Keefauver, John D. Research into Marginal Living: The Selected Stories of John D. Keefauver. Edited by Scott Nicolay. Lethe Press, 2021.
Research into Marginal Living at the ISFdb
Research into Marginal Living at Goodreads
Overall Rating: TBD/10
A dozen years ago (in 2013), I pleaded for the publication of a collection of stories by John Keefauver. Like many, I'd read a handful of his stories in various anthologies, and quickly realized that there are enough gems in the writer's oeuvre to produce even a slim collection. In August 2017, I received an email from author/editor Scott Nicolay, informing me that he was working with Mr. Keefauver's estate to bring his novel Tormented Virgin back in print the following year, along with a collection of his stories. Exciting news, but I did not receive a follow-up, and as I was busy with a one year-old daughter, I pretty much forgot about it.
Then in October 2021, someone posted on my review of Keefauver's "The Tree" that Nicolay was preparing a collection that should be out in early 2022. A quick search indicated that the book had been released the previous month.
In September 2021, Lethe Press released the first, long overdue, collection of stories by John Keefauver, titled Research into Marginal Living: The Selected Stories of John D. Keefauver. Few books have gotten me this excited, and of course I (eventually) ordered a copy.
I am only partway through, but decided to begin posting reviews of the stories as I read. So far the collection is excellent. Not only does it contain thirty short stories (selected from the allegedly 796 that he published during his lifetime), it has two very good introductions (one by Nicolay and another Joe Lansdale, who had included a couple of Keefauver's stories in his anthologies). In addition, Nicolay provides notes following each story that includes fascinating details about the stories and about Keefauver, hinting at the story-selling process over a handful of decades.
This collection is highly recommended, and you can purchase a copy at the Lethe Press website, where it is currently on sale for a mere $15! Please go support the project.
Oh Well What the Hell 7/10
Playboy, November 1958
A surprisingly enjoyable poem based on Lawrence Ferlinghetti's "A Coney Island of the Mind." Keefauver penned this homage months (or weeks) after the publication of Ferlinghetti's book. Throughout his career Keefauver would write other homages and parodies, showing a penchant for literary mimicry. We will see other kinds of mimicry in the collection, with stories produced for the Pan Horror Stories series, and with stories touching on a vast variety of styles. The best stories, though, are the ones he developed himself, lending his own Keefauverian touch.
The Daring Old Maid on the Flying Trapeze 7/10
Big Table #2, Summer 1959
This story emulates the work of the popular Beat writers of the time. The story follows the final hours of a former trapeze artist as she struggles down on her luck. While I am not an admirer of the Beat style, this story snuck up on me and surprised me with its bittersweet narrative. The title reflects the William Saroyan 1934 short story, "The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze."
Kali 6/10
The Fifth Pan Book of Horror Stories, Herbert van Thal, ed., London: Pan, 1964
... more to come ...