which might be a bit harder, and in an anthology with stories by Brian Aldiss and J.G Ballard, for which it was originally commissioned, and which isn't too difficult to get second hand. Whichever way you get it, it'll be worth the effort! 😊 6y
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quote
Bookwomble
Boy in Darkness and Other Stories | Mervyn Laurence Peake
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“There is a kind of laughter that sickens the soul. Laughter when it is out of control: when it screams and stamps its feet, and sets the bells jangling in the next town. Laughter in all its ignorance and its cruelty. Laughter with the seed of Satan in it. It tramples upon shrines; the belly-roarer. It roars, it yells, it is delirious: and yet it is as cold as ice. It has no humour. It is naked noise and naked malice.”

kidamy Slightly off topic, but I've always had the strangest crush on Konrad Veidt. 💞 6y
Bookwomble @kidamy He's great in The Man Who Laughs (from which this image is taken), and in The Cabinet of Dr Caligari. He was underused in Casablanca, but then ... Bogart! 6y
kidamy @Bookwomble When I was about 13, I saw Casablanca purely because Peter Lorre was in it (didn't know who Veidt was yet). Speaking of underused... Thirteen year old me had barely dug into my 🍿 when he was shot in the back. Luckily, the rest of the cast more than makes up for it. 😂 6y
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kidamy @Bookwomble BTW, if you ever get the chance to see the lesser known comedy "All Through the Night," do it! It's got Lorre, Veidt, Bogart, and a lot of great comedians from the era. It's a lot of fun, but I've had a hard time finding a copy. 6y
Bookwomble @kidamy I love Peter Lorre! Have you seen him in Fritz Lang's "M"? I haven't seen All Through the Night, but ill look out for it ? 6y
kidamy @Bookwomble Absolutely, it's a great film! I'm a big Fritz Lang fan, too. Actually, I probably just have a soft spot for any artist who fled Germany and kept working after that. 😊 6y
Bookwomble @kidamy Well, there's Metropolis, too, obviously, and I've been tempted to buy Lang's Dr Mabuse films for many years, but have never quite taken the plunge. Have you seen those? If so, were they enjoyable? As to fleeing Nazi Germany, it's a positive sign of good judgement! According to his Wikipedia entry, Veidt did so and was then (horrible irony) frequently cast in Hollywood films as a Nazi officer! 6y
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