By Whitley Strieber
1979 Bantam Books
Paperback, 275 pages
This is another one of those
classic horror books that I’ve seen the movie of, but I never got around to
reading. I took the bait recently when I found two different copies in
thrift stores. I bought them both, if only to assure myself that I had to read
it. Well, I did and I’m glad. It is pretty great.
Two cops are found mutilated in
a remote autobody yard in New York. The city’s finest homicide detectives are
put on the case; George Wilson, an older, slovenly, misogynistic, racist
curmudgeon who makes up for his lack of social skills with a keen detective’s
eye, and Becky Neff, a young but proven cop. This odd couple has the unenvious
job of trying to figure out who or what killed these two. The bodies
look eaten. There are paw prints. Dogs? Could there have been wolves?
Werewolves?
The bodies keep piling up and
the duo are starting to lean towards the latter, even though they know such
things don’t exist. But something is out there, and they are as smart as man,
stealthy and incredibly fast. Ferguson, a doctor at the Museum of Natural
History is starting to believe them. He has extrapolated what they might look
like from a plaster cast of a pawprint. The Medical Examiner is also on board.
But how could it be?
Strieber’s werewolf history
works for me here. These canids have been around for a long time and yes, the
werewolf legends probably derived from them. But they are so stealthy, and they
cover their tracks so well that they have gone almost unnoticed for thousands
of years. Passages of the book are told from the Wolfen’s point of view, so we understand
a lot about their intelligence and the laws of the pack. I buy it implicitly.
This species is so smart, they think of wolves as vacant and dumb. And they
know that they have to find and remove the two detectives who could reveal
their secret.
Everybody has an opinion on
older books and this one gets slammed for being misogynistic. Yes, Wilson
certainly is. He’s an old-fashioned dope, but Neff is such a strong and capable
character that to me, she erases any negativity that the reader might
(incorrectly) surmise. In fact, not mentioned in any of the dozens of online reviews
that I compared my own thoughts to, is that Wilson and Neff’s relationship
changes and corresponds with that of the leaders of the Wolfen pack that is
terrorizing New York. (Though Wilson’s revelation of his romantic love for his
partner is unneeded.)
The book blows the movie away.
The movie could never touch on the inner working of the Wolfen mind, nor could
it have survived with the police procedural layout of the book. The film (Michael
Wadleigh, 1981) added in extraneous bullshit that takes the souls of the Wolfen
away, and that’s one of the book’s most relevant aspects. Good movie, excellent
book.







