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The Attempted Rescue
 
by Robert Aickman
 
Foreword by Jeremy Dyson (The League of Gentlemen)
 
But is this a local book? Well, almost. The League of Gentlemen's main writer Jeremy Dyson acknowledges cult twentieth-century author of ghost stories Robert Aickman as a major influence on his writing, and those who know Aickman’s work have long seen its effect on the dark comedy of the BBC TV series. But from where did all this strangeness originate? Aickman’s first volume of autobiography, The Attempted Rescue, may help to provide a few clues, and Jeremy Dyson has written an astute new Foreword for this edition, in which he describes The Attempted Rescue as ‘the oddest book I have ever read.’
 
So much of Aickman’s childhood and youth was bizarre and unyielding of explanation that it is little wonder that his short stories lack closure. Aickman invests the book with his startling, politically incorrect opinions on politics, the modern industrial world and his rather bleak view of sexual relationships. But there is also much achingly heart-felt nostalgia in the atmospheric descriptions of pre-World War Two London, the theatre and the large country house of his singular Great Uncle and Aunt.
 
But more than anything else, over much of The Attempted Rescue looms the figure of Aickman’s eccentric father, a man almost entirely resistant to ‘normal’ family life, and a man who Aickman describes as dying ‘from loss of luxuries.’
 
Aickman displays more than a passing acquaintance with psychoanalysis in this fascinating work, and one must infer that the disturbing images with which he invests his fiction are there by design. Then again, when such a master of the weird tale tells the story of his own life, how far can we be sure that he is not manipulating our expectations as subtly as he does in his stories?
 
The Attempted Rescue is a sewn hardback book of 223+viii pages.
£27.50/$50.00
 
Reviews
"Robert Aickman will be remembered primarily for his fiction, I know, but I wonder how many who are fortunate enough to read this powerful memoir will remember, instead, that boy who cringed in fear of the shouting below. For those, The Attempted Rescue will remain Aickman’s most profound legacy." Lisa DuMond, Black Gate Magazine
 
"Read The Attempted Rescue, if you are an admirer of the artist; read it also for a glimpse of a time long gone, of a past which, as Jeremy Dyson points out in his shrewd and sympathetic introduction to this volume, is indeed a foreign country." Steve Duffy, All Hallows
 
"Aickman shows a solid comprehension of Freudian theory and he frequently refers to the sexual frustration resulting from single sex schooling and his shy nature. He demonstrates a perceptive awareness of symbols and their effect on the subconscious and comments on experiencing inexplicable fear induced by objects which in retrospect he sees as sexual symbols. This in itself certainly encourages a close re-reading of The Collected Strange Stories." - Matt Leyshon, Enigma
 
"Of interest to casual reader and macabre afficionado alike are those recounted memories of the bizarre, uncertain moments of fragility and uncertainty which invested Aickman's childhood with such penetrating depths of insecurity and unresolvedness. " - "Fine Frights" column from The Horror Within
 

  Page updated 10th January 2007