THE CADAVER OF GIDEON WYCKBy
ALEXANDER LAING (Macmillan; 1934/60)
A real curiosity: a strange, rather morbid thirties-era mystery
that in recent years has received attention as a novel of horror (having
been favorably profiled in the essential HORROR: THE 100 BEST BOOKS and
TWILIGHT ZONE MAGAZINE’S seminal August ’83 “Fantasy Five-Foot
Bookshelf”). That’s
doubtless due to the many bizarre and grotesque elements author Alexander
Laing includes, such as the near simultaneous birth of five mutant babies
and the last-minute revelation that a pivotal character has a half-formed
twin brother attached to his body.
The majority of this first person account is told by a medical
student looking to solve the murder of Professor Gideon Wyck.
Said killing doesn’t occur until about fifty pages into the
novel, the first portion being consumed with the living Wyck’s bizarre
behavior, in particular a strange malady he appears to be suffering from
(contradicting his oft-repeated claims that he’s “never been sick a
day in my life”). Further
conflict comes in the form of a disgruntled student of Wyck’s and an
amputee patient who claims the not-so-good professor has been siphoning
blood from him. As a whodunit THE CADAVER OF GIDEON WYCK
frankly leaves something to be desired.
The details of the mystery’s unraveling feel perfunctory and
unnecessary; the killer, revealed in a lengthy courtroom-set climax, after
the protagonist spends time in jail for suspicion of the murder, turns out
to be the most obvious possible suspect in the entire story (chances are
you’ve already figured it out based on the details I’ve revealed thus
far).
Then again, there’s a reason this story is remembered nowadays
(if at all) as horror themed. As I stated earlier, it has a genuinely unsettling, macabre
edge, particularly evident in the climax, when we learn exactly what Wyck
was up to when he was murdered. I
won’t give the secret away, but will say it involves research on a
deranged, possibly supernatural experiment that’s infinitely stranger
and more compelling than the details of the killing itself.
Far less enticing is Laing’s insistence on presenting his
fictional narrative as an actual document.
Lengthy and distracting footnotes are scattered throughout
attesting to this “fact,” as is an introduction and byline claiming
the book was “Edited By” Laing, with authorship credited to an
anonymous “Medical Student”. Fine
and good (similar stunts are still utilized today in books and films--THE
BLAIR WITCH PROJECT, anyone?), but far too much energy is expended on this
ultimately tiring masquerade.
Beyond that, though, the novel is penned in a smooth and
straightforward manner fully befitting a dedicated medical student.
Its small town college atmosphere is vividly evoked, with many
convincing details (which the “editor’s” footnotes frequently take
pains to point out). Quite prolific back in the thirties,
Alexander Laing was already a veteran novelist when GIDEON WYCK was
written. His
characterizations are strong, if a tad slight; like innumerable mysteries
past and present, it’s the story that takes center stage here, often at
the expense of nearly everything else.
One more thing: the version under review of this extremely scarce
novel is a 1960 abridgement published by Macmillan’s Mystery Revisited
series (itself a very rare find). I’ve never read the unexpurgated 1934 version and so
can’t say how the two differ. What
I can say for certain is that this 228-page abridgement by the author is a
smooth and uncluttered piece of work, so much so that I find it difficult
imagining just what else the original version could have possibly
contained.
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