Warner Paperback Library 1972
Cover art: Jack Thurston
Dorothy Daniels was a very prolific US author of Nurse Romance and Gothic novels. She was born in 1907 and “presumably” died in 2001. Yeah, I don’t know what’s up with that but that’s how they have her death listed on the Bowling Green website which has all of her original papers. She was married to pulp author Norman Daniels. Before she started writing herself she would help Norman by editing and typing. Seeing how it was done she gave it a shot herself and started getting her stories published. She had success with nurse romance novels but as that faded in popularity she ventured into the new and exciting gothic genre and blew up. With her success the script was flipped and she was now the household head writer and Norman would help her with editing and typing. She was one of the giants of the 50s-70s gothic romance explosion.
The basic premise: Archeologist Gay Quillan travels to the Lacandon Jungles of Chiapas Mexico to find her missing archeologist father. There she meets her dad’s boss, rival, secret girlfriend and a cast of other characters that may or may not have had something to do with dad’s disappearance.
A gothic mystery in the jungles of Mexico with Mayan sacrificial temples and a lake god named Chac Mol. Yes please. Dorothy Daniels delivers an interesting mystery with swift pacing, vivid characters, exotic setting, dreadful ambiance, folklore and archeological accuracy. Or at least she’s good enough at making it up to make it sound good.
Gay is a strong female lead. She is brave but not a fool. Sure, sometimes she needs some help but don’t we all. She is an archeologist, so she knows some things, but this part of the world was her father’s interest, so we do get exposition of the locals explaining to her the legends of the area. There is a lake outside of the village. In the middle of that lake is an island and on the island is an ancient Mayan temple constructed of stone with a sacrificial altar at the top. In days of old the Lacondones tribe would sacrifice people to the lake god Chac Mol.
All the Lacondones people avoid the island and even though he was warned not to go over there, Gay’s father was crawling all over it. The story has a pulpy weird menace vibe. The natives say Chac Mol has disposed of her father for intrusion into the forbidden. At times the mystery creeps into the seemingly supernatural. And of course we have the human suspects. Constantly guiding Gay toward one path or another. Some shadier than others. Some a little too friendly. I appreciated that we get about five human suspects and the legend.
Someone keeps leaving Gay little clues that dad is still alive, like a matchbook from Beirut and his still warm pipe. Is he leaving these things? Why doesn’t he make contact? Is it a trap? Everything that happens in this book is mysterious. One night at a dinner party at Don Ricardos house she is drugged. She makes it home but wakes up chained to the sacrificial altar. She screams and a diver from Mexico City who Don Ricardo has hired to search the lake for her father, hears her screams and rescues her. She thinks he’s hot, but it was pretty convenient that this handsome stranger showed up at just the right time. Lots of stuff like this to where you don’t know who’s helping and who’s hindering. Paranoia vibes galore.
This thing is on the gothic romance trope track and it’s making all the stops. Mysterious handsome stranger. Red herrings. At one point she is drugged again but this time with psychedelic shrooms and there is a hilarious CHAPTER of her having a Hunter S Thomspon-esque manic trip where stuff like the bed tries to eat her and her shoes are bigger than she is. It’s so over the top. I was dying. I’d readily guess that Dorothy Daniels never actually ate shrooms herself but read a sensational article about it in Readers Digest.
Classic mystery with a clear-cut cast of characters, shade and motive. I loved the exotic setting backdrop. Isolation. Stranger in a strange land. Mayan history. I didn’t know the baddies until the final reveal. This thing was so much fun, enjoyable and simple. The bad guys go to prison, good guys get love and marriage. The end.