The Colony
By Paul Lalley
1979 Carlyle
Paperback, 221 pages
Carlyle was porn publisher
Bee-Line’s imprint for publishing other genres. They had had some success with
Brian McNaughton’s Satan series so you’d think they would have had a lot of
horror novels made to order but there aren’t many. This nature-strikes-back
monsterpiece is one of the few I can find, and finding it (affordable, or at
all) hasn’t been easy. Reading it certainly was easy.
The book starts right off with a
bang. The South American Fire Ant has served up a few corpses in a small
Mississippi town. Luckily, they have Mark West of the Crop and Pest Commission
and an able-bodied sheriff in the person of Web Maddox. Together, these two try
to wrap their brains around how these foreign insects have come to set up
colonies in their sleepy town. A visiting carnival is attacked just pages after
it is mentioned, which made me feel pretty darn good about the Pediatric
Hospital mentioned on page 9!
The attacks are suitably
gruesome and the first third of the book is riddled with envenomated and chewed
up humans. The middle section slows down a bit so we can get some back story on
our heroes and the other characters involved in the admittedly paper-thin plot.
Mark and Web form a good friendship and soon become a good buddy team. Women?
Not much to see here, folks. Mark is seeing his secretary but not seriously and
he has an ex-wife. That’s pretty much the only estrogen in the book.
Still, reading this one is a
hoot. Lalley, whoever he might be, is no Shakespeare and the text is filled
with monstrous mistakes: misspellings, missing words, improper or missing
punctuation. It only adds to the charm. (I’m sure Bee-Lines porn books were
similarly error-ridden.) Funny enough, Mark West’s ex-wife is a proofreader!!
I commented to my own wife that the ex-Mrs. West should have worked on this book!
Unlike McNaughton’s Satan’s
Love Child published by Carlyle in 1977, it appears that Lalley wasn’t
asked to sex-up the narrative. It is quite chaste, in fact, unless you count
the town’s name, which is Beaverton. But we won’t count that, OK? This book,
warts and all, is an extremely fun read and it blows the shit out of Peter
Tremain’s tepid Ants (Sphere, 1979).