“On a split of land cut off by the Gulf, three Victorian summer houses stand against the encroaching sand. Two of the houses at Beldame are still used. The third house, filling with sand, is empty...except for the vicious horror which is shaping nightmares from the nothingness that hangs in the dank, fetid air. The McCrays and Savages, two fine Mobile families allied by marriage, have been coming to Beldame for years. This summer, with a terrible funeral behind them and a messy divorce coming up, even Luker McCray and little India down from New York are looking forward to being alone at Beldame. But they won't be alone. For something there, something they don't like to think about, is thinking about them...and about all the ways to make them die.”
The oppressive heat of the Beldame and the creepy houses –especially that third one being consumed by sand- that exists on a small strip of land that turns into an island during high tide is the setting for this Southern Gothic tale from a nearly forgotten writer. As I mentioned in my reviews of his lighter fiction (the Jack and Susan series), McDowell was a prolific writer in the 1980s, releasing a number of horror tales that came and went (most likely due to the fact that this era was full of them) and none were ever adapted. Yet beyond his helping bring the original Beetlejuice and A Nightmare Before Christmas to the screen, and having a life cut short due to AIDS, his work in the horror genre rises above the usual template of the time period. Here, in The Elementals, we get tale that takes some the rudiments of the haunted house genre and unrolls a story that, while slow at times, none the less builds to an exciting conclusion.
In Michael Rowe’s Introduction, he spills some secrets about two the characters that now make sense after I’ve finished book. Not sure if it’s actually a spoiler, but I’m glad I did not read that part for starting the book. But what I’ve read of McDowell, I’m sort of glad I’m finding his fiction now (and thanks to the small imprint Valancourt Books, because it’s possible these works would’ve vanished forever without them), as an adult because I can get a fuller understanding of what he was doing here.
I’ve gotten other books by him now to read (some horror, some detective fiction, some parodies of Sidney Sheldon), and will probably get more over the coming months. He’s hard to find used, and what is out there is expensive, but I think he’s worth it. I mean, in his short 49 years, he wrote multiple books in multiple genres and presented them each in a unique and original way.
The Elementals is worthy to seek out.




