| The Metal Monster | |||||||
| A. Merritt | |||||||
| Hippocampus Press, 237 pages | |||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
For those who thought Alain Robbe-Grillet just did not give enough detail in his maddening works will be
cheering throughout the forty pages Merritt rolls out, covering a journey to the Metal Monster's lair. Everyone
else is going to be wishing a sharp editor had gotten to this manuscript before it saw publication. To say
that the author dwells on minutae is understatement akin to his overstatement.
In The Metal Monster are the seeds of the liquid metal T-1000 of Terminator 2 fame -- barely
a germ of an idea. The antics of the metal creatures in this novel were enough to shock a 20s audience
that was prone to being easily astonished (hence, the hundreds of exclamation points), but today's audiences
are a more jaded bunch. Not every oddity is likely to strike terror into the heart of anyone who has
witnessed nuclear weapons, sexual predators, and the horrors waiting in every newscast.
Remember the more sheltered lives of the average law-abiding citizen of eighty years past and the reactions of the
characters are more understandable. Try to put yourself in their shoes, so to speak.
Goodwin, Drake, Ventnor and his fair sister Ruth, are the first modern humans to face the awful force that they
term "The Metal Monster" -- unlike anything the group has ever encountered. The chilling tale they have to relate is
almost too fantastic to be credited, but Merritt knows it is duty to bring the story to the world, to let everyone know
the terrible fate they barely escaped and the possibility of other such monsters out there.
What follows is a long, meticulously detailed journal of the four's amazing, astounding, jaw-dropping adventures in a hidden
world. It's vintage stuff, for die-hard enthusiasts of the sub-genre. Go into it knowing that and you won't be
disappointed; you'll applaud Hippocampus for preserving this example of a lost style and a long-gone point in our
history. Add it to your shelf of Golden Age classics.
Just resist the urge to break out the blue pencil and chop this novel to the short story it should have been.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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