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Friday, September 7, 2012

FFB: The Vampire of N’Gobi - Ridgwell Cullum

Through a ridiculously baroque method that involves subterfuge, pickpocketing and mistaken murder an African adventurer is sent a map so that he can find the most direct route to a lost city hidden outside of Zimbabwe. It appears that a queen who claims to be a reincarnation of an ancient sorceress wants the adventurer to be her mate and co-ruler. The actual journey to the city is the most interesting part of this book. The adventurer is accompanied by a Cockney cohort and a Bantu who wants nothing more than to kill as many “yellow men” as he can. A trip through an underground river leads them to the Gorge of White Death where they discover a forest of carnivorous trees or a man-eating fungus. It’s never really explained what they are. When he finally arrives in the city he is greeted by Queen Ramaanita who drives him (yes, they have cars and electricity in this lost city) to another hidden cave where the ruins of a human sacrifice amphitheater are located.

These are really the only interesting incidents in the book. There is no supernatural element and the “vampire” of the title is meant in the “dangerously seductive woman” manner. A deus ex machina finale culminating in three outrageous incidents -- one of them being a last minute rescue of the hero by a squadron of airplanes from the Rhodesian police force -- leaves the reader exhausted and unsatisfied.

Cullum is better known for his western novels none of which I have read. His style takes some getting used to, it's densely verbose with tangential or parenthetical comments interrupting the flow. About one third of the book is nothing more than exposition. No editor would stand for that kind of writing these days! The book as a whole is very episodic and overly done. For example: several extraneous characters are introduced early on, do their thing, and then never appear again. The real adventure, the real story for the search of the lost city, does not occur until well into the halfway mark of the book.

The Vampire of N'Gobi (1936) is a rather difficult title to find these days. As is usual with scarce titles the copies being offered online are expensive. The cheapest I found was $50 and seemed to be in collectable condition. In my opinion, though it's not really worth tracking down. The story is intermittently interesting however, with the exception of the fantastical elements mentioned above, rather run-of-the-mill. But that is one heckuva DJ, isn't it? Looks to be the same artist who did the covers for all the lost race books by Mark Channing that Lippincott published in the late 1930s.

9 comments:

  1. It seems to me that The Femme Fatale of N'Gobi would've been more accurate - and, really, it's no better or worse a title.

    I was interested to read that the journey is more interesting than the destination. The same might be said of Arthur Stringer's The Woman Who Couldn't Die, which also features a secret map, a lost city, a psychotic sidekick and a "dangerously seductive woman”. I'd say that Cullum drew inspiration, except these elements seem to be the staples of lost civilization stories.

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    1. Well, not sure I'd even bother to look it up without the V word. Was kind of hoping for a classic vampire story set in Africa, something I'm not aware of even exists, but alas t'was not what I got : P

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  2. Great cover, though, John. I pinned it on my vintage mystery board just for the cover itself. The story sounds a teensy bit like SHE by H. Rider Haggard.

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    1. Very much in line with She, Yvette. Haggard was ripped off repeatedly by writers less talented and imaginative than he was. Cullum is the only writer I've come across who has a lost city that manages to have acquired modern techology - airplanes, cars, electricity. Usually the point of a lost race novel is that it's NOT in synch with the contemporary world.

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  3. I admire you for finishing what was clearly an iffy book. I never do anymore. Just put one aside at page 179. I only finish about 30% of what I start lately.

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  4. I used to be a sucker for these "lost city" stories. You're right, most of them are just Haggard retreads.

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  5. The cover alone would be worth the price.

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    1. And I'd bet that price would be well over $500. That is if you could find a copy of the book with a DJ in superior condition. I've seen one copy with a DJ in my lifetime but it was considerably chipped and damaged. As of today no copies offered for online sale have a DJ.

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  6. Sorry it wasn't more fun but as you say, great cover John, though initially I thought the guy looked a bit like Chico Marx ... (and I don't even drink!).

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