First published by NEL in 1974 as The Venomous Serpent
The Night Creature, which is what I’ll call it since I read the American edition and I’m a ‘Merican, is a 70s British folk horror novel in league with an Amicus or Hammer film. It’s a slow burn. It’s cheeky at the beginning. When I started it and the first-person narrative started spitting lighthearted pseudo-humorous quips I groaned and almost quit immediately. I shut the book and looked over the cover art. I re-read the back synopsis. No, there is no way this is a comedy novel. I read on and am glad I did.
Video review here. Written review below.
Sally and Andy are young lovers who were attending college back in the city. After dating for four short months they quit school and moved out to the rural area of Derbyshire. They rent a barn to live in/open a shop to sell tourist items like ceramic gnomes, discarded junk sold as antiques and paintings that Sally made herself.
One day Sally finds a monumental brass in a collapsed church located in the nearby ghost town of Stymead. What is a monumental brass you ask? Good question my fellow Americans. A monumental brass is an engraved sheet of brass laid into pavement. They were very popular in England though are located in other European nations also. People would make rubbings of the etching and sell them for big bucks.
So, that is Sally’s plan. She makes a rubbing of the brass and brings it home to Andy. The rubbing features a man and a woman but the woman’s face has been carved out. At each of their feet lies a pet. At the man’s feet is a lion and at the woman’s feet is a dog-like creature.
One night Andy wakes up after a horrendous nightmare. While looking at the rubbing now hanging on his wall, illuminated by moonlight, he thinks he sees movement in the woman’s dress and her pet dog. He’s a little freaked but heads back to bed. In the morning, he sees that one of his two kittens is dead. It looks as if a wild creature snuck into the house and attacked it. He thinks back on last night and the rubbing. While inspecting it he finds a bit of blood on the corner. Odd.
Andy is now freaking out and surprisingly enough Sally sort of believes him about the rubbing. They venture back to Stymead to inspect the brass and the church. The few locals that live there eye them slyly from behind their curtains.
This book is loaded with folksy atmospheric descriptions of rural England. After having blundered that intro with lite comedy I was pleasantly surprised to see it head off in this direction. This is heyday 70s Amicus and Hammer horror film era and this book reads just like one of those movies.
Once again Andy is plagued with a nightmare and the scene from the previous night is played out again only this time amped up. The moonlight is lighting up the whole room. The dust floating in the light gives it a dreamlike feel. The dog is now clearly moving but its legs have become snakes. It slithers up the woman’s body to her heart, where she reaches out and embraces it.
I read this right before falling asleep and had dreams of being out in the woods with snakes and small creatures lurking in the dark. It really creeped me out.
This all happens within four chapters and to tell more detail would spoil it.
The couple investigates the history behind the brass further. Their opinions about the rubbing bring tension to the relationship though at times Sally also seems aloof to the situation. What is going on with her? Who are the people pictured in the brass? Are these things that Andy is seeing real?
Like I said this is radiating classic gothic folk horror atmosphere. The barn they convert into their home was built in 1710. All of the roads are thin and winding country roads. It’s raining and overcast in the day. At night the moon is full and bright in the sky, shining through open windows. You can almost smell the earthy air and feel the cool breeze blowing in.
The young characters of Sally and Andy are written perfectly as happy-go-lucky youngsters with not much life experience. They aren’t a bitter old arguing couple. It’s pleasant to spend time with them. Their motives and actions feel exactly what a twenty-year-old couple would do. The characters from the two towns they interact with are colorful in their stereotypical characterizations. The scowling unwelcoming townie. The poor and shabby, superstitious rural yokel interacting with the college educated city youngsters is always an enjoyable trope. A local constable warns Andy, no one would venture to Stymead on May Day. Don’t you know it’s Walpurgis Night?
The evil is mysterious and ancient. It builds its attack slowly from the shadows, each encounter one step closer to the inevitable doom. It’s not groundbreaking but it is classic pulp horror. Subtle and slow with ever building tension. Nothing too graphic though there is some bloodshed. This is one to read at night in the dark with only a book light on.