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Chargement... Dark Melodiespar William Meikle
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Music can transport you. It can bring sunshine on a cloudy day and lift your heart in times of trouble. But there is another side, a darker side, to music. Allow yourself to be open to a different melody, and who knows where the dance will take you. In this collection you will follow the music into dark places, down dark passageways, where dark melodies play. "As with the best of horror fiction, the stories (in Dark Melodies) are more about the characters than what happens to them, and the changes that result from their contact with something uncanny. Good collection." - Don D'Ammassa "William Meikle's stories capture the reader's imagination and takes it on a whirlwind of a roller-coaster ride that will leave you breathless come the last page." - Ginger Nuts of Horror Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Six of the eight stories are original. One of the reprints, “The Tenants of Ladywell Manor”, is a highlight of the book, but I reviewed that in Meikle’s Home from the Sea. The other reprint is “The Unfinished Basement” which, as a title alone, is enough to send chills down the spine of some of us homeowners. Dave Collins, house flipper, buys a house unseen with an unfinished basement and a piano. The piano is nice, nice enough that Thorpe, a reseller of pianos, starts playing it on first sight. The basement is not so nice what with its stinking pool of water and plant roots hanging off the ceiling. Thorpe ultimately sees a connection between basement and piano, and tells Collins he’s not going to being making his money back on this deal. It ends memorably.
There is a nested story in “The Unfinished Basement” that is quite similar to one in Meikle’s “The Lankhill Barrow” and another story in the collection, the Derek Adams story “Rhythm and Booze”.
That story reminded me of Meikle’s Operation Antarctica. Both have unearthly music and an important historical manuscript to explain the menace that may engulf the hero. Here big time Glasgow mobster Brian Johnson wants Adams to investigate a very weird rhythm an act is putting out at his night club – after he banters with Adams about his clothes looking like props out of all those private eye movies Adams watches. At the club, Adams hears what Johnson’s going on about: a dark, pounding rhythm of self-annihilation. And is the audience really fading in and out sight to the beat? After getting a manuscript from the drummer’s grandfather, Adams is off investigating the strange past and present of the great house at Eillan Eighe. The endings are fairly satisfying though there was one thread I would have liked to have wrapped up better.
Of the original stories, “The Death of Sergeant George” and “The Chamber of Tiamat” were my favorites.
The first is one of my favorite type of Meikle stories, the weird folk song. Here it’s “The Death of Sergeant MacLeod” (credible sounding Meikle lyrics -- as far as I can tell this is not a real song). Our hero John begins to notice that, when he sings the song at his caildh band’s performances, people disappear. In fact, sometimes the world seems to disappear. Eventually, haunted by the song and its strange effects, he stops performing and researches the song which takes him to the Orkneys and points more distant.
“The Chamber of Tiamat” is the classic archaeology-meets-ancient-horror type of story. Here Jake Simmons and his wife Fiona are working in the Mediterranean, hoping to make a big find and land a Discovery Channel show. He does the diving. She does the archaeology. Disturb a chamber and the next thing you know you’ve got centaur-like human scorpions running about and wrecking a harbor.
Duty and honor are major themes in Meikle’s work, but another, though it shows up less often, is bereavement. “The Persistence of Memory” has a widow who starts to hear her dead husband play on his beloved piano. She thinks she can bring him back. But that piano has a history before her husband got it. Meikle ends this one on a satisfyingly ambiguous note.
There are a couple of historical horror stories.
“The Mill Dance” is interesting for its setting, sometime in ninth century Britain given (Viking raids are mentioned), and its protagonist, a ten year boy. He works at his drunken and violent father’s mill. It’s a hard and unpleasant life. But then he starts hearing a tune in his head, a tune he can make things dance to. Soon, it’s not just his father who notices but the local clergy. I did find the end action sequence a bit unconvincing, but I still liked it.
I’m not really up on what kobolds are, but they are, of course, a major feature in “When the Kobolds Dance”. This one is set in a 19th century coal mining town in Ohio. The local sheriff, a former lawman on the frontier, has to deal with mysterious deaths in a mine. I liked not only the main story but also the underlying animosity between the Scots and Cornish miners.
A surprising variety of stories given the collection’s themes and references to Meikle’s other work. ( )