For
me, there are two types of horror: superficial horror intended to get
a temporary rise out of the consumer (Boo!—pun intended), and
horror with depth—metaphorical, psychological, existential,
slipstream, Weird, etc. The moment my brain encounters the former,
it looks for something better to do, whereas the latter can set it
tingling with uncomfortable interest, yet certainly interest. What
then to say about Susan Hill’s The
Woman in Black (1983)?
A
frame story, The Woman in Black
tells the tale of Arthur Kipps. Having a splendid Christmas time
with his family, things take a strange turn when sitting around the
hearth the family members are asked to tell the best ghost story they
know. Kipps uncomfortable with the idea, he knows his story is not a
story, but a memory he is still struggling with. As a young man just
starting his career, Kipps was asked by his boss to go the country
estate of a recently deceased woman and take account of her affairs.
Arriving at the small village nearby, things start to take on an
uncertain hue. Seeing things that may or may not exist, Kipps
nevertheless is interested in spending the night in the deceased
woman’s marshy home to get his commission over with. It is a
decision he will doubt the rest of his life.
Though
written in 1983, The Woman in
Black is classic, classic Gothic
horror. Not one step out of place from books written in the 19th and
early 20th centuries, Hill wonderfully captures the tone and style of
the horror novels of that era. Kipps’ tale is indeed that begins
domestically and innocently enough before unpacking itself one
properly contextualized detail at a time into the haunting bit. Hill
expertly leads the reader along this trail of bread crumbs, the plot
payoff satisfying.
But
it’s the payoff that also sours me—that sets my brain looking for
something else to do. What was shaping up to be a nicely
psychological bit of horror, something meaningful for Kipps, and by
extension, potentially the reader as well, instead resolves itself in
a cheap horror moment. Hill veils this ultimate resolve until the
final pages, but that does not stop it from coursing back through the
novel, making everything that happened up to that point almost as
cheap and meaningless.
The
Woman in Black is a quick
(+/-150 page) read that wonderfully develops plot momentum through to
its final pages. Tension springing off the page in certain scenes,
there is a genuine sense of suspense and wonder. And for most of the
book, there is also a genuine sense that the story will have some
profound effect on Kipps. But such is not the case. No spoilers,
except to say the final chapter is oh-so ordinary, deflating the
balloon of what could have been a more sophisticated offering.
Horror has a reputation among certain circles for being a cheap
medium, and unfortunately, The
Woman in Black is an example in
terms of not capitalizing on the chance to have more than one layer.
(Otherwise, the writing is fantastic.) Fans of retro horror will
certainly enjoy, however.
No comments:
Post a Comment