Showing posts with label Eddie Campbell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eddie Campbell. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 February 2019

Trigger Warning: Short Fictions and Disturbances

Neil Gaiman
Headline

This has been sitting on my shelf for a couple of years now but I've just not had the urge for it.  I finally got the urge today.

Like his other anthologies 'Trigger Warning' is a mix and match of stories and poems with the latter feeling less onerous than usual - I'm not really all that into his poetry but I read all of these and never felt put off by them.

The stories are where my interests lie though and this book is filled with goodies although without any real standouts.  There are a couple of  things I've already read such as 'The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains' - which was also issued as a graphic novel with art by the amazing Eddie Campbell - and his 11th Doctor story 'Nothing O'Clock'  featuring the paper mask wearing 'Kin'.  Around these are a few notables - the fairy tale redux of 'The Sleeper and the Spindle', the palpable loss experienced in 'Down To A Sunless Sea',  the revelatory nature of 'Adventure Story', another of his twists of the Holmes mythos in 'The Case of Death and Honey', the supremely creepy 'Feminine Endings' and the wonderfully daft 'And Weep Like Alexander'.  The book ends with an American Gods tale with Shadow being as annoyingly dull as ever.  It's not a bad way to end the book, the story is pleasingly chilling with a solid arc but a frustrating lead character.

In all a good read.  I'm glad it's been sat on my shelf all this time because it came into it's own today.

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Saturday, 25 June 2016

The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains

Neil Gaiman (author)
Eddie Campbell (artist)
William Morrow

The text of The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains was first published in the collection anthology Stories: All New Tales edited by Neil Gaiman and Al Sarrantonio. This gorgeous full-color illustrated book version was born of a unique collaboration between writer Neil Gaiman and artist Eddie Campbell, who brought to vivid life the characters and landscape of Gaiman's story. In August 2010, The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains was performed in the concert hall of the Sydney Opera House to a sold-out crowd—Gaiman read his tale live as Campbell's magnificent artwork was presented, scene-by-scene, on large screens. Narrative and art were accompanied by live music composed and performed especially for the story by the FourPlay String Quartet.

The arrival of this book completely snuck past me and so coming across it on the shelf at the local corporate bookstore was a really nice surprise.  I've been a fan of Gaiman since he arrived on the scene.  I was working in a comic shop in Cardiff at the time and from the first thing of his I read I knew he was going to be a writer I'd follow for a long time to come.  With Eddie Campbell it's even more so.  I really like his art but as a writer he's right up there with my absolute favourites (if you've not read anything I heartily recommend his 'Fate of the Artist' - Buy it here).  Here the words are all Gaiman with Campbell providing painted illustrations.

The Black Mountains of the title are on the Isle of Skye and there amidst their peaks is a cave full of gold.  Walking to this cave are two men.  One is a dwarf with two secrets and the other is his guide.  The latter has visited the cave in his youth and paid the toll that it's contents ask whilst the former is looking for something and will willingly pay any price.



The book is very much a Gaiman story centred in a slightly folkloric version of our own world, in this case the Jacobean era.  For the most part the book feels like it's going to be a fairly typical adventure story until without warning actions, events and characters take a sharp turn down the left hand path.  What really stands out though is how unrepentantly dark the story is.

The art is presented as central to the book.  Rather than restricting it to typical comic book boxes - which does happen on occasion - it is allowed free rein on the page sitting next to, behind and around the words with the text presented sometimes in Campbell's characteristic lettering but mostly in type which I think is a shame as the former is far more to my tastes.

As I'm sure you can imagine from what I said earlier I was excited by this and I wasn't disappointed.  It isn't the best thing either of them has done but it's very enjoyable nonetheless and will satisfy fans of both.

Buy it here -  The Truth Is a Cave in the Black Mountains by Gaiman, Neil (2014) Hardcover