| The Witch's Tale | |||||||||||
| Alonzo Deen Cole, edited by David S. Siegel | |||||||||||
| Dunwich Press, 253 pages | |||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
If you've never had the pleasure of hearing any of the old radio dramas,
comedies, adventures, and others, you can't appreciate the sheer pleasure
of tuning in. It's rather like being read to by your grandma, if your
gran was Helen Hayes... and she had an orchestra and foley artist on
call. It's your favourite book with all the voices you only heard in your own head.
(Don't worry; everyone does that.) And none was more successful than
the suspense dramas like X Minus One, Lights Out!, and,
of course, The Witch's Tale.
David Siegel has combed through seven years of scripts to cull the very
best for this collection. The thirteen tales he selected run the gamut of
gothic horror, filled with vampires, maniacs, the occult -- pretty much
everything you can cram into the genre. Remember that this is only a tiny
fraction of the total shows and marvel at that kind of
creativity. Oh yeah, I'd say he was prolific.
Reading these stories you might be tempted to scoff at the fear they
instilled. After all, you've seen The Omen and The Craft. But
imagine these plays enacted for you, listened to in the darkness, when your
next door neighbour probably wasn't a serial child molester. The
glow of the radio dial, the crunch of footfalls, the sudden scream of
terror, and the mental images your lurid imagination conjures up -- that
is an entirely different kind of scary, babe.
Cole knew quite a bit about how to keep an audience wrapped up in a story.
Take the first selection, "The Image," a lovely tale of demonic possession
with genteel intellectuals, tough cops, and corpses piling up like cord
wood. "La Mannequinne" brings to life an artist's dummy with violent and
chilling repercussions. "The Altar" has one of the more grisly endings in
horror fiction, an especially surprising turn considering the sensibilities and censorship of that era.
These are the kinds of tales that would allow children to scare each
other and themselves silly and the lady of the horse to be suitably
shocked. How many children must have heard the threat, That's the
last time for you, (Insert name here). That is not something a child should be listening to!
For their sakes, I hope the proclamation was forgotten by the time the next show aired.
For your sake, I hope you feel the same irresistible draw to check out The Witch's Tale.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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