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Unambiguous and novel visions of good and evil

Eleanor Bourg Nicholson’s historical horror series centering on a diminutive, pun-loving Dominican friar and vampire slayer is unique for a genre too often marred by romanticized amorality.

(Images: Ignatius Press and Chrism Press)

The trend of retelling old stories—in movies, books, and graphic novels—with the villains recast as misunderstood good guys and monsters as outcasts oppressed by a corrupt and hypocritical society continues unabated. Vampires, werewolves, witches, zombies, orcs, and name-brand villains like Cruella de Vil and the Wicked Witch of the West have all gotten this treatment. Even when evil is not being called good and good evil, in the now-rare event of a story treating monsters as monsters (like last year’s Nosferatu), the stories seldom match their depiction of evil with a more powerful, more appealing depiction of goodness.

Mercifully, there are exceptions. And none are better than Eleanor Bourg Nicholson’s historical horror series centering on Father Thomas Edmund Gilroy, a diminutive, pun-loving Dominican friar—and vampire slayer.

The first novel, published by Ignatius Press in 2018, is A Bloody Habit. Set in London during the final months of Queen Victoria’s reign, the novel follows a callow, striving young lawyer named John Kemp. After Kemp encounters terrifying, inexplicable violence on a train journey across Europe, he finds himself increasingly entangled with a world of ancient but hidden dangers centered on the arrival of a foreign nobleman.

Kemp and the Londoners of A Bloody Habit have been ill-prepared by post-Enlightenment modernity to deal with something like vampirism. Well-educated and polite, with a quintessentially Victorian agnosticism and casual anti-Catholic attitude, Kemp often refuses to acknowledge the evidence of his own eyes—seemingly the simplest act of empiricism. He takes some convincing, not just through the spreading terror wrought by the villain but through the slow, patient persuasion of Fr Thomas Edmund.

Critically, while unflinchingly portraying the story’s vampire as cruelly and gruesomely predatory, Nicholson offers a strong, clear, and convincing vision of what is at stake. Kemp’s beloved Esther, one of the objects of the villain’s attention, embodies Kemp’s hopes for love, success, and normal family life, and through Kemp’s friendships and connections, the reader comes to understand that vampirism threatens all of society. Kemp is, after all, a lawyer, working at the coalface of civilization.

But the strongest aspect of Nicholson’s vision of goodness is Fr. Thomas Edmund himself. Small, unassuming, overfond of puns and wordplay, and wearing the clerical garb that so often aroused suspicion or dismissal in Britain, he proves an easy character to scoff at but not an easy one to discourage or defeat. He has steel in him, and real physical courage disproportionate to his appearance. This, by example, works upon Kemp, and although Kemp is hardly yet a Christian by the end of A Bloody Habit, he has begun to change.

Brother Wolf takes place a few years later and concerns Athene Howard, the daughter of an American academic famous for using comparative literature and psychology to debunk religion. While sailing to Europe, Athene falls in with a strange trio she meets aboard ship—a recusant English nobleman, a nun, and the nun’s ward, a young woman with clairvoyant powers. The young woman is also a twin, and as Athene gets to know her better, she learns that this group is on a secret quest to find her twin brother, a Franciscan tormented by another supernatural evil—lycanthropy. He is a werewolf.

Where A Bloody Habit conveys the way sin undermines law and society, Brother Wolf explores the ways in which an even more fundamental building block—the family—can be turned toward evil. Unable to create, as so many great writers have pointed out, Satan corrupts. Not only does Athene begin the novel under the sway of her arrogant, resentful father, but the twin brother at the heart of the story has, through an evil he cannot shake off, become a danger to those he loves.

Neither novel offers an easy resolution—Father Thomas Edmund makes it clear that the effects of the fall and our own sin are not quickly undone—but both show clearly that goodness is real and more powerful than evil, even habitual, predatory evil.

In Wake of Malice, just published last fall, a sensationalist London newspaper dispatches Hugh Buckley, an Irish reporter, to his homeland to report on alleged embezzlement by the Jesuit priest in a quaint rural village. By the time he and Freddie Jones, his press photographer and best friend, arrive in Doolin, the situation has already become more serious. The priest’s chief accuser, a local bigwig and Church of Ireland member, has been murdered. The priest may be the obvious suspect, but he has an alibi, a cautious defender in Fr. Thomas Edmund, and no one can account for the most gruesome aspect of the crime—in addition to having his throat cut, the victim was partially devoured.

Wake of Malice has perhaps the largest cast and most intricately imagined setting of the series so far, which is fitting for a story so concerned with friendship and community. In the same way that good friendships strengthen the members and equip them for virtue—iron sharpening iron—bad relationships corrupt, and those who isolate themselves become most dangerous of all. Hugh and Freddie and Father Thomas Edmund and the accused, Father Michael Walsh, are set against the murder victim’s daughters, dangerous characters in the local village, and the old local ladies who are trying to revive pagan Celtic folklore and celebrate it in the church.

Who or what is responsible for the murders? Is it just local politics? A relict pagan cult? Or is it something far older that emerges from the caves beneath the moors at night?

Those who enjoy Gothic atmosphere—gaslit streets, full moons, windswept moorlands, big dark houses, old families with terrible secrets—will find something to love in all three novels. Nicholson creates and maintains palpably tense and moody settings, and the mysteries at the heart of each story unfold with maximum dread and suspense. That the stories take place in painstakingly realized historical periods provides yet another pleasure.

But the stories prove especially powerful because of the well-drawn, lifelike, and likable characters with which Nicholson has peopled them. Father Thomas Edmund, the only character to recur in all three books, is the best example, but each has a strong cast, all of whom have their own goals and worldviews, all of which clash and compete. This is compelling in all three novels, not only because pitting rival philosophies against each other works so well in horror fiction but because Nicholson has the rare gift of being able to make goodness attractive.

And, against the prevailing force of modern storytelling, Nicholson refuses to romanticize evil. The vampires, werewolves, and other monsters in her novels are evil—full stop. But all the characters facing them are fallen, too, and must reckon with evils they at first refuse to see and seek goodness beyond themselves if they are to defeat it.

The truth about sin and evil may shine through very occasionally from Hollywood or in modern fiction, but rarely, if ever, can the true nature of goodness and the workings of grace be portrayed as strongly and clearly. Nicholson, in three novels now, has accomplished both.

We should hope for a return to more clear-sighted, unambiguous visions of evil from pop culture.

But in the meantime, we should look forward just as much to the next Father Thomas Edmund Gilroy adventure.

A Bloody Habit: A Novel
Ignatius Press, 2018
Paperback, 440 pages

Brother Wolf: A Novel
Chrism Press, 2021
Paperback, 352 pages

Wake of Malice: A Novel
Chrism Press, 2024
Paperback, 300 pages


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About Jordan M. Poss 1 Article
Jordan M. Poss is a historian and novelist. A native of Georgia and an alumnus of Clemson University, he currently teaches at Piedmont Technical College in South Carolina, where he lives with his wife and children and writes historical fiction in his spare time.

2 Comments

  1. I’ll definitely order these books. Thanks for the article!

    I love the old horror movies (big fan of Svengoolie’s show!), and I was a young teenager when a TV soap opera called “Dark Shadows” attracted millions of fans, especially children and teens who would run home from school so that they could watch the latest exploits of Barnabas Collins, a 175 year-old “reluctant” vampire who hated being a vampire but couldn’t resist his craving for blood (and beautiful young women!). I think this might be one of the earliest examples of trying to show the “goodness” in someone very “bad”.

    Much of the show involved Barnabas trying to find ways to become a human being again, which tells us that he really is a good man if he wasn’t cursed with vampirism (by a jealous witch, Angelique, who was in love with him and resented his interest in a young ingenue, Josette, in case you don’t know the story).

    Dr. Julia Hoffman was a hematologist who was devoted to her work and had no interest in romance–until she got involved in attempting to develop a cure for Barnabas’ condition and in the process, fell in love with him, with predictable results–he ignored her and continued pursuing the younger beauties!

    Much of the time, Barnabas was a hero and passed himself off as a long-lost “cousin from England” and helped his modern family defeat various evils, but there were plenty of those times when he fell off the “goodness wagon” and demonstrated his evil side biting the throats of lovely village girls, which delighted all of us young teens and many children as well. After all, he had to eat to survive!

    At one point in the show, another monster who wanted to be good was introduced. Quentin Collins was a young man who was cursed by a gypsy to become a murderous werewolf when the moon was full (shades of Larry Talbot!), but he wanted to be rid of the curse and be fully human again.

    There were other “evil” people in the show, and interestingly, at some point, all of them expressed a desire to be free of their evil side. Sounds like many of us, doesn’t it? And I think that’s what made the show appealing and has KEPT it appealing for over 50 years now–the Dark Shadows conventions still attract a large number of fans from around the world.

    Once, Jonathan Frid, the unlikely 45 year-old unknown actor who portrayed Barnabas on Dark Shadows, was doing a fan appearance/autograph line in a store, and a little girl who was in line to see him was crying and screaming. Mr. Frid was really worried that there would be a bad scene, but when the fearful little girl got to the front of the line, she ran up to him, jumped into his lap, and said, “I love you, Barnabas!”

    Frid handled it well–in real life, Jonathan Frid was a gentle man who had worked in obscurity as a Shakespearean actor all his life and had a hard time accepting that he was now a teen idol featured in Tiger Beat Magazine! He was also gay, which back then (late 1960s, early 1970s) had to be kept a secret, and many of his biographers believe that he parlayed the hiding of his gayness into his role of Barnabas, who kept his “tragic” vampire condition a secret from everyone except Dr. Hoffman and his manservant, the faithful and long-suffering Willie Loomis (engagingly played by John Karlen, a wonderful character actor who eventually won an Emmy for his portrayal of Harvey Lacey in “Cagney and Lacey”).

    I personally believe that a lot of these “good monster” plotlines in various media started as a result of the character of Barnabas Collins, although after reading Bram Stoker’s novel, Dracula, almost every year, I can attest that there are several places in the novel when the monster Dracula speaks of his past with obvious longing to be
    “human” again, and when he is finally “staked”, there is a look of peace and rest on his face.

    I think plotlines featuring a monster who is trying to be “good” are helpful to many of us who struggle with besetting sins involving a “craving” for something (food, alcohol, smokes, drugs, sex, violence, money, gossip, power, etc.). They teach us that the battle to be a saint will be worth it in the end when Jesus runs up to us and says, “I love you!”

  2. Today sin runs rampant. Excerpt: (and beautiful young women!). Reminds me of a prominent politician gloating with a serial sexual predator viewing young women at a party. That politician was Donald Trump. His evil compatriot was the monster violator of innocent young women, Jeffery Epstein. Epstein committed suicide and Trump assumed the White House. Does that sin continue to manifest itself today?

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