Society Magazine

BOOK REVIEW: The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen

By Berniegourley @berniegourley
Amazon page

This speculative fiction novella mixes horror and sci-fi in a genre-bending work of intrigue. When I started the book, I was surprised to learn that it was from the last decade of the 19th century. The opening chapter, which is what I credit as science fiction, presents an argument that reality as we know it is just a veneer beyond which we cannot experience, and it's stated not unlike what one would hear in today's cutting-edge science and philosophical discussions. (e.g. It wasn't greatly removed from what one might hear from Donald Hoffman, for example.) The mad scientist of the opening chapter proposes that he can, with "minor" neurosurgery [to the extent there is such a thing,] open the doors of perception to make available what lies beyond our reality. We are left to think that he has only succeeded in a lobotomization.

The rest of the book is more the Victorian Era horror that one is likely to hear the story described as. We are introduced to a series of mysteries that will gradually be tied together and related back to the book's opening. A gentleman is approached by a beggar who - it turns out - was his classmate and should have been a well-to-do landowner, but who reported being ruined by having fallen in with the wrong woman - a not unusual story until one delves into the particulars. We further learn that a man had been found dead at this couple's property before the woman disappeared. Later there are a series of murders that have a certain demographic of society all atwitter.

Despite the shortness of the work, it does present jumping perspectives (not within chapters, but between them.) However, it's not hard to follow, though it's a bit jarring when the first PoV change hits because it involves a new cast of characters and it isn't clear how the events tie together. The reader who sticks with it will be benefited by the shift.

This book was widely panned in its day, more for its shocking sexuality than its horror elements. However, it should be pointed out that the author uses strategic ambiguity for this matter, so there is no graphic sexual content. For example, one character may whisper in another's ear the acts of depravity, but the reader is left to fill in the blanks according to the twistedness of their own particular psyche. For readers who enjoy the freedom to fill in the blanks, this is an interesting approach - others might not like the withholding of detail.

I enjoyed this book. It's readable, despite the era from which it came. As I said, in some sense, it's ahead of its time. The non-linear plotting builds the up the intrigue nicely. I'd highly recommend it for readers of weird stories, horror, or speculative fiction.

View all my reviews

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog