Tim Curran, The Corpse King (Cemetery Dance Publications, 2010)

In a city of filth, the dead are for sale. Samuel Clow and his partner Mickey
Kierney are traders in mortality, spending their nights digging up the freshly
dead for the benefit of science and their wallets. One night they get lucky and
come across a shallow mass grave of cholera victims -- 30 in all.
Clow and Kierney are off to cash at old Dr. Gray's when they see something
strange -- and for these blokes to call something strange is saying a lot. The
mythical Corpse King is rising. The lord of the dead, bane of resurrectionists
everywhere, has struck again, laughing its hysterical laugh.
The Corpse King is the twenty-first in Cemetery Dance Publications' popular
series of limited-edition hardcover novellas. It has ultra-creepy cover art by
Alan Clark and intensely disturbing, almost photo-realistic interior
illustrations by Keith Minnion. Author Tim Curran paints the Irish slums of Edinburgh, Scotland, with a muddy
brush, "a mud swimming with the filth of . . . seepage from backed-up sewers ...
emptied privy pails, offal from the slaughteryards . . . a seething organic brew
of feces, urine, blood . . . a ripe and heady breeding ground for contagious
disease." (Must be hard to sell real estate with a ringing endorsement like
that.)
At first, the pair take a brave tack: they simply refuse to believe in the
Corpse King's existence, diving back into their ghastly work. But a thing that
eats corpses cuts into the livelihood of enterprising individuals trafficking in
the freshly dead. So, the duo take it upon themselves to bait and destroy the
culprit, real or not. This chase takes up a good portion of the second half of The Corpse King --
and it is a frightening, suspenseful ride -- but the main draw of the novella is
the partnership of Clow and Kierney themselves. They've obviously been working
together for some time, as they have an easygoing, mildly competitive manner
with one another. Their verbal jousts over who had the worst childhood -- "Four
Yorkshiremen"-style -- are a
highlight. They're wickedly witty and uproariously rude as they engage in a
sort of "one-downmanship":
"Me old man used to beat me severely about the ears with his fists and I think
he knocked something loose up there, he did."
"Cor, he only used his fists?"
"Unless a fire poker was near, you see."
"Me old man was the same way. Used a barrel stave on me, he did.... The old
sod. I used to wake each morning with a stream of his vile piss in me face,
except on me birthday when he'd dump the entire chamber pot on me as a gift.
It's with great love and respect that I remember me father."
"Aye, enough then, Michael Kierney. If you were to peel an onion beneath me nose
I could cry no more."
"You're a kind man, Samuel Clow."
Curran seems to have a quiver full of remarks, retorts, and ripostes layered
with humorous hyperbole and gallows humor (literally, during the hanging of a
fellow graverobber) that engenders an affection for these companions that
grounds the abnormal goings-on in a relatable reality. One begins to care about
the filthy buggers, especially when compared to the people around them.
As a result, The Corpse King is more than just a horror tale. It's also a
tragic portrait of friendship. When Curran began leading the story toward its
inevitable end, I just held on because I knew I was in the hands of a master.
[Craig Clarke]


