THE QUOTE
From "Johannes Cabal and the Blustery Day" by Jonathan L. Howard
Johannes Cabal and the Blustery Day
Experiment 472 was a failure. The worst sort of failure. The sort of failure that comes in a compact little bundle and hides in the dark corners of one's laboratory, patiently awaiting an opportunity to leap out and sever any major blood vessels it might find in one's neck. The sort of failure that seven crushing blows from a retort stand barely slows down. The sort of failure that is chased out onto the attic landing, whips between the banister railings, plummets three stories down the stairwell and yet need pause only a moment to recover its wits before darting off again.
It never got that moment. A cheap plaster bust of Napoleon Bonaparte followed it down from the attic landing, fell the three stories accelerating all the way and
dashed the failure into failure pate upon the instant of impact.
Johannes Cabal -- a necromancer of some little infamy -- leaned over the bannister railing from which he'd dropped the bust and examined the effect of cheap statuary on reanimated flesh. It told him nothing new; he expected to commit this messy act of euthanasia every few months and the splash it made always looked very much the same. At the end of the landing was his remaining supply of ammunition, another five Napoleons. He would have to lay in some more if his current line of experimentation continued to be so disappointing.
--JDR
LOVE the Caball series, I just finished listening to the audio versions of them all. I just hope Howard has another book or two in the series left in him.
ReplyDeleteI agree that the whole series is worthwhile. Unfortunately I think the first novel (JOHANNES CABAL: NECROMANCER) is the weakest of the lot and thus a poor place to start. The second book (JOHANNES CABAL: DETECTIVE) is my favorite of the novels. Best of all are the short stories (seven or eight, depending on how you're counting). I have the audiobook of the shorts, which I just dug out and re-listened too. The reader does a good job too: hadn't heard of Nicholas Guy Smith before but it's a name I'll take note of in deciding whether to pick up audiobooks in the future.
ReplyDelete--John R.