mark monday's Reviews > The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig'

The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig' by William Hope Hodgson

by
131922
's review
Jun 05, 12

bookshelves: horrortime-classik

The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig' is a creepy travelogue set in 1757, following a diminishing group of men through alien waters after the foundering of the title ship. hey, do you want some giant sea squid, terrifying sounds in the night including some heavy breathing and light shrieking, trees that ooze blood and display tormented human faces, horrible slug-like 'weed men', squirmy flappy tentacled stinging biting things etc? you got it. you want a survival story that has a nuts-n-bolts approach to dealing with clean water, food, repairing a boat, making a fire, all those basic details of an adventure tale? you got that too. hey, do you want a brave & kind & loyal & stronger & smarter than anyone around him type supporting character as your blue collar The Real Hero? with this novella, you get a grade A specimen of the type, free of charge. (oh noble unnamed bo'sun, you rock the house!)

William Hope Hodgson is one of the senior members of the classic Weird Fiction crew, and yet he gets less love than melodramatic Lovecraft or the arch & ironic Clark Ashton Smith. unlike Lovecraft, he knows how to restrain himself. his style is wonderfully archaic but he rarely goes over the top and is able to capably conjure up an atmosphere of creeping dread without getting all hysterical about it. he's no Lovecraftian drama queen (don't get me wrong, i love Lovecraft). and unlike CAS, he doesn't seem interested in being witty or using sardonic drollness to create a kind of ironic distance from his horrorscapes (don't get me wrong, i love CAS the most of the Weird writers). Hodgson is rather dry, very sincere, practically humorless, and despite the palpable horrors of Boats, there is a kind of naturalist-slash-spiritual side to him that makes this tale particularly convincing. of all the Weird writers, i would say that his closest brother would be Algernon Blackwood.

4 stars for the first two-thirds, which is expertly written and wonderfully dark and atmospheric. unfortunately, 2 stars for the last third, where a very annoying second boat is found, full of annoying people, and worst of all, The Tender & Brave Romantic Interest. that last third brings out the worst in both Hodgson and the narrator. on the one hand, we have endless descriptions of ropes & kites & repairing ships & oh yawn i'm falling asleep again. on the other hand, we have a narrator who suddenly embodies the most cloying aspects of Victorian culture (although, to be precise, the narrative actually takes place in the Georgian era) and who plunges into a particularly labored and trite romantic affair. it's like being forced to sit in Great Aunt Hortensia's stuffy, musty, doily-shrouded parlour and listening to her endless and microscopic descriptions of the Victorian Mating Ritual. especially irritating when i came over to visit Grandfather Jedediah and listen to some of his eerie ghost stories. get away Aunt Hortensia, your stories make me a little nauseous. and your tea is too sickly sweet.

this was my first audiobook and i have to say that i didn't enjoy the experience. i have a couple more on my ipod so i will try again; hopefully this will turn out to be an anomaly. the narrator was as monotone as they come and the sinister, atonal sound effects & music - although suitably unnerving at first - eventually became wearying (although they did add a delightfully macabre quality to the saccharine romance). but worst of all was my inability to go back, reread, and so further enjoy all the glorious WORDS ON THE PAGE. it was frustrating and it made the experience so much less immersive.

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig'.
sign in »

Comments (showing 1-22 of 22) (22 new)

dateDown_arrow    newest »

mark monday the two stars is just my initial reaction. who knows, it may go up by the time i get to writing the review.

the first half was pretty great. the last third... very eh. annoying.

i think my reaction may also be informed by my irritating experience with it as an audio book, so i want to give it a bit of time to sink in. this was my first audio book. i didn't enjoy it and wish i had just read it instead. it also took forever to get through.


mark monday it was fun to play compare-and-contrast with Curran's Dead Sea.


message 3: by Jason (new)

Jason mark wrote: "this was my first audiobook and i have to say that i didn't enjoy the experience."

I, too, struggle with audiobooks. I'm glad to see I'm not the only one. I tried it once with Pride and Prejudice. I think what happens is, I have the attention span of a 4 year-old so I find myself spacing out and struggling to either a) get back into the story, or b) rewind and try to find my place. It's a mess.


mark monday i've been slowly going through this excellent GR reviewer's reviews and have added a bunch of her highly rated reviewed books. but she seems to exclusively review audiobooks and now i wonder if i've been making a mistake adding all these books, audio or otherwise. i think that the experiences can be really different. i don't see how a highly dense and wordy novel can be successful in the audio format.


message 5: by Terry (new)

Terry I've found it all depends on the reader Mark. I just 'read' Middlemarch in audio and it was fantastic...due in no small part to the excellent reader. I definitely found myself rewinding to listen again and make sure I was catching the nuances of some of the text and the format certainly lends itself to missing some things that might perhaps not be missed if reading a text version, but it can be a great way to read as long as you have a gifted narrator.


message 6: by I, Curmudgeon (new)

I, Curmudgeon Isn't that the way Jules Verne started, writing travel logs? That was the idea behind Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea? He wrote it to be like a travel log?


mark monday not sure about Verne (it's been a while since i read him), but the style is certainly effective in Boats.


Jean-marcel My favourite Hodgson so far is House on the Borderland. I agree that this one really lost steam. in House even the romantic element works completely in the book's favour...mostly because the romantic interest is, well, dead!


message 9: by I, Curmudgeon (new)

I, Curmudgeon mark wrote: "not sure about Verne (it's been a while since i read him), but the style is certainly effective in Boats."

Verne himself said that was what he intended.


message 10: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday Jean-marcel wrote: "My favourite Hodgson so far is House on the Borderland. I agree that this one really lost steam. in House even the romantic element works completely in the book's favour...mostly because the romant..."

it has been many, many years since i've read House or Night. they are both due for a re-read.


message 11: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday Curmudgeon wrote: "Verne himself said that was what he intended."

i've really got to get around to reading more of him. i think i have upwards of 25 of his books on Kindle. as i'm fond of saying, one of these days...


message 12: by knig (new)

knig OK, I need to read atleast one Hodgson in this lifetime. Which should it be?


message 14: by knig (new)

knig Its free on Kindle! Doesn't get any better than this. downloading now, Thanks


message 15: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday my pleasure!


message 16: by Kelly Maybedog (new)

Kelly Maybedog Hawkins I'll second that audiobooks vary tremendously according to the reader.

Books that I rated much higher than I probably would have because of the reader:
The Golem's Eye and the rest of the trilogy
Skulduggery Pleasant (well I might have loved this one anyway)
The Help
The Graveyard Book
Magic Street

Books I hated but might have liked if not for the reader:
The Hunger Games
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
The Gunslinger
Trickster's Choice

I think it's important to look at the reviews for the specific audiobook before listening to it over reading the hardcopy. I love them so much for long road trips when the same old music wears thin.

Nice review.


message 17: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday thanks! and thanks for the recs.


Jean-marcel There's a truly terrible audiobook floating around of House on the Borderland, read by some guy with a new England accent who sounds like he's advertising for haircare products. it's also missing the awesome poem at the beginning of the book. So, yeah, watch out for that crap!


message 19: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday i will be on my guard!


message 20: by Henry (last edited Apr 11, 2013 03:56am) (new)

Henry Avila Night Land is eerie,strange, fascinating book,different and difficult, to say the least.I enjoyed it thoroughly,Mark.


message 21: by mark (new) - rated it 3 stars

mark monday i remember enjoying it as well and hope to enjoy it again someday. but not on audiobook!


message 22: by Henry (new)

Henry Avila The kind of book you need to read not listen to.


back to top