Take My Face-Jack Vance mystery novel, book review
Take My Face-Jack Vance mystery novel
AKA: Flesh Mask (author’s preferred title)
Mask of Flesh
Take My Face is a 177 page
novel that was written in 1948 and was first published in 1957 under the
pseudonym of Peter Held. There were two other editions under the same title,
one in 1958 (under Peter Held) and another in 1988 (under Jack Vance). When it
was published as part of the Vance Integral Edition in 2002 it was under
Vance's name and the title was changed to the author's preferred title The
Flesh Mask. An excellent quality paperback was issued by Spatterlight February
2, 2018, making this once rare book readily available.
Although The Flesh Mask is an early Vance work, it is still entertaining and
well worth reading if you are a Vance fan. As Michael Andre-Driussi points out
in his preface The Flesh Mask is a darker work and lacks Vance's wonderful wit
and humor. It is also not as polished as Vance's great works and does not have
much of his justly famous clever dialog, although the dialog is perfectly adequate.
There are a number of Vancian touches that his fans will surely note, such as a
setting in a fictitious city near San Francisco (in this case "San
Giorgio" 60 miles north of SF), well described odd characters, a quirky
plot, and a very engaging and lively storyline. Two of Vance's passionate
interests are also included in the novel, jazz music and boats. There are
several discussions about bop jazz, some jam sessions and live concerts with
the "Manley Hatch Trio." The main character also served as a merchant
seaman (as did Vance) and makes a trip to Monterey where he attempts to locate
a friend's fishing boat and admires and covets a sailing ketch.
The story begins in 1944 with the main character, a thirteen year old boy named
Robert Strauve, who was very similar to other youth his age. He enjoys comic
books and has a paper delivery route. One day he is on a motor scooter doing
his paper delivery route when he is struck by a vehicle and has severe facial
disfiguration from the injury and flames. "His mouth was drawn over to the
side; his left cheek was like a dish of brains. Above the mouth was a low
gristly ridge, with black holes for nostrils." Even after healing his face
was described as being, "as nasty a wad of tissue as I've ever seen."
Unfortunately he and his mother are cheated by the wealthy driver of the
vehicle and the insurance company so that plastic surgery is not an option
because of the expense. Robert's whole life changes as he returns to high
school and has to cope with severe social pressure and ridicule of his fellow
high school students. Robert tries to make the best of it. He becomes a star
halfback football player and tries to live a normal life but is frequently
reminded of his freakish face.
One day he and some of his male friends are invited to observe a high school
sorority initiation of four pledges that will be held in an abandoned house.
Robert arrives there in the evening but has had too much alcohol so goes off
alone to lie down on the floor in one of the bedrooms. While he is in the
bedroom resting the girls being initiated are assigned the unpleasant task of
having to kiss Robert. When they find him in the bedroom he appears to be
sleeping so they forgo kissing him but make many derogatory comments about how
disgusting it would be to actually have to kiss him. Robert is actually awake,
however, and hears their conversation about how hideous he looks. A few minutes
later a different sorority girl approaches him alone to kiss him but she finds
Robert fully alert and standing up. He is so angry by the comments the girls
made that he physically assaults the girl. She and her family press charges and
Robert ends up being sent to live at a detention home for boys. Eventually
while residing at the detention home Robert is provided with corrective surgery
but no photo is taken of his new appearance.
Some years later in 1952 one of the girls involved in the sorority induction
incident is murdered and has her face severely disfigured with a knife. Earlier
that evening she had told her brother that she met Robert and that he had a
completely changed face and had a different name. Although a person confesses
to the murder and is confined in prison, the same type of murder and facial
mutilation happens to another one of the former sorority girls and Robert is
suspected of the crime and disfiguring. But nobody knows what he looks like,
what name he goes by or where he lives. The plot continues, sometimes
improbably, but always engagingly, with some complex and unpredictable twists
that are described in a deceptively simple manner. There are also romances,
detective work including some by a private detective, social class
pretentiousness, and secret letters.
I read this novel three times so far and enjoyed it more after rereading it. It
is a crisply written, fast paced, engaging mystery novel that is enjoyable even
though it is not one of Vance's finest efforts. It should certainly be of
interest to Vance fans or those wanting to read an entertaining dark mystery. I’ve
read this three times so far and rated it a 3 or "Liked it."
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