Helen Clarvoe is terrified. A girl named Evelyn
Merrick has been harassing her and making veiled threats, all while carefully
treading a legal line that ensures her victim can’t call the police and have
something done about it. But soon, Evelyn decides to expand on her work instead
of limiting her victim to Helen Clarvoe. She begins to terrorize everyone
connected with Helen, starting with telephone calls and escalating into more
and more vicious behaviour…
And so Helen turns to her lawyer, Paul Blackshear,
who makes it his mission to track down Evelyn. But things aren’t quite as
simple as that might sound. Half of the people who know Evelyn describe her as
an insane girl who will destroy herself one of these days. The other half is
shocked at the first half, and describe Evelyn as a saint who would do anything
for a friend and whose kindness knows no limits. What is the secret behind the
enigmatic Evelyn Merrick?
It’s the plot of Margaret Millar’s Beast in View, a 1955 novel that won the
MWA’s Edgar Award for Best Novel in 1956. And you can tell why. This book is
quite simply groundbreaking, but it has one of the most difficult endings to
describe. The ending has since been extremely overused, especially by
Hollywood. It has become one of the most cliché endings imaginable, and just
one adjective can quite easily give it away (as it did for me). From page 1, I
was convinced I knew the ending. So did that make the book less enjoyable?
Oddly enough… no! I was absolutely amazed at how
Margaret Millar manages to pull off such an unconventional ending while playing
perfectly fair with her readers. She never directly lies to us, you see. The
only deceptions that are played out are those legitimately played out on the
investigator, Paul Blackshear. And when the ending comes, you can really see
why people back in 1956 were so astounded by it. It is one of Margaret Millar’s
trickiest bits of misdirection, and even if you know the ending you can admire
her for inventing the ending in the first place, and then for the clever
misdirection with which people were fooled back when this twist was new.
And even though this twist now seems as old as the
Great Wall of China, there is plenty of emotional resonance to the ending
nonetheless, with an absolutely perfect last sentence that encapsulates the
book’s beauty and tragedy. It really is a shame that, thanks to its overuse,
this twist will likely not fool modern readers. I envy anybody who can read
this book and be surprised by the ending.
Paperback coming September 2016 |
But that’s not all. I was also genuinely shocked to
see the topic of homosexuality discussed quite openly in the book. To be fair,
the words “homosexual”, “gay”, and “lesbian” are never used (although the
derogative term “fairy” is used once), but it’s quite clear that these things
are going on. At one point, a lesbian makes a pass at another woman. Before she
does so, another woman leaves the room sneering that she prefers the “normal
ones”. The lesbian, Bella, runs an indecent abode, is overweight, ugly, and
generally repulsive. She only appears for a handful of pages. Yet Margaret
Millar manages to somehow turn her into a compelling character. Bella admits
that the world has been cruel to her, and so to cope she began to eat, and eat,
and eat, until she became the woman that we see in the present day. Although we
see all the ugly things about Bella, this painful monologue shows that there is
far more to her than meets the eye. There’s another homosexual character who is
very important to the story, but describing this person and his backstory would
give major spoilers for something that happens well into the book. (While Bella
appears near the end of the book, her inclusion is only minor and I have used
it to demonstrate just how talented Millar was at writing characters.)
All this proves yet again that gosh darn it all,
Margaret Millar could write, and her
work really has been unfairly forgotten. The characters in this story are among
the most memorable you will come across in any
novel ever written. The atmosphere of
menace and dread in this story are absolutely top-notch, and it really tackles
some risqué subject matter for the 1950s. The ending, although original at the
time, has unfortunately become cliché since then through overuse, but that
doesn’t take away from its emotional power. But even if you know the ending,
like I did, you will undoubtedly find much to admire in Beast in View. This is another masterpiece from Margaret Millar and
has reminded me once again why I love her stuff so much.
Note: Beast in View has been
reissued by the Orion Publishing Group under their Phoenix imprint. More
information can be found at the publisher’s page here. U. S. residents can
easily order the book from The Book Depository here.
Patrick Ohl ©2012
At 19 years of age,
Patrick Ohl has already read the complete works of Agatha Christie and has
almost done the same with John Dickson Carr. His taste in mysteries is very
comprehensive, including the intellectual challenges of John Rhode, the
psychological suspense of Margaret Millar, and the violent world of master
thief Parker. He currently plans to write his autobiography, tentatively
entitled I can’t stand postmodernism, and to sell millions of copies worldwide,
gain international fame and influence, and use this to get some attention for
criminally neglected authors such as this one. His reviews can be found on his
blog, At the Scene of the Crime.
2 comments:
Great review Patrick - the book is a classic and milestone. I think I prefer HOW LIKE AN ANGEL of all her works, but it's a close-run thing. She was an exceptional talent.
Cheers,
Sergio
Agreed, Sergio, Millar was indeed an exceptional talent. In an entry for The Canadian Encyclopedia, soon to be posted, I write that she was arguably the most talented English Canadian woman writer of her generation.
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