It’s customary at this pass, in most introductions, to list through the included stories and give a brief preview of each, saying that “Bloody Man,” for instance, is a ghost story concerning, among other subjects, pirates. But that would be misleading and more than a little shallow as an approach to Avram’s work in general or the specific. For one thing, given the ghostly status of the country where they take place, all the Limekiller tales are, by virtue of that alone, ghost stories, regardless whether a literal supernatural-type ghost can be perceived flitting about in them. For another thing, these are not like other stories in the least, and you cannot so easily sum them up. If you haven’t read Avram Davidson before, you are about to enter uncharted territory as regards the art of the narrative. Certainly you will be able to find, should you care to look closely, traditional narrative mechanisms buried among Avram’s sentences — foreshadowings, structural elements, and so on. Yet you don’t feel them moving you along as you do in more traditionally narrated stories. No grinding noises such as are made by primitive machines. No great grandiose tidal sweep of, yee-haw! Writing. No stampede of eloquence. No institutional overlay of Bauhaus Existential. No Stylemaster style. Reading Avram, and in particular, reading the Limekiller stories, you are simply dropped into the exceptionally active mind of the narrator and twitched along from thought to thought, something like the way a sun-dazzle will appear to be shifted from point to point on the surface of water slopping against the pitch-coated pilings of a pier in Avram’s (and Limekiller’s) own Point Pleasaunce. The mechanics of the story become obscured and you are made dizzy, dazed, much like Limekiller himself might feel, walking, (shall we imagine?), in the strong sun, slightly trashed by a hangover, trying to figure out some minor money hassle, distracted by this slash of color, that burst of song, or. Well, perhaps a sample would be instructive:
“Night. and not the plenilune, either. You can bet your boots, Limekiller has no boots, he has, though, a shovel! Limekiller feels that if he eats another pannikin of rice and beans or of the thin chowder called fish-
This, the opening of “Limekiller at Large,” inundates you with atmospheric fact, with a tumbling-downstairs rhythm to accompany the single tumbling-downstairs event detailed, and submerges you in the mind of the narrator, ne Limekiller, without saying a thing about him, other than he is hunting turtle eggs with a shovel. But as you are twitched and shifted, like a sun dazzle, across the light chop of Avram’s prose, you come to know so many things about Jack Limekiller and about the many things he knows, it feels that you are not reading a story, but listening in on his selfconversation, that little talk we’re always having with ourselves, that flippy voiceover that captions all our experiences, this being an especially clever and artful specimen, yet every note authentic. And so when you reach the end of the story, though you have endured, witnessed, felt what Limekiller himself endured, witnessed, felt, though you have sensed the incidence of character development, conflict, denouement, etc., it seems less a story than a passage of time that had a story in it, along with innumerable other flashes and dazzles that related to the story in obliquely enchanting and curiously illuminating ways. That last, I suppose, is as good a definition as any of an Avram Davidson story.
So.