This book is one of those that I picked up because of the cover art. Yes, yes, I know the saying - don't just a book by its cover. Yet, there are plenty of times that I see cover art that just cries out for me to pick up the book, and this is one of those instances. However, it was more than just the heavy greens and blacks and the beautiful blond woman - as it turns out, this cover appeared on at least two different gothic titles! But I'll get into that later. There was also that title that caught my attention - a unique title that begs the reader to open the cover to find out just want it means (although, let's face reality - I don't think any title is quite as unusual as Let the Crags Comb Out Her Dainty Hair). Thus, the book ended up in my hands and ultimately among the stacks of gothic novels I have yet to read. Only, now, this one has been read...
The Heir of Starvelings is, as the title page describes, a tale of innocence and evil. First published in 1967 (my copy is a reprinting by Dell in 1968), it was written by Evelyn Berckman, who is known for her post-war detective fiction. She was born in the United States, but later moved to England in the 1960s. She also wrote a number of plays and historical non-fiction, as well as horror and gothic novels. A quick search online reveals that The Mugar Memorial Library at Boston University has a collection of the author's manuscripts, including early drafts and final proofs (The Evelyn Berckman Collection). This is the first work by Berckman that I've read, and although it gets off to a somewhat lackluster opening, the story does pick up to the point where I was glued to the pages, unable to close the book until I was done!
The story centers around lovely Davina Milne, the daughter of the Reverend Frederick Milne, who lives in a small English town, near a decaying old house known as Starvelings. There are plenty of rumors about the seemingly abandoned property and its owner, Lord Stanyon. These rumors mean nothing to Davina, who is mourning the death of her fiance, Nevil Stonor, of whose death she and her father were notified from the war office. Fate plays a wicked game, though, and an attorney for distant relatives of Lord Stanyon appears on her doorstep, looking for a governess for Lord Stanyon's young son. Although the offer was not meant for her (the lawyer came to see if Reverend Milne knew of any women in town who might be hired), Davina knows this is the thing she needs to distract her mind from Nevil's death. The lawyer, Mr. Truscott, warns her that not only is the boy wild, unbathed, and likely unlearned, but Mr. Stanyon and his servant, Porcher, are difficult men who will not make her job any easier. Davina is insistent, giving Mr. Truscott and her father no other choice.
Davina is not your typical gothic heroine. From the very start, she is determined, she is strong, and despite her grieving soul, she finds sympathy and concern for the young William Stanyon. She quickly learns what incentives she can use to not only get him to wash, but also to practice his speech, writing, and reading. Despite his rebellious and wild side, she manages to gain his trust while exploring the mysteries of Starvelings. Where is Lady Stanyon? Why is William so afraid of the Folly on the grounds? Who struck William so hard as to cause a loss of hearing in one ear? What happened to the Staynon's fortune? And how can Davina save William from the tragic life to which he is subjected in that house? Davina sets out to find answers to all of those questions, even though it puts her in danger, not only from Porcher, but from Lord Stanyon himself. As for Lady Stanyon, well, she is nothing at all what Davina would have expected, and she seems to be more afraid of Porcher than of her own vile husband. Berckman provides readers with a dark and sometimes depressing mystery that throws in a few twists and turns before it is all revealed in the end.
And Berckman's descriptions - she certainly sets the mood with the detailed pictures she creates of the aging house, the overgrown grounds, the moody inhabitants, and the desolation and emptiness within the halls of Starvelings. The reader immediately sympathizes with William, roots for Davina to overcome all of the evil within the house, and is disgusted by Porcher and Lord Stanyon - especially near the end when Davina has a final confrontation with the two men in the dark recesses of the Folly, which holds some of its own mysteries. Berckman also includes some very human aspects to the story, with William's fascination with the Queen and his ardent desire to meet the Queen, a wish that surprisingly gets granted in part thanks to Mr. Truscott's feelings for Davina. Yet, despite having his wish fulfilled, it is bittersweet, as a part of that dream did not see fruition, bringing bitter disappointment to a young boy that could not understand the full impact of the opportunity that he had been given. Scenes like this are what tug at the heart of the reader and make it all the more real. That being said, I was pleasantly surprised by an unexpected event at the end of the story, which took the characters in a much different direction than I would have ever anticipated. I won't spoil it, but I will say that it is most definitely an ending that Davina deserved!
Now, some other unusual aspects about this book that are worth mentioning are the dedication, the introduction, and the epilogue. Berckman dedicates the book "In Memory of Rupert Gunnis, Who Told Me This True Story." This leads directly into the one-page foreward, "Rupert Gunnis, 1899-1965." The author provides readers with a bit of background on Mr. Gunnis, who was a real person, a historian as well as collector of British sculpture. Berckman indicates this story founds its origins in Gunnis' love of buried historical facts, and although she changed the names of the persons involved, the geography and events are said to be true. Gunnis also appears in the epilogue, which is set nearly 70 years after the events of the story in 1855, and in which young William is now an elderly man, searching for a connection to his past in paintings now owned by another family - paintings that fate uses to bring Gunnis and the elderly Lord Stanyon together, bringing the story full circle. I don't believe I've ever seen an author meld alleged truth and fiction together to create a story like this, and its curious nature certainly adds to my liking of this tale.
Going back to the cover art, depicting Davina as she walks through the halls of Starvelings, that painting of Lord Stanyon just behind her, I wish the artist was identified, as the shadows, the colors, the expression, the candles - they blend so perfectly to create the somber mood that permeates the story within. And, apparently, Dell (who published this edition of the novel) liked the art so much, the company reused that same art just three years later in 1971 on the cover of its Gothic Romances magazine (issue 2 of the 3-issue series of magazines containing short gothic tales by recognizable authors such as Dorothy Eden, Virginia Coffman, and many others). The larger art on the magazine cover loses a lot of the shadows from the top and left side, but it does give us a better look at young Davina's face - a face that very much resembles that of Nancy Barrett, the actress who played Carolyn Stoddard in the gothic television drama, Dark Shadows. Makes one wonder if the author perhaps used Ms. Barrett as a model for this cover art.
Having read this book, my search now begins for Evelyn Berckman's other gothic novels...
RATING: 9 peer robes of red velvet out of 10 for a gothic tale of an innocent child, a vile father, an evil servant, and a strong-willed governess ... and a god-forsaken house filled with secrets and broken dreams.