Isle of Peril-Jack Vance mystery novel, book review
Isle of Peril-Jack Vance mystery novel
AKA: Bird Island and
Bird Isle (author’s preferred title)
Isle of Peril was written by
Jack Vance in 1947 and had a draft title of Forbidden Island. It was first published ten years later in
1957 by Mystery House publishers with the title Isle of Peril under the
pseudonym of Alan Wade. This written
date of 1947 makes it the first mystery novel Vance wrote, or at least the
first written mystery novel that was not lost.
(Although Bird Isle is really more of a comic novel than a
mystery.) In the 1988 Underwood-Miller
release the title was changed from Isle of Peril to Bird Isle with Jack Vance
listed as the author. The 2002 Vance
Integral Edition the title was changed again, this time to Bird Island. The 2018 Spatterlight Press release reverted
back to the title of Bird Isle.
Bird Isle has about as much
plot as a Marx Brother's movie with a plethora of odd characters and strange
events. Despite this, it is engaging to
read and easy to follow. But it is more
of a comic novel than a mystery.
Although it is sometimes dismissed as an uninteresting early Vance work,
I really enjoyed reading it because of the novelty, humor and quirky characters
and creatures. As indicated on the back
cover of the Spatterlight issue, this novel was "inspired by the great
P.G. Wodehouse."
Bird Island is a fictitious
island about two miles off the coast of Monterey, California that is rumored to
have once been owned by a gang of bootleggers.
Most of the island is now owned by a Mr. Coves who owns and operates
Bird Island Hotel. Also on the island
with ten to twenty acres of her own is Miss Pickett owner and operator of
"Miss Pickett's Fine Art Academy and Finishing School for Select Young
Ladies." Our main character, Milo
Green, who has an unpleasant encounter with Miss Pickett, describes her as
having a "chin like the working end of a pipe wrench" and a
"face like a salt water crocodile."
She is extremely strict and controlling with her students and forbids
"lipstick, nail polish, bop records, jive talk and the cha-cha." (Vance frequently mentions boats and jazz in
his mystery novels.)
Although Mr. Coves' hotel
rooms are very reasonably priced, he has few customers because the old hotel is
in need of major repairs and renovation.
Coves can barely pay the taxes and bills so in order to obtain the money
needed to fix up his hotel he decides to sell off sections of the island that
he does not use. He divides this into
five lots of from 10 to 28 acres each and includes a provision that they are
not allowed to be subdivided. Miss
Pickett is the only other land owner so is very upset with this plan because
she likes privacy and does not want the island to be developed. When Coves persists in his plan to sell lots,
Miss Pickett decides to purchase one of the plots that is adjacent to hers so
she can insure some privacy. But she
continues to have frequent complaints and concerns, especially after the
strange group of new land owners arrive.
Milo Green is the first
outside person to show an interest in purchasing a lot and he arrives in his
small sloop from Sausalito. Milo writes
limericks which he sells to children's magazines. He refers to his writings as
"doggerel." Two months ago he
purchased a winning lottery ticket for the Mexican Grand National and ended up
with $20,000 after taxes. (We are
informed in the novel that back then houses in San Francisco sold for half of
that amount, so it was a considerable sum of money.) Milo purchases ten acres with a view and
plans to build a house on it. In the
meantime he meets Miss Pickett's young, attractive niece, Celia, and a
friendship and romance develop much to Miss Pickett's dismay and
disapproval. Miss Pickett does not like
Milo and is very protective of her niece, Celia, whom she just hired as one of
her teachers. Miss Pickett had an
unpleasant interaction with Milo earlier so insists that her niece have nothing
to do with that "insolent young boor."
A retired business man,
Mortimer "Slippy" Archer, who seems to have a shady past and now
dabbles in nude photography, buys another parcel. So does a San Francisco attorney who plans to
use his plot as a retreat for him and his secretary. The most eccentric person who purchases a
parcel is a character named Ike O'Rourke.
O'Rourke is described as having "elemental vigor" and a
straggly yellow beard. He is from
Alaska, arrives with his dogs and is said to speak "knowingly of tundras,
and igloos and dog sleds." He also
seems to enjoy pointing his shotgun at others, has a peculiar odor, likes to
grind up and eat pemmican and has a powerful love potion developed by
Eskimos. There is also an explorer from
Africa who arrives with his pet baboon named Banjo who was a "gift of
Batonga, chief of the Pulu Tribe."
The hotel cat, named Rexie, seems to develop a particular antipathy for
Banjo whom he considers to be an intruder.
Rexie also unintentionally creates mischief and loves cheese, often
stealing it from the chef's cheese cellar.
Additionally we encounter a
university student intruder who comes to the island to gather fifteen different
species of bird manure, a ginseng business scam to which Milo subscribes, a
stalker who seems to assault others, some finishing school students who almost
cause a scandal after they pose for nude photos, a mysterious shoe thief, and a
visiting mystic named Mahmoud Singh with the "silhouette of a cucumber"
who sends out "Questing Vibrations" while in a "supra-somatic
state" in order to "compose the corporeal frame while Seeking
Essences wing and soar above the island" in order to locate a bootlegger's
treasure rumored to be somewhere on Bird Island. The mystic insists on brewing his morning
coffee "in a small copper brazier fired by camel dung." There is also a hotel visitor, Tiger Joe
Connolly, who was just released from San Quentin Prison and seems to have an
interest in blackmailing and drug smuggling.
He too has heard rumors that Big Ben Manzio, who use to own the island,
"left a lot of boodle around here somewhere." Tiger teams up with his old pal Slippy, the
nude photographer, in a scheme to run everybody off the island in order to find
the treasure for themselves while using the island for their illicit drug
smuggling from Mexico.
I liked Bird Isle largely
because of the eccentric characters, odd humor, and novelty of it. But don't read it expecting a mystery novel
with a well-developed plot. It is more P.
G. Wodehouse than Agatha Christie. Also
if you are not quite certain what ambergris is, you might want to look it up
before reading the novel. Bird Isle
should appeal to many Vance fans if they don't mind the over the top, quirky
humor. I’ve read Bird Isle three times
so far and rated it a 4 each time or “Really liked it.”
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