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Sherlock Holmes and the Vampires of Eternity

by Brian Stableford

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712,356,196 (5)None
From 1895, when the means of visiting the future through drug-induced "timeshadowing" is discovered by Professor Copplestone, to 12 million years AD, when the Universal Engine seeks to determine the cosmos' ultimate fate, the vast tapestry of time is the theater of a time war between the Overmen, descendents of the vampires, Humanity, and the shadowy intelligence that waits at the End of Time. Sherlock Holmes, the great detective, Count Dracula, the reluctant vampire, the mercurial Oscar Wilde, William Hope Hodgson, freshly returned from the Night Land of the Great War, the visionary H. G. Wells, Alfred Jarry, Camille Flammarion, and many other figures from the literary firmament, become pawns and players in a conflict that spans the entire course of universal history. Brian M. Stableford has been a professional writer since 1965. He has published more than 60 science fiction and fantasy novels, as well as several authoritative non-fiction books. He is also translating the works of Paul F val and other French writers of the fantastique for Black Coat Press which has published his most recent fantasy novels: The Shadow of Frankenstein and The Stones of Camelot.… (more)
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William Hope Hodgson’s story begins (after a brief prologue) the novel and ends it. His “Soldier’s Story” is interspersed with accounts of four other men: Count Lugard (reputed to be a vampire) who gives us, of course, the “Count’s Story; the “Explorer’s Story”; the “Writer’s Story”; and the “Detective’s Story”. Hodgson is summoned to a secret mission, leaving his identification disks behind, just before his Forward Observation Post is blown up and, so our history says, he is killed.

This is not only a masterful science fiction novel but a conte philosophique that combines many of Stableford’s interests and characteristic themes: an interest in literary decadence; a future history (seen in his emmortal series and Tales from the Biotech Revolution series) that includes severe environmental degradation and nuclear and biological warfare in the early 21st century followed by a massive die off and then a heavy use of genetic engineering to create an near utopia on Earth; vampires; sympathy with the Devil’s Party and literary Satanism; art for art’s sake, the value of artifice, and the related ideas of personal myth and the power of the imagination; the stance to take when facing an uncertain future (also seen in his “Taken for a Ride” which also deals with questions of destiny, predestination, and free will), and an interest in early British and French science fiction.

For the decadence, we have Oscar Wilde, the Writer. He is treated sympathetically throughout the book, a genius whose inductive powers of reasoning are the match for the Great Detective (never named as Sherlock Holmes except in the title). The latter is portrayed, at least in the beginning, as less than sympathetic.

And his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, even less so. Other authors that show up are H.G. Wells, Alfred Jarry, Camille Flammarion, and Rémy de Gourmont, and Stableford has written about them all.

The book is also crammed full of various sf themes: alternate histories, the far future, genetic evolution and the transformation of organic sentience into inorganic machines, time wars, rationalized supernatural creatures, and another use of Frank Tipler’s The Physics of Immortality and its idea of technologically created Heaven where the dead will live again. (John C. Wright’s Awake in the Night Land also made use of this four years later.)

The story, told through several nested narratives, is a debate about the value of chaos and order and their manifestations in organic life and intelligent machines as manifested in the various camps of the Overmen, the clade of vampiric humans who, with their machine descendants, replaced normal humanity.

The only problem I had with the novel is that sometimes arguments and perspectives are repeated a bit too often by some characters. On the other hand, given the elaborate series of nested stories, Stableford might have felt the need to reorient his readers occasionally – especially given the motives and perspectives of the various groups are shadowy and not always clear. Indeed, Stableford, who doesn’t shy away from strategic obscurity which results in many of his characters engaging in paranoid speculations about manipulation by shadowy forces, doesn’t make everything clear.

At the climax, when it seems Hodgson will have to make some kind of decision on Wilde’s proposal for Hodgson’s and humanity’s future, Stableford throws in an unexpected element of Hodgson’s work (even though it was foreshadowed on the Acknowledgements page) to vastly increase the scope of the conflict and forces at work. Here just the slightest Lovecraftian tinge enters the work.

Hodgson concluding fate is obscure for the man but symbolically fits in with the rest of the book and its arguments.

I have not read enough Wilde to comment on Stableford’s impersonation of him, but the Hodgson sections are credible imitations.

If this all sounds somewhat familiar, slightly variant parts of this book have appeared elsewhere: the Prologue and the Explorer’s and Count’s stories as “The Hunger and Ecstasy of Vampires”, the Writer’s and Detective stories as “The Black Book of the Dead”, and the Soldier’s story as “The Gateway of Eternity”. ( )
2 vote RandyStafford | Mar 11, 2020 |
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From 1895, when the means of visiting the future through drug-induced "timeshadowing" is discovered by Professor Copplestone, to 12 million years AD, when the Universal Engine seeks to determine the cosmos' ultimate fate, the vast tapestry of time is the theater of a time war between the Overmen, descendents of the vampires, Humanity, and the shadowy intelligence that waits at the End of Time. Sherlock Holmes, the great detective, Count Dracula, the reluctant vampire, the mercurial Oscar Wilde, William Hope Hodgson, freshly returned from the Night Land of the Great War, the visionary H. G. Wells, Alfred Jarry, Camille Flammarion, and many other figures from the literary firmament, become pawns and players in a conflict that spans the entire course of universal history. Brian M. Stableford has been a professional writer since 1965. He has published more than 60 science fiction and fantasy novels, as well as several authoritative non-fiction books. He is also translating the works of Paul F val and other French writers of the fantastique for Black Coat Press which has published his most recent fantasy novels: The Shadow of Frankenstein and The Stones of Camelot.

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