by lhb412 » Thu Oct 18, 2012 9:27 pm
Book Review: The Lost and the Lurking by Manly Wade Wellman
Manly Wade Wellman was a sci-fi/fantasy/horror writer who's best known character is John, a character of the 'superntural detective' mode. He's been given the name 'Silver John' or 'John the Balladeer' by fans and publishers, but simply goes by his first name in the stories. Wellman did his first cycle of John short stories in the '50s, then quit, and 20 years later he brought John back for a series of 5 novels (novellas, really) and several more short stories until his death in the mid-'80s
John is a backwoods minstrel, roaming the Appalachian mountains primarily singing and collecting songs but always coming across various supernatural events: monsters, ghosts ('spooks'), Hoodoo men - and John, with his smarts and strength, does his best to help whoever is in trouble. Sometimes he diffuses the situation just by being the super-nice guy he is! Wellman was able to conjure up all sorts of evil in his stories (often drawn from genuine Southern folklore), but they're never totally black because he genuinely believes good would always triumph over evil and that we should always have faith in that.
This book is the third of the five John novellas Wellman wrote, and frankly, John works much better as a short story character. It's in that format that both Wellman and John shine, and it seems that so far these John novels have just marginally more substance than one of the short stories stretched out in length, but even while this book doesn't match the awesomeness of stories like 'Oh, Ugly Bird!' or 'Owls Hoot in the Daytime' it's still enjoyable because John is such a great character, and hearing him narrate another one of his adventures is like listening to an old friend. A warm, reassuring thing.
The plot has John surfacing in a middle-of-nowhere town on behest of the US government, who have apparently been keeping tabs on some of his adventures. Not having a well-funded BPRD, the United States apparently just decided to send John in when they begin to suspect supernatural fowl play. Once John is in the town he's pretty quickly figures out what's going on: Satanism, big time. The whole town is involved and John has only a few days until the Sabbat to stop whatever they've got planned.
To tell you the truth, nothing much happens in this story that couldn't have fit in a short story, but it's never dull because John's charisma carries the whole thing. His narration is, as always, worth the price of admission; peppering his tale with appropriate lyrics from a folk songs, bits of obscure wisdom in his explanations of what's going on, and just his own philosophy towards life.
The John stories typically have great monsters, but there's nothing here but a few brief, spectral demons.
If you're interested in John, then by all means pick up the Who Fears the Devil? paperback. It's collects all the John short stories, which are excellent. Also, the Hellboy story 'The Crooked Man' is an homage to Wellman's John stories, and apparently a comic adaptation of John himself is in the works.