“Horrer Howce” was first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1956. You can read it on Archive.org. It is story #13 of 22 for The Best SF Stories of 1956 group read. Asimov and Greenberg picked “Horrer Howce” for The Great SF Stories #18 (1956) and it was also included in Galaxy: Thirty Years of Innovative Science Fiction, which was our Group Read #9. You can read our original discussion thread here.

I know nothing about Margaret St. Clair. Except for reading “Horrer Howce” before in the Galaxy anthology, I can’t recall reading any of her other stories. Wikipedia reports she wrote over 130 fantasy and science fiction stories, and ISFDB,org lists quite a few. She only has two books and five stories cited in CSF, with none getting more than two citations. I once owned a copy of this Ace Double, but I got it for the Philip K. Dick story. St. Clair has been reprinted in a several anthologies devoted to rediscovering women science fiction writers, such as The Future is Female! edited Lisa Yaszek, which I own, but haven’t read.

Unfortunately, I didn’t think much of “Horrer Howce.” The story is about a man named Freeman who tries to sell exhibits to amusement parks featuring haunted houses. He’s having trouble selling his exhibits because they drive his potential clients mad with fear, or even kills them. At first, I thought this might be an oddball fantasy like those Shirley Jackson wrote, but “Horrer Howce” appears to have a science fictional basis. Although, at one point, Freeman consults books like a conjurer. Even after two readings, I was never sure if Freeman was opening gateways to other dimensions or using magic to open fantasy portals. In either sense, I didn’t think such gateway/portals were suitable for amusement parks. The early ones were just scary dark holes, but Freeman expected visitors to enter the world of the Vooms, and it was much too big to be a fake thrill ride.

I can see where “Horrer Howce” has a certain appeal but just not to me. I thought it reasonably good enough for a magazine story, but I find it disappointing for a best of the year or retrospective anthology. My friend Mike summed it up nicely in an email:

Margaret St. Clair's "Horrer Howce" is an effective horror story. It invokes feelings of fear, dread, and dismay. 

We shouldn't ask "Horrer Howce" to be anything more. Examining the characters and plot seems like a fool's errand. We enjoy the creepiness of the Vooms and are left wishing that we could see Freeman's future tableau: A Horrer Howce for the Voom.

I didn’t feel fear, dread, or dismay. I could see how St. Clair worked to create those responses, but her efforts seemed too basic or simple to me. Because of the horror angle, it was out of place in Galaxy — at least for me. I thought it would have been more suited for F&SF, Fantastic, or Fantastic Universe.

I should give Margaret St. Clair another chance. Does anyone know of a better story of hers to recommend?

James Wallace Harris, 12/26/23

3 thoughts on ““Horrer Howce” by Margaret St. Clair

  1. The St. Clair stories that I remember best are both humorous. “Stawdust” (sic) tells how the universe was conquered by stuffed shirts, and “Short in the Chest” is about a future in which everything has been regimented including sex, except for the demented robot alluded to in the title. The collection of hers that has both in it is THE HOLE IN THE MOON. Generally I like her attitude but don’t find most of her stories especially memorable.

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  2. I will second the recommendation for St. Clair’s ‘Short in the Chest’–an excellent story that amusingly deals with the high anxiety around sex and sexuality in the 1950s by way of its extrapolations.

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  3. I’ll take note of those recommendations above, as I don’t think I’ve read either “Sawdust” or “Short in the Chest”. I have not read Margaret St. Clair/Idris Seabright exhaustively, but my favorites include: “The Wines of Earth”, a 1957 short story, 3.9/5, or “Great”; “Prott”, a 1953 short story, 3.8/5, or “Great”; “Brightness Falls from the Air”, a 1951 short story, 4.1/5, or “Superlative”; “Change the Sky”, a 1955 short story, 3.8/5, or “Great”. I also love Horrer Howce”, but we can agree to disagree on that. I love the Voom.

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