The third of six blog posts exploring the literary and philosophical significance of the weird tale, the occult detective story, and the ecological weird. The series suggests that the three genres of weird fiction dramatize humanity’s cognitive and evolutionary insignificance by first exploring the limitations of language, then the inaccessibility of the world, and finally the alienation within ourselves. This post introduces the occult detective story.
Ghosts and Detectives
Character and Setting
The essence of occult detective fiction has remained largely unchanged since its initial popularity, the combination of a crime fiction character with a horror fiction setting. This combination creates an immediate tension because ever since Edgar Allan Poe introduced C. Auguste Dupin in ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ (published in Graham’s Magazine in 1841) the detective has been the man or woman of reason, a rational agent who restores the moral and social order following its disruption by harm or crime. Poe referred to all three of Dupin’s cases as ‘tales of ratiocination’ and the same could be said of the investigations of Dupin’s most illustrious descendants, Sherlock Holmes and Hercule Poirot. In contrast, the setting of horror fiction may be more or less like the real world, but there is at least one aspect of that world into which the irrational in the form of the divine, the supernatural, or the paranormal intrudes. One may catch only the briefest of glimpses of it or it may be supervenient on science, but the divine, supernatural, or paranormal is always in excess of human reason, rationality, and ratiocination. One of the advantages of occult detective fiction is that creators can introduce an additional layer of suspense in having the detective investigate both criminal and supernatural cases and Hodgson employed this device with Carnacki very successfully. The world of the occult detective must nonetheless be one in which the supernatural intrudes into the natural in some way, whether or not that intrusion is revealed in every case.
The crucial tension between the rational detective and the extra-rational
setting is difficult to master and demands a rigorous internal logic, which may
also be more or less revealed in the narrative. There is a special relationship
between detective fiction, including occult detective fiction, and narrative.
In every narrative there is a real or imaginary sequence of events that
takes place in the storyworld. In an autobiography, this sequence of events
would begin with the author’s birth or – more commonly – the birth of her
parents or grandparents and end shortly before the decision to write the
autobiography or with the publisher’s decision to publish the manuscript. In a
detective story, the sequence of events begins with the murderer planning the
murder or with a person’s decision to disappear and ends with the murderer
being identified and usually (but not always) brought to justice or with the
missing person found (whether dead or alive). Typically, the story will
start after the discovery of a corpse and end before the trial begins. Even
within that limited period, however, the represented events will be a selection
of all of those that take place in the storyworld. In both documentary and
fictional narratives, the narrative is thus a superstructure underpinned by the
base of the real or imaginary sequence of events. Detective fiction standardly dramatizes,
stages, or thickens the relationship between story and sequence of events by
presenting both the story of the crime (the sequence of events) and the story
of the investigation (the story itself) together, with the progression of the
detective involving her repeating, retracing, or revisiting the progression of
the criminal. The tension between the story and the sequence of events is in
addition to the tension between the rational detective and extra-rational
setting and the combination of the two is, I think, a large part of why occult
detective fiction has proved so difficult to master.
Archivists, Musicians, and Priests
I concluded part II by defining weird fiction as philosophical in virtue of presenting or representing a fully-fledged and fleshed-out worldview, generically hybrid in character, and foregrounding the difference between the world as we think it is and the world as it actually is. This definition would include most of the occult detective stories I have mentioned so far and my take on the genre is that it is most accurately categorised as a subgenre of weird fiction rather than a subgenre of either crime or horror fiction. If one is seeking a more specific definition, then there is no need to reinvent what has already been established: occult detective fiction is philosophical in virtue of presenting or representing a fully-fledged and fleshed-out worldview and foregrounding the difference between the world as we think it is and the world as it actually is and featuring a detective protagonist in an apparently supernatural setting. I shall have more to say about the instantiation of the second part of this definition in occult detective as opposed to other weird fiction in part IV. Like the weird tale, the occult detective story is best-suited to shorter formats, such as the short story, novella, graphic novel, and feature film. I include feature film rather than television series because television in the twenty-first century has taken a narrative turn, by which I mean that each season of a series (if not the whole series) tends to tell a single story rather than a different story each episode. One of the great exceptions to this rule of thumb about occult detective fiction is Amazon Prime Video’s Carnival Row (two seasons 2019-2023), specifically the first season, which is vastly superior to the second.
The most exemplary short story series is by Sarah Monette (b.1974 and also writes under the penname Katherine Addison) and features Kyle Murchison Booth, an occult detective who is an archivist at the Samuel Mather Parrington Museum. Booth’s first case, ‘The Wall of Clouds’, was published in 2003 (in Alchemy) and his first ten cases were collected in The Bone Key: The Necromantic Mysteries of Kyle Murchison Booth (2007, with a second edition published in 2011). Seven more short stories and a novella, A Theory of Haunting (2023), have been published since (for a total of eighteen cases), although the stories can be difficult to find online. I mentioned the most accomplished occult detective novella in part II, Victor LaValle’s (b.1972, pictured) The Ballad of Black Tom (2016), a deconstruction of Lovecraft’s less accomplished occult detective story, ‘The Horror at Red Hook’ (published in Weird Tales in 1927). While my graphic novel recommendation is somewhat outré, I trust it will resonate with readers of my generation (particularly those from the UK), Mark Millar and Chris Weston’s all but forgotten Canon Fodder (published in 2000 AD 1993-1995). Like Carnival Row, the first instalment is followed by a disappointing sequel, but the digital versions of both are still available from Rebellion. For a feature film, one can do no better than Alan Parker’s Angel Heart (1987), starring Mickey Rourke, Lisa Bonet, Robert De Niro, and Charlotte Rampling, which is an adaptation of William Hjortsberg’s Falling Angel (1978) and one of the few cinematic adaptations that is unquestionably better than the novel on which it is based.
Recommended Reading
Fiction
William Hope Hodgson, The Casebook of Carnacki – Ghost Finder,
Wordsworth Editions (2006).
Sarah Monette, The Bone Key: The Necromantic Mysteries of Kyle
Murchison Booth, Prime Books (2011).
Rafe McGregor, The Adventures of Roderick
Langham,
Theaker’s Paperback Library (2017).
Nonfiction
No comprehensive or authoritative study of occult detective fiction has
been published to date and the best sources of information are the editor’s
introductions in these three anthologies (I began writing such a study in 2020,
during the pandemic, but as soon as I understood what a mammoth task it would
be, realised I’d rather spend the time continuing the cases of my own occult
detective):
Peter Haining (ed.), Supernatural Sleuths, William Kimber (1986).
Mark Valentine (ed.), The Black Veil and other tales of Supernatural
Sleuths, Wordsworth Editions (2008).
Stephen Jones (ed.), Dark Detectives: An Anthology of Supernatural
Mysteries, Titan Books (2015).
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