Clarice Starling: ‘Did
you do those drawings, Doctor?’
Dr Hannibal Lecter: ‘Ah.
That is the Duomo seen from the Belvedere. You know Florence?’
Clarice Starling: ‘All
that detail just from memory?’
Hannibal Lecter: ‘Memory,
Agent Starling, is what I have instead of a view.’
Thomas
Harris / The Silence of the Lambs [1998]
A few months ago, my wife suggested we go to Italy,
specifically Florence for a little break, just the two of us. This Tuscan city
was mentioned because she has always wanted to view the paintings in the Uffizi
Gallery, and wander through the city, viewing the historic architecture. She is
also aware of my interest
in exploring the place where Thomas Harris set a significant part of his 1999
novel HANNIBAL.
Florence is where his character Dr Hannibal Lecter fled after his escape from
Baltimore at the close of 1988’s THE
SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, taking on the disguise of Dr
Fell.
Though she has grown irritated at my recent obsessive
behaviour, related to my fascination with a novel released
last week.
She said last night as I was reading aloud a scene
from Thomas Harris’ 6th novel - “It’s getting tiresome, all you
ever talk about is Cari
Mora, by Thomas Harris.” Continuing “You carry that bloody book
around with everywhere, quoting from it to anyone who passes by, it’s mental
and driving me insane; and it’s not the first time, and is not normal, it’s
weird.”
Florence
apart from being the hiding place of Dr Hannibal Lecter (a setting in Thomas
Harris’ 4th novel Hannibal), also lends
its name to a ‘condition’, one that some appear to suffer from: when a piece
of ‘art’ resonates within them.
I
should know, as I suffer from Florence Syndrome [aka Stendhal
Syndrome]. Sometimes a piece of writing, music or art resonates so deeply
within me, it’s like the peal of a bell, chiming within, so my thoughts become trapped, as
my mind focuses only of that piece of art, again, again, again, especially triggered
by evocative writing, thought-provoking narratives - like my current obsession with Cari
Mora.
“I was
in a sort of ecstasy, from the idea of being in Florence, close to the great
men whose tombs I had seen. Absorbed in the contemplation of sublime beauty ...
I reached the point where one encounters celestial sensations ... Everything
spoke so vividly to my soul. Ah, if I could only forget. I had palpitations of
the heart, what in Berlin they call 'nerves'. Life was drained from me. I
walked with the fear of falling.”
French
author Stendhal (pseudonym of Marie-Henri Beyle)
Who
described his experience in 1817 with his work “Naples and Florence: A Journey from Milan to Reggio” where he was overcome with profound
emotion at what he experienced in the art that spoke to him, in Florence.
I pass an apology to those I
have annoyed with my Stendhal-like utterings
about the sixth
novel by Thomas Harris. This weird feeling lingers inside me, like it does
whenever I have been exposed to a piece of art, music or writing that for some
reason resonates, plaguing my mind. It gives me a racing heart; I feel dizzy, faint
and plagued by nightmares whenever this occurs. It is also exhilarating, and I get
affected by varying degrees, from the literature, art and music, that speaks to
me.
My personal Stendhal Syndrome
is always at a zenith, an apex, whenever I
read a new novel by Thomas Harris, or listen to his voice narrate his own
work; narratives acted out in his native Mississippi twang, that becomes a ‘southern
gothic’ that makes me think so very, very deeply, haunting my conscious and subconscious
mind.
I am so very sorry if I have annoyed you, with my love of Cari Mora and the writings
of this author who I have followed since I was a clueless 17-year old.
It has never been my intention
to annoy, as I mean no harm – sorry.
“We
don’t invent our natures...they’re issued to us along with our lungs and
I was admiring my new set of backlist
Thomas Harris novels, featuring Dr Hannibal Lecter, just re-issued with
stunning Artwork from the Arrow paperback Imprint of PenguinRandomHouse to
coincide with the release in Hardcover of Thomas Harris’ sixth novel, Cari Mora.
I thought also of conversations
with my Father, who was always amused at my interest in this character, the deranged
psychiatrist from Johns Hopkins Baltimore. Though now retired, my Father was a
former psychiatrist – hence his amusement.
I have been having a rather surreal
time lately. Firstly, after weeks of sitting on my hands, thanks to Charlotte
Bush of PenguinRandomHouse who kindly allowed me [and
a few others] an early read [coupled to a non-disclosure agreement].
I have finally been able to speak
about Thomas Harris’ sixth novel Cari Mora last week in London
on 16th May 2019 for UK and Ireland, and May 21st
2019 in North America / Canada. It was amusing to see Thomas Harris’ sixth
novel appear on the European side of the Atlantic, before it was released in
the author’s native continent.
Prior to release my anticipation was visible HERE, HERE and HERE.
Due to the enforced silence until I could
publicly review Thomas Harris’ new book last week, I have become rather vocal,
as to my sheer joy at the new novel. Some may consider that I have going a tad
mental, a tad
all Stieg Larsson and perhaps I have, as my
enthusiasm for Thomas Harris’ narrative skills knows no perimeter.
They say anyone who was alive on 22nd
November 1963, the day John F Kennedy was murdered in Dallas, remembers what
they were doing and where they were at that moment, when those shots were fired.
As nutty as it may sound, I know
where I was, who I was and the context of my life when a new novel by Thomas
Harris was released; apart from 1975’s Black Sunday, which missed my radar
at that time. I was twelve and clawing my way through Ian Fleming,
Alistair Maclean, Adam Hall,
Desmond Bagley, Hammond Innes, Eric
Ambler and all those myriad British Thrillers that The Talented Mr Mike Ripley
so amusingly and informatively recounted in his book KISS
KISS BANG BANG, now available as a paperback, with more info HERE
I was a clueless
17-year-old kid in 1981 buying RED
DRAGON by Thomas Harris in
Hardcover purely on Stephen King’s recommendation, from of all places the SPCK, Chester [surreally a Christian
Book-group]. Immediately after reading it three times back-to-back, I tracked
down BLACK SUNDAY by Thomas Harris, a paperback edition, a
film-tie from Earl’s Eye Books, a second-hand bookstall in Chester market I
frequented and traded books in my youth. I enjoyed Black Sunday, though it was
a workman-like thriller, but as a
debut it was a portent for what would follow. It dates back from the days when
Harris and two colleagues worked as journalists for The Associated Press. Rumour
has it that the advance was split three ways, but it was Thomas Harris who actually
did the writing as well as the typing for the novel. It was the film option that allowed Thomas Harris
to escape Journalism.
I was
aged 25, a marine chemicals surveyor in 1988. At London Heathrow I screamed,
spotting an ‘early / advance’ copy of THE
SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas
Harris in the airport bookstore. It was my second trip to the Arabian Gulf
(for a six-week tour of duty). That novel made the flight to the Middle East so
memorable, as well as that six-week tour of duty, where I read the novel four
times [back-to-back]. The last time I recall finishing it; I was resting on the
deck of a Chemical Tanker berthed on a jetty in the Arabian Gulf. As dawn broke
I watched the Sun emerge from the horizon, just as Starling read the letter from
Dr Lecter about Orion, which closed the novel.
Just
before the Millennium, I was 36 and working for a German Chemical Engineering
company. I queued at Maxim
Jakubowski’s MurderOne in Charing Cross, London
on 7-8th June 1999, with a hotel Room Booked, and a bottle of Amarone waiting
for HANNIBAL by Thomas Harris. I was
the first in the queue, for this book.
In 2006,
I was 43 and under a huge burden setting up a complex business that was in its
infancy. I recall those difficult years. My readings of HANNIBAL
RISING by Thomas Harris helped
me cope with the adverse camber of setting up a business, and watching it so
very closely, because a business is like a flower, it can be crushed or wilt
without close, close management especially in those early days.
During Crimefest
2010, I was one of four competing in the Criminal Mastermind, and chose The
Novels of Thomas Harris as my specialist topic – giving me a valid excuse to
re-read the five [at the time] novels by the author, Click
Here to see what happened. Martin
Edwards unsurprisingly won [again] with Peter Guttridge and I joint runners-up
and poor Cara Black was in the rear, as her
specialist topic ‘French Crime Novels’
was far too broad a church.
In 2013,
I helped Barry Forshaw [with a little background material] for his excellent
book on THE
SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, part of the Devil’s Advocate series, which coincided
with the release of the 25th Anniversary edition of that
extraordinary book from Thomas Harris – CLICK
HERE for more information.
In 2019, I
will turn 56, and Thomas Harris has
published his 6th novel entitled CARI MORA. I was very fortunate to have an early reading, though
having to sign a legal agreement not to publish a review until after Midnight on
Thursday 16th 2019, the day of its release in the UK and Ireland by William Heinemann - one
of the oldest and most respected publishing imprints in Great Britain, part of
the PenguinRandomHouse conglomerate.
I could
go on and on, but moving to 2019, Mike Stotter kindly edited my enthusiastic
review of the Cari Mora British Edition HERE
for Shots Magazine, and Jeff Pierce kindly edited my review of the US edition
of Cari Mora HERE
for January Magazine.
I have
been reading varying commentary about Cari Mora; much revolving around comparisons
to 1981's RED DRAGON and 1988's THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, [though little
mention is made of 1999's HANNIBAL or 2006's HANNIBAL RISING]; Perhaps, the
first two novels to feature Dr Hannibal Lecter remain at the summit of the
Crime / Horror Genre in the opinion of many, including my own - so it is
natural to compare.
Particularly
interesting are commentary from Barry Forshaw
in the FT, John
Connolly in the Irish Times, as well as from Marcel Berlins and John Dugdale
in Saturday’s THE TIMES and THE SUNDAY TIMES [respectively]
Though I
have affection for Hannibal
and Hannibal Rising but not to deride or compare them to the two novels
that preceded them. Like a parent we love our children, each for different
reasons, rationalizations.
I sometimes
quote Francis Dolarhyde [from Thomas Harris’ RED DRAGON] who sent a letter to
Freddy Lounds of The National Tatler, signing it as 'Avid Fan'. When it comes to the writings of Thomas Harris, that
term Avid Fan does makes me smile.
Though I
have issues with his debut, BLACK SUNDAY, a workman-like thriller, and a good
calling card, while he worked with two others at the Associated Press, the film option
being his way to exit journalism.
And I
stand resolute in my admiration of his 6th Novel, the weird and terrifying CARI
MORA, and as a caveat, would say, with regard to RED DRAGON and THE SILENCE OF
THE LAMBS - "that was then", and as for CARI MORA, "this is
now".
For those
who write vivid and thought-provoking prose drawn from the darkest wells of the
imagination, and find interest in ‘The
Weird’ - will find resonance in these words from Harris.
“You must
understand that when you are writing a novel you are not making anything up.
It's all there and you just have to find it.”
CARI MORA
is written by a person who takes his craft, writing prose, exceedingly
seriously, and his 6th novel is a very different book, to those that preceded
it.
The
bottom line, for me is that I loved it so very, very dearly and still do,
applauding the authors audacity so hard, that my palms became red, but they
have now turned crimson.
But you
make up your own mind, but remember the dark excesses it contains, the black
humour is in terms of its narrative artistry, because the 'beauty' or 'horror' always
resides in the eye of the beholder.
“The
exposition of Atrocious Torture Instruments could not fail to appeal to a
connoisseur of the worst in mankind. But the essence of the worst, the true
asafoetida of the human spirit, is not found in the Iron Maiden or the whetted
edge; Elemental Ugliness is found in the faces of the crowd.”
Thomas
Harris, Hannibal [1999]
And what
can this novel CARI MORA signal about our own natures?
For
little has changed from when we resided in caves, to the draw of the coliseum
back at the times of gladiatorial games in Rome, to watching John Wick 3 today.
One thing
I can state, is that despite your opinion, Thomas Harris' writing ability is in
mine - extraordinary, and at times so very scary, as he holds a mirror to our
faces, and our inner fears and worries.
For a
rare and insightful interview with Thomas Harris, Click
HERE for the recent New York Times feature.
Regards,
Avid Fan
Footnotes
If you’ve
never read Thomas Harris’ THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, RED DRAGON, HANNIBAL, or HANNIBAL
RISING then the new paperbacks from Arrow, [PenguinRandomHouse] with the beautiful
new covers, are a great place to start, scroll to the bottom of THIS LINK
for more information on securing them.
And more
information from Publisher Jason Arthur of William Heinemann recorded HERE and embedded below
in a six-minute clip filmed in angular
gonzo-vision, of the launch last week at Goldsboro Books London >
Part of the launch included details of a
nationwide Treasure Hunt, for Gold Bullion, mirroring the narrative of Cari
Mora – the prize being a unique ‘Gold’ Edition of the Thomas Harris novel –
details from The Bookseller HERE
And finally I highly recommend the audio narrated
versions by Thomas Harris from Audible,
with RED DRAGON, THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, and HANNIBAL being abridgments,
while HANNIBAL RISING and CARI MORA are Unabridged. Because of the gothic
nature of these books, Thomas Harris US Southern Accent, and his talent to act
the roles makes them a unique experience, one that decorates your mind.
Ali Karim - is Assistant Editor at Shots eZine, a contributing editor at January Magazine & The Rap Sheet and writes for Crimespree magazine, Deadly Pleasures and Mystery Readers International and is an associate member of The Crime Writers Association [CWA], International Thriller Writers [ITW] and the Private Eye Writers of America [PWA]. Karim contributed to ‘Dissecting Hannibal Lecter’ ed. Benjamin Szumskyj [McFarland Press] a critical examination of the works of Thomas Harris, as well as The Greenwood Encyclopedia of British Crime Fiction [ed. Barry Forshaw]. Karim has contributed to ITW 100 Thriller Novels due out in 2010.
Karim been three times nominated for a Anthony Award [2007, 2008 & 2009] as well as The Spinetingler Award in 2008 for special contributions to the Crime and Thriller genre.