From rec.arts.sf.reviews Wed Apr 15 11:12:56 1992 Path: herkules.sssab.se!isy!liuida!sunic!palantir.p.tvt.se!malmo.trab.se!kth.se!eru.mt.luth.se!bloom-beacon!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!wupost!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!usenet.coe.montana.edu!news.u.washington.edu!raven.alaska.edu!never-reply-to-path-lines From: djdaneh@pbhyc.pacbell.com (Dan'l DanehyOakes) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews Subject: Review: PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING, by Christopher Moore Message-ID: <1992Apr13.192413.3048@raven.alaska.edu> Date: 13 Apr 92 19:24:13 GMT Sender: wisner@raven.alaska.edu (Bill Wisner) Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Organization: Pacific * Bell Lines: 79 Approved: wisner@ims.alaska.edu PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING, by Christopher Moore Review copyright (c) 1991 Dan'l Danehy-Oakes It's fairly common these days for a first horror novel to be compared to Stephen King. It's _also_ fairly common for a funny first genre novel to be compared to Douglas Adams. H.P. Lovecraft, though, is a somewhat less common comparitor in these sad and quasi-literate latter days. But throw in Frank Capra and things get hard to comprehend. Or accept. Or whatever. Yet that is precisely the set of comparisons that Tim Cahill makes on the back cover of Christopher Moore's first novel, PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING. Well, of course I had to find out. To dismiss the comparisons right off: It is like the works of Stephen King, in that it is about a Bad Thing invading a small community. It is like the works of Douglas Adams, in that it is a funny and off-the-wall satire of the genre it springs from and of modern society. It is not like the works of H.P. Lovecraft at all -- though he appears as a character. And if it bears any resemblance to the films Frank Capra beyond having a happy ending, I'd like someone to please explain it to me. Okay -- then, what's it about? There's this demon named Catch who's really pretty nasty, and he's in the keeping of a fellow named Travis who's really pretty nice. Catch eats someone every day or two, which makes Travis quite uncomfortable, so Travis (who summoned Catch quite by accident) has been trying to send Catch back where he came from since, roughly, World War I. They come to the coastal town of Pine Cove, California, where Travis pursues his quest to find the incantation to get rid of demons, while Catch pursues his quest to find a master who'll use him for the purpose for which he was intended -- that is, evil. Over the course of the book, one of them succeeds. Since this takes place in the '90s, some may ask how HPL appears as a character. Well, I'm afraid I do too; but the nature of the book is such that you really don't care. He's just _there_, in Pine Cove, as the keeper of H.P.'s Cafe, which serves such delicacies as "Eggs-Sothoth." (This is, incidentally, the second novel I've read in which HPL appears: the first being Richard Lupoff's very odd LOVECRAFT'S BOOK.) The humor works, and, more importantly, stays in its place. There are places in Douglas Adams' books where he lets the weirdness take over and the plot goes to hell. This never happens in PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING. The characters, though weird, are all -- well, _almost_ all -- acceptibly weird: they never caused my suspenders of belief to snap violently back in my face. Because they are both weird and plausible, the humor grows pretty much organically from the story instead of being added in. All in all, a good enough first novel that I shall be looking forward to the second. (What? The review's over? And here I haven't even mentioned the King of the Djinns, or The Breeze, or. . . well. Go read the book yourself.) %A Moore, Christopher %T Practical Demonkeeping %I St Martin's Press %C New York %D January 1992 %G ISBN 0-312-07069-1 %P 243 pp. %O hardcover, US$18.95