Shades of Darkness: by Richard Cowper




Richard Cowper's post-colonial ghost story Shades of Darkness was something of a departure for a science fiction author who spent much of his working life labouring under the shadow of his more famous father, the critic, John Middleton Murry. By all accounts the father was not much taken with the son's choice of genre, a point of view easily dismissed by casting an eye over Cowper's achievements; over a dozen books in twenty years, amongst them three undoubted classics (one novel, two collections). Thankfully Cowper Senior is entirely forgotten, whereas his son remains a solid presence in British sf, despite the fact that he is long dead and largely out of print.

Cowper's best novel is perhaps The Twilight of Briareus. This strange fusion of The Midwich Cuckoos and the Nativity is easily his most accessible novel and certainly the best he produced for Gollancz; sadly Cowper's other novels for that publisher largely failed to match his early work at Dobson, where two striking books, Breakthrough and Phoenix, established him as an outstanding mainstream interpreter of the New Wave. The only fault of these early novels is a certain flippancy in tone, as though Cowper were determined to be deprecating about his subject matter. Gollancz excised this fault, but the author's work became variable, ranging mostly between interesting (Profundis) and absurd (Worlds Apart). Where Cowper really excelled was in the field of novellas and long short stories. During the 70s and 80s he issued three splendid collections - The Custodians, The Web of the Magi, and The Tithonian Factor. These last two collections are among the best ever assembled by a British author. The title story The Web of the Magi is a winning combination of H. Rider Haggard's She and James Hilton's Lost Horizon, wherein a 19th century British engineer scouting a remote area of Tibet discovers a forgotten civilisation which dupes him into engineering time itself. Aside from its beautiful title story, The Tithonian Factor contains the environmental apocalypse story, A Message to the King of Brobdingnag, and the very English science fantasy of What Did the Deazies Do? These two volumes were never issued in paperback so far as I'm aware, but some of the stories were reprinted in a US marketed collection, Out Where the Big Ships Go. Sadly the best stories are missed from that volume. I should say that Cowper's White Bird of Kinship trilogy of books has been much praised, but I found that it didn't do much for me.

Shades of Darkness appears to have been Cowper's final novel. It was issued in 1986 by Kerosino books in a limited print run of 1000 copies. A further collector's edition ran to several hundred signed copies and contained a supplementary pamphlet of short stories. It is a ghost story with an African twist. Journalist Jim Fuller is deported from Uganda while uncovering a story of genocide there. Upon return to England he is sacked by his newspaper, which is now undergoing radical change as a Murdoch vehicle. He is persuaded by friends to turn his material into a crusading novel and rents a cottage called "Myrtles" on the coast near Colchester for the purpose of writing a first draft. He soon finds that the cottage is more haunted by Africa than he is - specifically by the conscience of a previous owner who had been very publicly caught up in the Mau-Mau revolt of the 1950s. Cowper makes use of a number of old tropes to move this story along at a fair pace - the remote cottage, the ancient, folded dress found hidden inside a trunk in the attic, the convenient cache of newspaper clippings, mysterious messages on the typewriter, and so on. But he inserts these so deftly that they do not feel like devices; rather they feel like secondary characters - we know them, we know their ways, and it is a surprise when they do not behave as anticipated. The cottage becomes an African bungalow; the dress is never worn by the plot; the newspaper clippings are reduced to ephemera, and the typewriter messages are neither threats nor gibberish but are rather an inspiration for Fuller to complete his book. He finds ultimately that he himself may be the tool of exorcism, under the guidance of a local witch, but he is so convinced by his African experience that he allows one more horror to complete his inspiration. It becomes a question of whether his imagination can survive its encounters with source material.

Shades of Darkness is a personably written novel. It features Cowper's trademark relaxed prose which tenses unexpectedly before slowly unraveling into anti-climax.  For the reader these multiple shocks are turned into a vivid, page-turning experience, and the book dictates a read of one or two sittings. Recommended.




7 comments:

  1. I remember seeing his name all the time in second-hand bookshops, but somehow I never got around to reading him. Most of his work seems to be available on Gollancz for Kindle, no doubt with more and better misprints than most cheap paperback originals could hope for. I will definitely give the story collections a look, and probably Shades of Darkness too.

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  2. Yeah, I used to see his name a lot on the sf shelves in second-hand bookshops. I was never particularly inspired by the blurbs and it was only the fact that I collect the old Gollancz yellowbacks that I ended up reading him. In my mind I have him sort of lodged between Keith Roberts and Michael G. Coney. I think the collections are best, yes, and Shades of Darkness is good if not anything very new. I keep forgetting that many of these authors are having a second life through kindle - probably because I don't have a tablet.

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  3. I don't have a tablet either; I've got the laptop version which I generally use when I want something cheap and now or when There Is No Alternative. I looked Cowper up on Amazon and there they all were, in yellow-fronted Gollancz Gateway series. I don't think I've ever heard of Michael G Coney, and I seem to have found Roberts' Pavane forgettable except that it displeased me with a finger-wagging bit at the end, about how we'd never have had Passchendaele if only the Church had been allowed to go on burning people.

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  4. haha, I didn't even know there was a laptop version. I was always surprised that Pavane was regarded as Roberts best novel. I did not like it at all. He is another author whose shorter fiction appeals to me rather more than his novels. Coney is a strange one - none of his books are very memorable, but fragments of them do return. I have a fondness for Friends Come in Boxes and Mirror Image. Beyond those not very much of his has stayed with me. He did win a British SF Award for Brontomek, which was a sort of sequel to Mirror Image, if I remember correctly - both books are concerned with corporate-human exploitation of a particularly vulnerable alien race.

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  5. Actually, come to think of it, perhaps I'm being unfair to Coney - I read almost all his books, and I recall that I enjoyed most of them. The same cannot be said for Roberts or Cowper.

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  6. I greatly enjoyed The Tithonian Factor, except for "A Message to the King of Brobdingnag", which I found badly flawed by tedious exposition, predictability and that flippancy of tone you mention. The other stories are all very good indeed, especially the title story and "What Did the Deazies Do?", which reads a bit like a Rex Warner make-over of CS Lewis' "Dark Tower". And when Cowper avoids the flippancy he can make something quite affecting even out of fairly conventional material like "Brothers" and "The Scent of Silverdill".

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  7. I'm glad you found a good deal to enjoy in it. I can see why you didn't like Brobdingnag much - it was rather predictable, but then, I'm very forgiving of apocalypse stories.

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