In the Valley of the Kings marks the extraordinary debut of Terrence Holt, who fifteen years ago abandoned a promising writing career to practice medicine. Moved by his patients' valor in the face of death, seeking to comprehend the mysteries revealed at their bedside, Holt has taken up fiction again. He emerges now with this astonishing collection of one novella and seven short stories that explore the farthest reaches of the imagination in a style that recalls the nineteenth-century American masters. Holt leaps across genres and millennia, from small-town America to deep space, daring his readers to journey with him into realms as mysterious as they are unforgettable. The opening story, "'? ????s," is a chilling account of the last days of the human race, as the hospitalization of a little girl in a New England town heralds a terrifying plague, transmitted not by a microbe but by a single word. The final story, "Apocalypse," returns to small-town New England and another vision of the end, in an intimate account of how a couple struggles to live and love under the shadow of the Earth's approaching doom. In between, these stories range from outer space, where--in "Charybdis"--an astronaut alone on a doomed NASA mission comes to terms with his fate, to the Egyptian desert of the title novella, where an archaeologist seeks a fabulous tomb that holds the secret of immortality. Painting with lurid colors and finely crafted prose, Holt offers his readers haunting visions of the reefs and abysses of the human imagination. In the Valley of the Kings redefines the art of the story, throwing aside the rules in search of the enduring truths that ultimately make stories worth reading.
For a moment, I was tuned in looking for my lucky pencil. Long time it has been when I agree to the writing of books, the concepts to shake a reader imagination is well given. To see it and understand is well worth a time.
Lovecraft meets Beckett
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This anthology offers a host of unsettling stories that is one part Lovecraft and one part Beckett. The first story, O Aoyos, is Lovecraftian in its narrative structure (crazy doctor reflecting on the horrors of an "unnameable" plague, but rich with allegory (the power of the Word, Logos, whatever). The second story, My Father's Heart, is an unsentimental reflection of the power of our parents, even after they're gone. Next comes three sci-fi shorts (Charybdis, Aurora, and Eurydike) that are eerie stories of being marooned in space (as a doomed astronaut, a probe, and an experiment gone wrong - respectively). Again, these are fairly allegorical in nature - each modern man lost in the vacuum of an unknown future. I loved the ambiance of these stories, but felt like some of the underlying themes were going over my head. The gem of this anthology is In the Valley of the Kings. It is a great story of a modern-day Egyptologist that falls victim to his own theories and passions. Well paced and well told - this was by far my favorite of the lot. The last 2 stories, Scylla and Apocalypse, are again heavy on the allegory. They remind us that the world often ends not with a bang, but with a whimper. Overall - Holt is a master stylist and storyteller. If you are not into books that are heavy into allegory and metaphor; stay away. But if you want a dose of dark philosophy, wrapped in creepy ambient short stories - look no further!
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