We know Hugh B. Cave as a horror writer, so when we saw this wild Samson Pollen cover for his 1959 novel The Cross on the Drum we were looking forward to some dark and scary stuff fit for the Halloween season. Unfortunately, Cave plays it straight—or as straight as you can in a voodoo novel. Basically, it’s a variation on the standard South Seas tale, except set in the Caribbean on a small island called Ile du Vent, and involving a missionary who wants to civilize the locals. The book is absolutely fine aside from its built-in cultural snobbery, but it never had the weight and menace we seek from a novel of this type. In the end, how you assess it might hinge on your own beliefs. If you’re a Christian you’ll probably see it as a thrilling tale of moral uplift in which Jesus outshines the false gods of santería, but if you’re a non-believer you’ll probably see a flawed novel-length discussion of whether one primitive superstition is inherently better than another. Take a side and discuss.
I'll have to go to confession later for thinking this, but my religion could use a few sweaty writhing chicks.