Read Shriek: An Afterword Online
Authors: Jeff VanderMeer
As to the current whereabouts of Duncan and Janice, I must fear the worst, although rumors,
2
as rumors will, continue to flourish in the current atmosphere of paranoia and fear.
And yet, despite the strife and violence chronicled and presaged by this volume, the enduring image I have of Janice and Duncan is a peaceful one. It is, oddly enough, of Janice in that room in the Spore, calmly typing away—from the bar folks’ perspective, in a sliver of green light between the doorway and the corridor as once they saw Duncan, but farther and farther away, across green glass and green grass, and fading, fading as the light fails once more.
THE END
Dradin, in Love
The Book of Lost Places
City of Saints and Madmen
Secret Life
Veniss Underground
Why Should I Cut Your Throat?
Fiction Anthologies
Edited by Jeff VanderMeer
Album Zutique
Leviathan 1
(with Luke O’Grady)
Leviathan 2
(with Rose Secrest)
Leviathan 3
(with Forrest Aguirre)
The Thackery T. Lambshead Pocket Guide to
Eccentric & Discredited Diseases
(with Mark Roberts)
Thanks to my wife Ann, my first reader, who has provided invaluable comments on and support for this novel over so many years. My most sincere and heartfelt thanks and gratitude to Liz Gorinsky, my editor at Tor, who has worked so hard to make this novel as perfect as possible with her general, specific, and structural edits. This novel would be a pale shadow of its current self without her efforts. Special thanks to my other beloved
Shriek
editors Peter Lavery (U.K.) and Hannes Riffel (Germany), as well as the indomitable Jim Minz.
Thanks to everyone who read all or part of this book in manuscript form and offered their comments, including Matt Cheney, Clare Dudman, Richard Hutchinson, Jason Lundberg, Mark Roberts, Eric Schaller, Jonathan Stephens, Anne Sydenham, Anna Tambour, Jeffrey Thomas, Juliet Ulman, Robert Wexler, Elizabeth VanderMeer, Neil Williamson, Tamar Yellin, and Zoran Zivkovic. Thanks to everyone at ISD who was generally supportive or specifically helpful with regard to this novel, including Gwen Hooper, Diana Jones-Ellis, Paul Larsen, Missy Lynch, Tom Lynch, Meredith McDonough, Kimberley Mitchell, Leigh Moore, Richard Peterson, Leisa Pichard, and Scott Stratton. Thanks to Jonathan Edwards and Mark Roberts for wonderful forgeries. Special thanks to my agent, Howard Morhaim, for his guidance, advice, patience, and friendship; to Danny Baror of Baror International; and to Claire Weaver, for her tireless efforts.
Finally, huge thanks to all of the people at Tor whose meticulous attention to this book I very much appreciate, including copyeditor Robert Legault, proofreader John Yohalem, designers Peter Lutjen and Nicole de las Heras, production editor Meryl Gross, publicist Leslie Henkel, and other behind-the-scenes contributors in the sales and marketing, art, and production departments.
Over the seven years during which I wrote
Shriek,
I listened to music—an unofficial soundtrack that helped me stay focused and on task through the most difficult parts. Much of the soundtrack I listened to is listed below.
Afghan Whigs—
Gentlemen
—Mary and Duncan’s relationship
The Cure—
Mixed Up
—transitions
Dead Can Dance—
Aion
—general
In Flames—
Soundtrack to Your Escape
—war scenes
James—entire catalog—general
Murder City Devils—entire catalog—war scenes and general
Muse—entire catalog—opera scene
The National—entire catalog—Mary and Duncan’s relationship
Nick Cave—
The Boatman’s Call
—the sadder parts of Mary and Duncan’s relationship
Nick Cave—
Henry’s Dream
—war scenes
Pleasure Forever—Compilation—Janice’s dissolute parties and Festival night
Radiohead—
OK Computer
—general
Scott Walker—
Tilt
—Duncan’s underground adventures
Songs: Ohia—
Magnolia Electric Co.
—general
South—
With the Tides
—general
Spoon—entire catalog, including
Gimme Fiction
—war scenes and general
Thursday—
War All the Time
—war reporter scenes
Tindersticks—
Tindersticks
—general
Scott Walker—
Tilt
—Duncan’s underground adventures
Special thanks to The Church, whose music I listened to throughout the writing of
Shriek
—so much of it that I hear it in my head when rereading the novel.
—Tallahassee, Florida, May 1998–August 2005
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
SHRIEK: AN AFTERWORD
Copyright © 2006 by J
EFF
V
ANDER
M
EER
Hoegbotton logo © 2002 Eric Schaller
Appendix Photographs © 2006 Jonathan Edwards
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
Edited by Liz Gorinsky
Machine diagram rendering by Jim Kapp
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
Tor
®
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
VanderMeer, Jeff.
Shriek: an afterword / Jeff VanderMeer.—1st ed.
p. cm.
“A Tom Doherty Associates Book.”
ISBN: 978-0-7653-1465-9
1. Title.
PS3572.A4284S57 2006
813'.54—dc22
2005034500
1
Some on my editorial staff have suggested that we should include an unexpurgated version of Duncan’s
Early History of Ambergris
as an appendix to this edition. However, I cannot acquire that text, as I returned my only copy to Janice and do not know what she did with it. Moreover, an edition that combined Janice’s manuscript with the complete
Early History
would put even Hoegbotton’s hardbound edition of its seventy-five Southern Island travel pamphlets to shame for sheer size and verbiage.
2
No evidence exists to support supposed “Duncan Sightings” at Zamilon and Alfar, for example.