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    Image of the Beast / Blown


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      UNSPEAKABLE ACTS …

      After viewing his partner's mutilation in a home

      movie, a horrified private detective pursues

      leads in the most disgusting case of his career.

      His investigation plunges him into a nightmare

      of sexual brutality and supernatural bestiality.

      It is a journey he—and you—will never forget.

      Image of the Beast and Blown are two under-

      ground classics that tell this fantastic story

      complete in one volume. They are now avail-

      able for the first time in ten years.

      With a Foreword by Theodore Sturgeon

      PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER

      IMAGE

      OF THE

      BEAST

      FOREWORD BY THEODORE STURGEON

      PLAYBOY PRESS

      PAPERBACKS

      For Forrest J. Ackerman,

      the Scarlet Pimpernel of fantasy

      IMAGE OF THE BEAST and BLOWN

      Copyright © 1968, 1969 by Philip Jose Farmer

      Cover illustration by Enric: Copyright © 1979 by Playboy

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored

      in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by an electronic,

      mechanical, photocopying, recording means or otherwise without

      prior written permission of the author.

      Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada by

      Playboy Press, Chicago, Illinois. Printed in the United States of

      America. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 79-53029.

      Reprinted by arrangement with Scott Meredith Literary Agency.

      Books are available at quantity discounts for promotional and in-

      dustrial use. For further information, write our sales promotion

      agency: Ventura Associates, 40 East 49th Street, New York, New

      York 10017.

      ISBN: 0-872-16557-4

      First Playboy Press printing October 1979.

      Foreword

      Theodore Sturgeon

      "I hear you're writing pornography now."

      Thus spake one of the acquaintances of Philip José

      Farmer recently. The question seems simple and straight-

      forward. It was, obviously, asked by a man who honestly

      felt he could define his own terms, and probably that the

      terms he used were so self-evident that they didn't need

      defining.

      There is a vast number of honestly simple-minded

      people who can, without hesitation, define

      pornography science fiction

      God communism

      right freedom

      evil honorable peace

      liberty obscenity

      law and order love

      and think, and act, and legislate, and sometimes burn,

      jail, and kill on the basis of their definitions. These are

      the Labellers, and they are without exception the most

      lethal and destructive force ever faced by any species on

      this or any other planet, and I shall tell you clearly and

      simply why.

      Simple truth is hard to come by. Virtually everything

      which looks like the truth is subject to question and

      modification. "Water runs downhill." At what tempera-

      ture? Where—in an Apollo capsule, for example, or in the

      input end of a siphon? "Skirts are for girls." Would you

      like to face up to a batallion of the kilted Black Watch

      or a company of the hardbitten Greek evzones? (They

      even have lace on their skirts.) "E=MC2," said that

      burnished deity of the relative, Albert Einstein, "may

      after all be a local phenomenon."

      The lethal destructiveness inherent in Labelling lies

      in the fact that the Labeller, without exception, over-

      looks the most basic of all characteristic of everything

      in the universe—passage: that is to say, flux and change.

      If he stops and thinks (which is not his habit) the La-

      beller must concede that rocks change, and mountains;

      that the planets change, and the stars, and that they have

      not stopped because of the purely local and most minor

      phenomenon that he happens to be placing a Label on in

      this place at this point in time.

      Passage is more evident in what we call life than in

      any other area. It is not enough to say that living things

      change; one must go further and say that life is change.

      That which does not change is abhorrent to the most

      basic laws of the universe; that which does not change

      is not alive; and in the presence of that which does not

      change, life cannot exist.

      This is why the Labeller is lethal. He is the dead

      hand. His' is the command, Stop! He is death's friend,

      life's enemy. He does not want, he cannot face, things

      as they really are—moving, flowing, changing; he wants

      them to stop.

      Why?

      I think it's because of a perfectly normal desire for se-

      curity. He wants to feel safe. He does not know that he

      has mistaken stasis for stability. If only everything

      would stop, if only today and tomorrow would be just

      like yesterday (he never looks really carefully at yester-

      day, you understand, so he thinks everything was

      motionless and peaceful and law-abiding yesterday,

      which of course it wasn't) he could really feel safe. He

      doesn't realize that he has become anti-life and pro-death

      —that what he is actually about is a form of suicide,

      for himself and for his species. He doesn't realize that

      in the sanctuary of the church of his choice, any given

      Sunday (or Saturday) morning, he will see respectable

      matrons dressed in clothes which would have been for-

      bidden, not only on the streets, but on the beaches,

      within the memory of the older parishioners. He has

      forgotten that it was only a few short years ago that

      something close to cultural shock swept through our

      species because Clark Gable, as Rhett Butler, said

      "Damn" in a movie. He overlooks all evidence, all

      truth, and he Labels; and he is absolutely deadly, so

      watch out for him.

      Philip José Farmer is a superb writer and in every

      sense a good man, who seems to have been born with the

      knowledge that the truth—the real truth—is to be sought

      with the devotion of those who sought the Holy Grail,

      and to be faced openly, even when it turned out to be

      something that he and the rest of us would much rather

      it wasn't. Ever since (in 1952) he exploded into science

      fiction with an extraordinary novelette called The Lovers,

      he has continued to call it what it is, show it as he finds

      it. The book you hold in your hands is a perfect case in

      point. The Labellers will be gone from here long about

      page 5, crying "Stop!" (A word which of all words is

      most against God.) A handful of poor tilted souls, whom

      the Labellers have frustrated and perverted, will drool

      wetly all the way through, skipping all the living con-

      nective tissue and getting their jollies out of context.

      (Some of these will th
    ereafter destructively Label the

      book, to Stop anyone else from getting any.) The rest of

      you will take these pages for what they are: truths (for

      many of these things are truly within us all, whether

      you find that a pleasant truth or not) and the seeking

      for truth; the symbols and analogs of truth and of the

      quest for truth—and a hell of a good story.

      After I had read The Image of the Beast, and be-

      fore I wrote these comments, I called Phil Farmer for

      one clarification. In all my reading and researching,

      and in all my hardly impoverished imaginings, I have

      never run across an image like the one concerning "the

      most beautiful woman in the world" and the long, glis-

      tening thing, with a golf-ball-sized head complete with

      a face and a little beard, which emerged from her womb

      and entered her throat. Aside from the amazement

      and shock which it evokes, it filled me with wonder,

      for it is unique, and was, to me, without literary or

      psychopathological referents. They are, he tells me, Joan

      of Arc and the famous/infamous Gilles de Rais (which

      in itself is an odd coupling!), and he went on to tell

      me that they are part of a far larger symbolic structure,

      to be elucidated in two more books. This is why IMAGE

      has the subtitle-note An exorcism: Ritual I. Therefore,

      like everything else Farmer has written, IMAGE is fable.

      That is to say, like all of Aesop and a lot of Shake-

      speare, the story is larger than the narrative—the play

      means more than the events described. Calculated dis-

      comfort is a well-known path to truth. The lotus position

      is at first an agony. A fast of forty days and

      nights is only for the dedicated, and while it might lead

      to a meeting with Satan, it is recorded somewhere that

      Satan can thereupon be defeated. I take Farmer's

      structured shock accordingly, and go with it, and eagerly

      await the completion of his pattern.

      For you can't keep a good man down, friends and

      Labellers—neither his goodness nor his manhood.

      —Theodore Sturgeon

      1

      GREEN MILK CURDLED.

      Smoke rose to the light, and smoke and light fused to

      become green milk. The milk fissioned to become smoke

      and darkness above. As below.

      Smog was outside, and smog was inside.

      Green and sour.

      The green and sour odor and taste came not only from

      the smog, which had forced its tendrils into the air-

      conditioned building, nor from the tobacco plumes in the

      room. It came from memory of what he had seen that

      morning and anticipation of what he would see within

      the next few minutes.

      The film room of the Los Angeles Police Department

      was darker than Herald Childe had ever seen it. The

      beam of light from the projection booth usually tended

      to make gray what otherwise would have been black.

      But the cigar and cigarette smoke, the smog, and the

      mood of the viewers, blackened everything. Even the

      silver light from the screen seemed to pull light in in-

      stead of casting it back at the viewers.

      Where the beam overhead struck the tobacco fumes,

      green milk formed and curdled and soured. So thought

      Herald Childe. The image was unforced. The worst smog

      in history was smothering Los Angeles and Orange coun-

      ties. Not a mouse of a wind had stirred for a day and a

      night and a day and a night. On the third day, it seemed

      that this condition might go on and on.

      The smog. He could now forget the smog.

      Spread-eagled on the screen was his partner (possibly

      ex-partner). The wine-red draperies behind him glowed,

      and Matthew Colben's face, normally as red as Chianti

      half-diluted with water, was now the color of a trans-

      parent plastic bag bulging with wine.

      The camera swung away to show the rest of his

      body and some of the room. He was flat on his back and

      nude. His arms were strapped down beside him and

      his legs, also strapped down, formed a V. His penis

      lolled across his left thigh like a fat drunken worm.

      The table must have been made for just this purpose

      of tying down men with their legs separated so others

      could walk in between the legs.

      There was only the Y-shaped wooden table, the thick

      wine-red carpet, and the wine-red draperies. The camera

      swept around to show the circle of draperies and then

      turned back and swooped up to show the full form of

      Matthew Colben as seen by a fly on the ceiling. Col-

      ben's head was on a dark pillow. He looked straight up

      at the camera and smiled sillily. He did not seem to care

      that he was bound and helpless.

      The previous scenes had shown why he did not care

      and had demonstrated how Colben had progressed,

      through conditioning, from impotent fear to rigid antici-

      pation.

      Childe, having seen the complete film once, felt his

      entrails slip about each other and knot each other and,

      their tails coiled around his backbone, pull until they

      were choking each other.

      Colben grinned, and Childe murmured, "You fool!

      You poor fucking fool!"

      The man in the seat on Childe's right shifted and said,

      "What'd you say?"

      "Nothing, Commissioner."

      But his penis felt as if it were being sucked back up

      into his belly and drawing his testicles after it.

      The draperies opened, and the camera moved in to

      show a huge black-rimmed, long-lashed, dark-blue eye.

      Then it moved down along a straight narrow nose and

      broad, full, and bright red lips. A pink-red tongue slipped

      out between unnaturally white and even teeth, shot back

      and forth a few times, dropped a bead of saliva on

      the chin, and then disappeared.

      The camera moved back, the draperies were thrust

      open, and a woman entered. Her black glossy

      hair was combed straight back and fell to her waist.

      Her face was garish with beauty patches, rouge, powder,

      green and red and black and azure paint around the

      eyes and a curl of powder-blue down her cheeks, arti-

      ficial eyelashes, and a tiny golden nose-ring. A green

      robe, tied at her neck and waist, was so thin that she

      might as well have been naked. Despite which, she untied

      the cords about the neck and waist and slid the robe off

      and showed that she could be even more naked.

      The camera moved downward and closer. The hollow

      at the base of the neck was deep and the bones beneath

      hinted at exquisiteness.

      . The breasts were full but not

      large, slightly conical and up-tilted, with narrow and

      long, almost sharp, nipples. The breasts were hung upon

      a large rib cage. The belly sank inward; she was skinny

      about the hips, the bones stuck out just a little. The cam-

      era went round, or she pivoted—Childe could not tell

      which because the camera was so close to her and he

      had no reference point. Her buttocks were like huge un-

      shelled soft-b
    oiled eggs.

      The camera traveled around her, showing the narrow

      waist and ovoid hips and then turned so that it was look-

      ing up toward the ceiling—which was covered with a

      drape-like material the color of a broken blood-vessel

      in a drunkard's eye. The camera glanced up her white

      thigh; light was cast into the hollow between the legs—

      she must have spread her legs then—and there was the

      little brown eye of the anus and the edge of the mouth

      of her vagina. The hairs were yellow, which meant that

      the woman had either dyed her head hairs or her pubic

      hairs.

      The camera, still pointing upward, passed between her

      legs—which looked like the colossal limbs of a statue now

      —and then traveled slowly upward. It straightened out

      as it rose and was looking directly at her pubes. These

      were partly covered by a triangular cloth which was taped

      on. Childe did not know why. Modesty certainly was not

      the reason.

      He had seen this shot before, but he braced himself.

      The first time, he—in common with the others in the

      room—had jumped and some had sworn and one had

      yelled.

      The cloth was tight against the genitals, and a shift in

      angle of lighting suddenly revealed that the cloth was

      semitransparent. The hairs formed a dark triangle, and

      the slit took in the cloth enough to show that the cloth

      was tight against the slit.

      Abruptly, and Childe jumped again even though he

      knew what was coming, the cloth sank in more deeply,

      as if something inside the vagina had spread the lips open.

      Then something bulged against the cloth, something that

      could only have come from within the woman. It thrust

      the cloth up; the cloth shook as if a tiny fist or head

      were beating against it, and then the bulge sank back,

     


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