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Title: Drood
Author: Dan Simmons
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Horror
Pages: 725
Words: 281K
Synopsis: |
From Wikipedia & Me
The book is a fictionalized account of the last five years of Charles Dickens’ life told from the viewpoint of Dickens’ friend and fellow author, Wilkie Collins. The title comes from Dickens’ unfinished novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood. The novel’s complex plot mixes fiction with biographical facts from the lives of Dickens, Collins, and other literary and historical figures of the Victorian era, complicated even further by the narrator’s constant use of opium and opium derivatives such as laudanum, rendering him an unreliable narrator.
Collins narrates the story of how Dickens met a strange fellow named Drood at a railroad accident. Dickens is convinced that Drood is some sort of evil incarnate while Collins is pretty sure Dickens is just being Dickens.
As time passes however, Collins is no longer so sure that Dickens was wrong. Dragged along by Dickens in his quest to find Drood and uncover the mystery of who he is and what his goals are, Collins becomes a pawn of the mysterious Drood. Drood is King of the Underworld and a practitioner of dark arts lost since the times of the Pharoahs. At the same time Collins is also wooed by one Inspector Fields, a former head of Scotland Yard who is convinced that Drood has killed over 300 people and plans on some sort of supernatural takeover of London.
Caught up in his own literary world, Collins must contend with Drood, Fields, the success of Dickens and his own increasing use of drugs such as laudanum, opium and morphine to combat the pain and hallucinations brought about by syphilis and the scarab beetle put into his brain by Drood to control him. With the death of Dickens, Collins is sure that Drood will leave him alone, even though Dickens revealed to him that everything that had gone on before was a combination of mesmerism, hypnotic suggestion and drugs, all as an experiment on Dickens part and making use of Collins.
Collins knows better though and even though he outlives Dickens by many years, the shade of Drood haunts him to the end.
My Thoughts: |
I went into this completely blind. I was hoping for a completion of Dickens’ unfinished The Mystery of Edwin Drood. This was not that book. This was the syphilitic hallucinatory ramblings of an opium and morphine addict.
There were times that the narrator would talk for a whole chapter and then at the beginning of the next chapter you realized that the entire thing had happened in his head, or in his opium dreams or was just a wish fulfillment on his part. It was disturbing to say the least and by the end of the book I was having bad dreams. I didn’t realize it, but this WAS horror and it affected me as such. Not your gruesome 80’s slasher kind of horror, but the invisible dread that hovers over your soul kind of horror. While I’ve read some of Simmons SF, I’d never sampled his horror offerings. After this, I won’t be trying out anything else by him.
With all of that, this was fantastically written, kept me glued to the pages and even though an unreliable narrator tends to send me into the screaming heeby jeeby rants I never once thought of stopping. Simmons kept me reading page after page like he had inserted a magic beetle of his own into MY brain. And that was disturbing to me too.
I think that some familiarity with Wilkie Collins’ works, at least his Moonstone, would help a lot. Since this is a fictionalized account, I’m not sure that too much knowledge would actually help as the confusion between fiction and reality would make this even more of a psychedelic read. Unless you LIKE having your mind messed with, then by all means, dive into this head first and see what happens.
As a completion to The Mystery of Edwin Drood this was a complete failure. As a standalone horror story, it was a complete success. I shall try my hand again at finding another “ending” to the Mystery. I have my eye on one by David Madden but considering it was never released as an ebook, I’m not sure if I’ll be able to get a hold of it. If you’ve heard of any other books or authors who tried to complete the Mystery, let me know please.
I have tried to complete the story of Edwin Drood.
It ends ‘and Edwin ‘Judge’ Drood all lived happily ever after, THE END.’
How do you like them apples?
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Not bad, not bad. Not quite up to Dickens style, but that’s ok. Maybe make it 100 times longer?
And make sure you mention his Judge Bicycle and what happened to it after the Happily Ever After….
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And with that, a heavy look fell across the countenance of Judge ‘Edwin’ Drood, and he fired up his light-cycle penny farthing and vanished into the gloom of the London fog as mysteriosly as he arrived.
The End.
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Ahhhhh, MUCH better!
Yep, I’d say you have a hit on your hands. Better publish it quick before “someone” else does!
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Great, I challenge your readers to come up with a better ending!
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I look forward to the ensuing battle!
Let the Games Begin….
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Sounds like a good horror story but not your cup of tea?
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Definitely not my cup of tea. While I was reading this I was wondering if I should try out some of his other horror works, but now, no way!
The weird thing is, it was really good and I did enjoy it. There were just “side affects”, I guess you could call them, that weren’t 😀
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This one sounds interesting, but not one I’ll likely ever read. At least it was written well though. Hope you’re able to find the one you’re looking for!
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Thanks. Horror, real horror and not gore-or, just isn’t my thing. I read it so seldomly that I forget and then have an experience like this 🙂
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Glad it got such a high ratting from you even though you felt like a magic beetle was invading you space. I’ll have to check this out sometime, seems interesting enough.
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Dang, now I know why I need at least TWO cups of coffee before I start commenting for the day.
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Good old beetles “ratting” through my brain.
Your comment may have been more accurate than you intended 😉
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😂😂😂
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Sounds like a good read, I must really check this out because I love a well told horror tale. great review
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If you like horror as opposed to goreor, then when you get a chance I’d highly recommend this.
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I am sorry to say that I am but a Dickens novice so cannot help. I will let you know if I see something though.
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Thanks Dave 🙂
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Why won’t you read more of him if you liked this?
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Because an author that can write something that gives me bad dreams, that’s not an experience I want to repeat.
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Mmmyeah, I thought that was it. But surely his scifi doesn’t do that?
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No, I loved the first two Hyperion books. But the third and fourth turned me off his SF 😀
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I jumped ship in the second Hyperion
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Considering your taste in SF, I’m not surprised 🙂
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You know, I’d love nothing more than to read some new, well done, original, wide canvas space opera adventure without plotholes. It doesn’t seem to ge published anymore.
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I don’t know that anything with those qualifications EVER existed 😉
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Some Banks, Dune. That’s all I can think of atm. On screen maybe some Star Trek stuff.
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Star Trek….
* horse noises *
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LOL
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Glad you enjoyed it. Can’t say this one really did anything for me, but the writing style he was emulating was superb. Dan Simmons’ stories are sometimes hit or miss for me, but he’s a great writer.
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I’ve been tempted over the years to try some of his horror stuff but after this, I’ll be giving that idea a firm pass 😀
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Well, if the combination of horror and hallucinations managed to pass through your armor, this might be an intense book indeed, and one to approach with great care. If ever… 😉
Thanks for sharing!!
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It was extremely intense for me for sure. Sometimes I can’t tell ahead of time how something will affect me. But no more Simmons for me!
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Really surprised how much you liked this one! I had not thought of it as ‘horror’, I guess it was. I’ve avoided Simmons horror stuff, somehow I missed that flag on this one.
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Did you read it?
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Yep, read it two years ago. For some reason, it just struck me as some sort of crazy fiction, not horror, even as horrific as it was.
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I can see that. I gave it the horror tag because we’re never quite sure if some of Wilkie’s hallucinations might be real….
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It’s pretty interesting that you preferred seeing this as a stand-alone rather than a Dickens “completion” story. I’d have imagined that you’d have opted for the latter seeing that you picked it up hoping that it would try to complete that story hahah and thus… bash it for not doing what you expected it to do!
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If it hadn’t been so mesmorizingly weird, I probably would have gotten on my Bash Horse and ridden it hard. But man, Simmons can write!
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