A critical success on both sides of the Atlantic, this darkly imaginative novel from Scottish author James Robertson takes a tantalizing trip into the spiritual by way of a haunting paranormal mystery. When Reverend Gideon Mack, a good minister despite his atheism, tumbles into a deep ravine called the Black Jaws, he is presumed dead. Three days later, however, he emerges bruised but alive—and insistent that his rescuer was Satan himself. Against the background of an incredulous world, Mack’s disturbing odyssey and the tortuous life that led to it create a mesmerizing meditation on faith, mortality, and the power of the unknown.
When I was a child I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: yet I was
already, in so many ways, the man I would become. I think back on how cold I
was, even then. It is hard to recall, now that I burn with this dry, feverish
fire, but cold I certainly was. There was ice built around my heart, years of
it. How could it have been otherwise? The manse at Ochtermill saw to that.
I have walked and run through this world pretending
emotions rather than feeling them. Oh, I could feel pain, physical pain, but I
had to imagine joy, sorrow, anger. As for love, I didn't know what it meant.
But I learned early to keep myself well disguised. To the world at large I was
just Gideon Mack, a dutiful wee boy growing in the shadow of his father and of
the Kirk.
As that wee boy I was taught that, solitary
though I might be, I was never alone. Always there was one who walked beside
me. I could not see him, but he was there, constant at my side. I wanted to
know him, to love and be loved by him, but he did not reveal himself. He
frightened me. I had neither the courage to reject him nor the capacity to
embrace him.
This is the hard lesson of my life: love is not
in us from the beginning, like an instinct; love is no more original to human
beings than sin. Like sin, it has to be learned.
Then I put away childish things, and for years I
thought I saw with the clarity of reason. I did not believe in anything I could
not see. I mocked at shadows and sprites. That constant companion was not there
at all: I did not believe in him, and he did not reveal himself to me. Yet,
through circumstances and through choice, I was to become his servant, a
minister of religion. How ironic this is, and yet how natural, as if the path
were laid out for me from birth, and though I wandered a little from it,
distracted or deluded here and there, yet I was always bound to return to it
again.
And all the while this fire was burning deep
inside me. I kept it battened down, the door of the furnace tightly shut,
because that seemed necessary in order to through life. I never savoured life
for what it was: I only wanted to get to the next stage of it. I wish now I'd
taken a little more time, but it is too late for such regrets. I was like the
child in the cinema whose chief anticipation lies not in the film but in
wondering what he will do after it is over; I was the reader who hurries
through a 500page novel not to see what will happen but simply to get to the
end. And now, despite everything, I am there, and for this I must thank that
other companion, in whom also I did not believe, but who has shown me a way
through the shadows and beyond the shadows.
I have not preached for weeks, yet I am full of
texts. If I am a prophet then I have yet to be heard. If I am Jonah, then the
fish has vomited me out but nobody believes where I have been: nobody except
the one who saved me from the belly of hell. Who am I? I am Gideon Mack,
timeserver, charlatan, hypocrite, God's groveling, apologist; the man who saw
the Stone, the man that was drowned and that the waters gave back, the mad
minister who met with the Devil and lived to tell the tale. And hence my third
nonScriptural text, for what is religion if not a kind of madness, and what is
madness without a touch of religion? And yet there is peace and sanctuary in
religion too—it is the asylum to which all poor crazed sinners may come
at last, the door which will always open to us if we can find the courage to
knock.
Few suspected it, but all my life was a lie from
the age of nine (when, through deceit, I almost succeeded in killing my
father); all my words were spoken with the tongue of a serpent, and what love I
gave or felt came from a dissembling heart. Then I saw the Stone, and nothing
was the same again. This is my testimony. Read it and believe it, or believe it
not. You may judge me a liar, a cheat, a madman, I do not care. I am beyond
questions of probity or sanity now. I am at the gates of the realm of
knowledge, and one day soon I will pass through them.
“Provocative . . . [Gideon’s] testament will affirm your faith in the power of fiction.”
—The Washington Post
“Haunting, memorable, and completely compelling.”
—Los Angeles Times
“Uncommonly thought-provoking and serious-minded . . . Gideon Mack’s story raises disquieting questions most modern fiction prefers to ignore.”
—San Francisco Chronicle