The Traveler’s Tale (1984) by
Lucius Shepard is a science fiction/horror story set on the fictional island
Guanoja Menor off the coast of Honduras. One of several stories Shepard has set in the
region, he brings to bear his familiarity with Central
America in telling this voodoo-esque tale of alien proportions.
The Traveler’s Tales is told through
the eyes of Frank Winship, a retired American who recently bought a piece of
land on a remote corner of Guanoja Menor, met a younger woman, and is ready to
settle into his twilight years. The
locals full of color, Frank spends his days at the area chicken shack, eating
meals, and having beer over gossip. A
few tourists travel through the area, and Frank strikes up a short friendship
with one, a great storyteller named Ray Milliken. Milliken disappears a short time later and
Frank thinks nothing more of it until, having chicken one evening, he hears a
rumor that Milliken has returned and intends to develop an unused,
snake-infested point of land into a town.
Visiting the large parcel, a place the locals call the Burying Ground
based on old pirate legends, Frank learns firsthand that indeed Milliken
intends to develop the overgrown jungle into a community and has brought along
a cadre of like-minded young travelers to help.
But when the travelers begin straggling out of the jungle at odd hours,
knocking on Frank’s door seeking assistance, things take decided a turn for the
strange, and Frank begins fearing for his life.
A
science fiction story with horror elements, The
Traveler’s Tale banks its money on suspense and good storytelling. Shepard drawing out the tension nicely as
things become more and more inexplicable, his prose simultaneously keeps the
reader invested in the details of island life.
The local people in particular come alive—drunks, housewives,
shopkeepers, and the like, and all with an eye to the setting they
inhabit.
In
the end, The Traveler’s Tale is good
storytelling from one of the best writers of short fiction the genre has seen
yet. The novella not his greatest story,
it remains one that engages the reader for tension and does not let them go for
detail. Like Shepard’s later Stars Seen through Stone, the story
possesses a moral, but is one the reader can ponder upon, the connections
covert. Certainly involved, however, are Honduran culture and history, its
interaction with American tourism and economic interests, and the imperfect
joys of island life in Central America. May not be a story for the ages, but has
impact in the moment.
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