Thursday, 14 February 2008

dr lecter i presume_04



Dr. Lecter, I Presume

"There is a nameless force that makes explicable the most extreme

of human actions ... those actions that are attractive only because

they are evil and dangerous; they possess the fascination of the

abyss."--Charles Baudelaire

Dr. Hannibal Lecter--physician, monster, many of many parts--is set to

return in Hannibal Rising, Thomas Harris' prequel to Red Dragon

(1981), The Silence of the Lambs (1988), and Hannibal (1999). The

novel will reach both UK and U.S. bookstores on December 5. In

anticipation of the good doctor's reappearance, let's take a quick

look back at the history of the Hannibal Lecter Phenomenon.

I first discovered author Harris when, in 1981, I chanced across a

copy of Red Dragon--in a Christian bookshop, of all places. The novel

featured a big cover blurb by Stephen King, and it didn't take me long

after cracking Dragon's spine to realize that this was a work of great

merit, destined to make a mark on the crime/thriller fiction genre. It

remains solidly on my top-10 list of crime novels. Michael Connelly

(Echo Park) once told me that Dragon heavily influenced him and even

strengthened his desire to become a crime novelist.

That book was the second from Tennessee-born former journalist Harris,

who'd debuted with the still uncannily topical Black Sunday (1975),

about Middle Eastern terrorists threatening to explode a blimp over a

packed football stadium during the Super Bowl. All of Harris's novels

have now been filmed (with Red Dragon having twice been adapted to the

silver screen), and each remains solidly in print throughout the

world. The influence of Harris' fiction cannot be underestimated: the

serial killer as a protagonist/antagonist has now become a staple of

modern crime fiction, for good or ill.

Harris grew up in the town of Rich, Mississippi, but surprisingly

little else is known about his life, as he jealously protects his

privacy. After being married twice, with one daughter to show for it,

he now splits his time between Sag Harbor, New York, and Florida.

Despite his comparatively limited output (five novels over 31 years),

his readership continues to grow and his reputation now extends far

beyond the circle of crime fiction and thriller readers. Much of his

success can certainly be attributed to the popularity of the fictional

Hannibal Lecter, who, like the gothic villains before him--including

Professor James Moriarty, Count Dracula, Edward Hyde, et al.--exudes

the captivating magnetism of a car-crash. In the three novels

featuring Lecter, we see him evolve from backstage villain (Red

Dragon), to a side-stage and supporting role (in The Silence of the

Lambs), and finally in 1999 to center stage in Hannibal (originally

titled The Morbidity of the Soul).

Dragon's successor, The Silence of the Lambs, was a crime-writing

milestone that had Harris' contemporaries extolling his talents. I

recall receiving an early review copy and reading it in an almost

hypnotic fever. If memory serves, both Roald Dahl and Clive Barker

described the book as "razor-sharp entertainment." It remains one of

the all time great works of crime fiction. When filmed, The Silence of

the Lambs took the Oscars by storm, such was the intensity of the

source material for Ted Tally's screenplay. The movie also

reinvigorated actor Anthony Hopkins' career and earned Jodie Foster

the covers of magazines worldwide. I'd go as far as to say that,

thanks to the strength and intensity of Harris' characterizations,

Clarice Starling and Hannibal Lecter have become permanent fixtures in

the pantheon of memorable imaginary figures.

By the time Hannibal finally came due at the end of the last century,

Delacorte Press was prepared to capitalize on it, big-time. The

American publishing house issued a press release at Easter 1999

stating that Harris (who'd scored an alleged $9 million advance for

the novel, as part of a two-book deal) had delivered his long-awaited

manuscript, and that presses were rolling to issue the book globally

on June 8 of that year. Hannibal was shrouded in secrecy. There would

be no proof or review copies sent about, and an embargo was placed on

booksellers, telling them not to issue the work for sale until the

global launch date.

Being, by this point, an aficionado of Harris' fiction, I was a man

demented (pun intended). When Hannibal's surreal cover art was

released, along with a teaser synopsis about the revenge of a former

Lecter victim, Mason Verger, my excitement only mounted. I didn't

discover until later that the book jacket features the coat of arms

for the Visconti family, a noble house from which Dr. Lecter believes

himself to be descended. That image was interesting, too, in that it's

part of the Italian car giant Alfa Romeo's logo, and Harris drove

about in a red Alfa while researching his novel in Italy. (While in

Florence, the author also researched the Italian serial killer Pietro

Pacciani, dubbed The Monster of Florence. Harris sat through the trial

of Pacciani, who was convicted of committing seven of the eight

murders for which he was charged. Pacciani was later freed on appeal,

though--only to die mysteriously before he could face a retrial.) This

graphic reference was just one of the winks in Hannibal, a book that,

like its predecessors, is peppered with multiple and often conflicting

meanings, cynical observations of the human condition, and black humor

that in Hannibal transformed itself into the Grand Guignol tradition

of French theatre.

As the release of Hannibal approached, I found myself feeling

desperate for a copy. Hearing that Maxim Jakubowski, crime writer and

proprietor of the Murder One bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London,

planned to open his shop at midnight on June 7 so that he could begin

selling copies of Harris' latest book, I organized a day off and then

booked a hotel room near the store so that I could be among the first

people to purchase Hannibal. Little did I imagine the sort of media

circus that would gather about this event.

I arrived outside Murder One early and wound up sitting next to a

couple of drunks sipping cider from plastic bottles. As darkness fell,

and the inebriates left to seek out more alcohol, other people began

arriving, and a bristling queue formed. Also in that line was the

then-budding crime writer Mark Billingham, who turned out to be a

fellow Harris aficionado. Soon, the press swept in. Ravi Mirchandani,

publishing director for Random House, had organized a media blitz, and

just as Jakubowski arrived with bottles of Chianti and fava beans, an

actor appeared in blue overalls, looking remarkably like the Lecter of

Anthony Hopkins' portrayal. Then, from out of the shadows came

representatives of the BBC, ITV, C5, and CNN, all waving cameras and

lights and looking for sound bites. As I was at the front of the

queue, I ended up appearing on television, much to the embarrassment

of my wife and family. But at least my mission was accomplished: I got

my hands on a copy of Hannibal.

In the days afterward, I was amused by the dichotomy of critical

opinion of that novel. In Europe, the majority of reviewers and

writers applauded Hannibal. David Sexton of the London Evening

Standard even went on to write a book-length appraisal of Harris'

works. In the United States, though, the reaction was far more tepid.

Some readers were perplexed by the amoral nature of Harris' story, and

therefore found it hard to appreciate the work in its entirety.

(Interestingly, Patricia Highsmith's Tom Ripley [from The Talented Mr.

Ripley, Ripley Under Ground, etc.] found the same sort of trouble

among readers, and her work was better received in Europe than in her

native United States. Perhaps there's something about European culture

or history that makes it easier for residents here to understand and

appreciate amoral yarns.)

For my own part, I was far from disappointed in Hannibal. I found the

novel to be hypnotic, surreal, and amazingly complex, a book boasting

a depth that's lacking in so many works of crime and thriller fiction.

I also thought Hannibal was very funny in places, but the humor was

smeared with the rope burns of the gallows. The love story angle which

numerous readers found to be unpalatable, I thought gave the book an

edge that few other writers would have dared to explore. Sure, Harris

was in love with his creations, but his love was peppered with a dark

wit and seen through a manifestly cynical eye. Hannibal is

chock-a-block with literary nods and nudges, not the least intriguing

of which is Lecter's decision, while hiding out in Florence, to assume

the nom de plume "Dr. Fell," an homage to the bumbling detective Dr.

Gideon Fell, created by the now almost forgotten John Dickson Carr.

After reading Hannibal, I wrote to Thomas Harris. He responded,

thanking me kindly for my enthusiasm as regards his work, and sending

me a set of signed book plates which are now framed on the only

section of my office wall that's not covered by bookshelves.

That was five years ago. And now, again, I await the publication of a

new Harris novel. If you haven't read Hannibal, or have not re-read it

over the last half-decade, I strongly recommend your picking up the

book. If you like your crime fiction with an eccentric edge and filled

with black humor, then Hannibal is for you. You have just enough time

to finish reading that story before Hannibal Rises hits bookstores.

Hey, I know what I will be doing in the wee small hours of Tuesday,


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