Please note this review is for the novella Ship of Shadows, not the later collection which took this as its
title. A review of the collection can be read here.
Reading the comments regarding a review of Fritz Leiber’s The Big Time today, I was made aware of
a facet of the novel I hadn’t been aware of: its hints and stabs at Weird (yes,
capital W). Things never quite mirroring
the reality of our world, at no time does Leiber pause to break it all down in
the novel, instead letting the reader sink or swim. Inspired, I decided to pick up a collection
of Leiber’s I’ve had for some time. The
first story knocked me down. A Weird text
if ever there were, Ship of Shadows
is a delightful dip in an ether of horror to which few know the recipe. Looking for, or needing anchors to reality in
your fiction? Look elsewhere.
Ship of Shadows is the bizarre story of Spar.
Half-blind, half-deaf barman at the Bat Rack, a watering hole is perhaps
not the best place to work for an addict.
Sick and hungover on the opening page, a talking cat makes his
acquaintance, and after some initial social troubles, the two become friends. The owner of the Bat Rack barely tolerant of
Spar’s lifestyle, it’s the customers who keep Spar afloat. Doc, though having his own issues, has an eye
out for the crippled and elderly Spar—and the eye is needed if the likes of
Crown and his Hellhound are to be kept at bay.
Events oscillating between the mundane and feverishly horrorific, Spar
discovers a cat may be a better friend than humans.
The above introduction not extremely coherent, Ship of Shadows is a story that needs to be experienced rather than
explained. An odd, peculiar narrative,
at times it seems to move confidently, and at others nowhere at all. Don’t be deceived; this is Leiber’s talent. Authorial sleight of hand perpetually pulling
the rug out from under the reader’s feet, you never know what to expect, one
bizarre scene morphing into the next.
"Sleepday’s dreams
had begun good, with Spar having Crown’s three girls at once. But Sleepday
night he had been half-waked by the distant grinding of Hold Three’s big
chewer. Then werewolves and vampires had attacked him, solid shadows diving in
from all six corners, while witches and their familiars tittered in the black
shadowy background. Somehow he had been protected by the cat, familiar of a
slim witch whose bared teeth had been an ivory blur in the larger silver blur
of her wild hair. Spar pressed his rubbery gums together. The cat had been the
last of the supernatural creatures to fade. Then had come the beautiful vision
of the ship."
So esoterically strange, such a side-step from reality, Leiber’s voice compels
the text to be read. That it ends up a coherent
story is almost a disappointment—the ride perhaps more fun than the nature of
the conclusion allows.
In the end, Ship of Shadows is
a brilliantly written story that betrays itself only in the final pages to be standard
horror/sci-fi. Sky is the limit
imagination-wise, the narrative which precedes is a tantalizing mix of fuzzy
shapes and vague sounds, weird objects, and scenes not quite fitting standard
physics. Just when the reader thinks
they have the setting figured out, Leiber tosses another wrench in the works,
nothing firm under foot. It’s unknown
whether Leiber intended it to be a fashion statement, but writers like Gene
Wolfe would later to adopt the same elusiveness. Contrarily, for as entertaining as they may, some
later stories with similar premises still pale in comparison—George R.R.
Martin’s standard usage of similar tropes in Nightflyers coming to mind.
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