Robert Bloch, at least to the small but select
audience of this blog, needs no introduction. He is one of the great writers to
graduate from the mid-Twentieth Century pulp racket, and—like all true pulp
writers—if it sold, he wrote it. He worked several genres including crime,
horror, science fiction and fantasy. He is best known for his fine novel Psycho—later transformed into its
faithful film adaptation Alfred Hitchcock’s
Psycho—but his work has a depth and quality rarely seen. If Mr Bloch wrote
it, it is likely pretty great.
On the far side of great is his 1958 story “That Hell-Bound Train”. It won the 1959 Hugo Award, and it is the best science
fiction story—short or otherwise—I have read in a long time. It features a
young bindlestiff called Martin. His father “walked the tracks for the CB&Q”
until he met with a drunken accident and his mother ran off with a traveling
salesman. He skipped the orphanage and drifted with the rails. He tried his
hand at crime, and on a cold and lonely November midnight he determined to go
straight—
“No
sir, he just wasn’t cut out for petty larceny. It was worse than a sin—it was
unprofitable, too. Bad enough to do the Devil’s work, but then get such
miserable pay on top of it!”
Martin’s dream of a straight life is interrupted by
the unexpected appearance of an unfamiliar running train. The windows dark. Its
whistle “screaming like a lost soul.” The conductor who steps from its forward
car is off—the way he drags a foot when he walks, and his nonstandard technique
of lighting his lantern with his breath. It takes only a moment for an offer of
a ride to be tendered, but Martin negotiates a deal. He will gladly ride for a
single wish in exchange. He wants, at his own choosing in a moment of happy
contentment, to stop time. The conductor accepts the bargain, and Martin is
certain he fooled the devil. He finds a job in the nearest town and plots his
own happiness, looking for that moment where he wants to spend forever.
“That Hell-Bound Train” is brilliantly executed. Its narrative
is seemingly simple, but the simplicity is misleading. A study of misdirection,
really. It shows the reader enough to make a conclusion (incorrectly) about
where the story will finish, fulfilling that expectation in a way, and then
taking it further. And that final step takes the story from pretty good to
great. It is very much like the best of The
Twilight Zone, and a shame it was never treated in an episode.
“That Hell-Bound Train” was originally published in the
September 1958 issue of The Magazine of
Fantasy & Science Fiction. I read it in the anthology The Hugo Winners, Volume 1 edited by
Isaac Asimov and published by Fawcett Crest in 1973.
8 comments:
I read that story in that very issue of F&SF back in 1958, and I thought it was one of the best things I'd ever read. I still think it's a great story and it remains a favorite.
Ben, Robert Bloch is one author I have not read yet. I have come across his short stories in public domain. I like the thought of reading him in the genres you mentioned, perhaps one in each to begin with.
"That Hell-Bound Train" not The. Though for some reason this is a common error.
Thanks Todd. Interestingly the anthology I read it in actually has it as "The" but I've seen it online as "That". Although it wouldn't be the first time an error has made it into print.
just found a free copy on-line. this story will stay in your mind forever. thanks for this little nugget. that's what makes blogging so worthwhile. finding these gems from the past.
Michael. I'm glad you found it and like it. It certainly stays in your mind long after the final sentence is done.
I've actually been thinking about rereading it.
This short story is deceptively simple and fictional to the core. Dare scratch beneath the veneer of that deception and you will appreciate its thematic relevance on the subject of our elusive search of perfect moment of happiness! Sadly, we are all victims of our own watches, anxiously looking out for the time and place. Wealth...family... friends...none satisfies us. Like poor Martin, we learn the moment is only now....we need to ride the train.... just know where its going...enjoy the ride, not the destination ...or you become the next sucker!
I had thought this was an episode of Twilight Zone because my mind recalled the visuals that it created for me when I first read it, probably in that Hugo Award collection but possibly in one of my fathers pulp Sci-Fi mags from the forties and fifties. It's a great one.
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