Of all the Peter Straub novels, I think I was most looking forward to reading his 1983 novel FLOATING DRAGON, but mostly just because it was referenced in Stephen King’s THE TOMMYKNOCKERS. Having finished it, I have to say other than GHOST STORY, it might be my favorite Straub novel to date.
Set in 1980, FLOATING DRAGON is set in Hampstead, Connecticut, a quiet suburb where families go to be content. At the start of the story, once we’re past the prologue and introduction, several things happen almost simultaneously in Hampstead that make this a very interesting time to live there. In a neighboring town, a Department of Defense project has gone haywire, releasing a deadly gas into the air, where the winds will most likely carry it to Hampstead. As this deadly gas is being released, Stony Friedgood, adulterous wife of Leo Friedgood who was sent to the chemical plant to deal with the problem, is murdered by a man she’s brought home from a bar. Meanwhile, high schooler Tabby Smithfield has just moved back to Hampstead with his father after the death of Tabby’s grandfather, businessman Monty Smithfield. In another part of town, Richard Albee, child star and current home remodeling contractor, and his wife Laura have also just moved to Hampstead, marking the first time in 100 years that descendents of all the town’s founders are back in Hampstead at the same time.
And it’s a good thing, because the Dragon has also returned to Hampstead. Hundreds of years ago, when the town was flourishing, a man named Gideon Winter, who was also called The Dragon, came to Hampstead, leaving death and ruin in his wake. The town survived and flourished again, but over the decades the Dragon has returned to wreak havoc on the town and its people. The pattern has never been detected until now, and with Graham Williams and Patsy McCloud rounding out their group, Tabby and Richard set out to stop the destruction and death before Hampstead is irrevocably lost.
The town is caught in a whirlwind it can’t comprehend nor escape from as all the birds in town fall dead from the sky, a murderer makes his way through the town’s women and the children all find their way in the dead of night to the seashore where one by one they wade in past their ability to return.
The scope of what Straub pulled off with this novel left me astounded and humbled with each page. It’s not enough his prose is simply perfect, but the plot he’s created, the characters and the town inside FLOATING DRAGON were nothing short of the work of a master. Straub was 39 when FLOATING DRAGON was published. I’ll be 39 later this year. What the hell have I been doing with my life?
Straub didn’t just pick his four focus characters and tell their story exclusively, he really took great pains to tell the story of Hampstead, Connecticut as a whole, and that’s a feat and a half. It seems with every book I read, his skill just stands out more and more and I’m once again in awe of what he is able to accomplish. His mastery of the language is unmatched.
It wouldn’t be out of the question to say Straub might just be the best American writer working today.
It’s not just that his plots work, or that he hits upon the occasional phrase that makes a reader take notice. It’s more than that. His prose is flawless. I have never found myself mentally editing a Peter Straub novel as I read it, nor have I ever found myself stuck in the mire of some scene that seemed like it would never end and the characters hadn’t done anything in 40 pages. I don’t have to worry about Straub’s characters coming onscreen just long enough to utter some witticism to get my notice before then being flattened by a semi on the highway in the next scene. Though the cast of FLOATING DRAGON was pretty immense, none of them felt like walk-ons, each character was given the time and space to grow and really inhabit their part of the story.
Nearing the end of the book, I kept having that feeling of familiarity, but I couldn’t place what it was until I was almost at the last page, and then it hit me: the feeling I was having was similar to the end of Stephen King’s IT, which just proved, to me, how much of an influence this novel had to have been on King’s work around this time. If you think about it, the end of IT (and I don’t mean the actual climax, I mean the feelings evoked in and for the character at the end, but, yes, also I suppose the battle felt similar, too) is reminiscent of FLOATING DRAGON. King’s next novel was THE EYES OF THE DRAGON, which was dedicated in part to Straub’s son. King’s next novel was THE TOMMYKNOCKERS, which made a direct reference to FLOATING DRAGON. I think it’s safe to say I’m not the only one who dug this book. It really is awesome.
I loved the feeling of completeness in this novel. I loved getting to know and care about the characters. I loved how real the setting became to me. Once again, a Straub novel has left me pleased to be a reader. This is exactly the experience that reading a novel should give me.