When Rohmer scholar, Dr. Robert E. Briney
compiled a posthumous hardcover collection of the author’s rare and previously
uncollected short fiction in the early 1970s, he included three short stories
that were first published in This Week magazine
in between Rohmer’s last two Fu Manchu novels. The stories were
subsequently reprinted in sequence in Edgar
Wallace Mystery Magazine between January and March 1966 where the latter
two stories were retitled. The hardcover collection, The Wrath of Fu Manchu and Other New Stories was first published in
the U.K. in 1973 by Tom Stacey. A U.S. mass market paperback edition from DAW
Books followed in 1976. The collection was subsequently reprinted in 2001 as
part of Allison & Busby’s Fu Manchu
Omnibus - Volume 5. Titan Books will reprint the original collection as a
trade paperback in March 2016.
The Eyes of Fu Manchu
was serialized in two installments in This
Week magazine on October 6 and 13, 1957. It first appeared in book form
when Dr. Briney added it to the 1970 Ace paperback collection, The Secret of Holm Peel and Other Strange
Stories. The story opens with Sir Denis Nayland Smith attending a lecture
at the Sorbonne by an American scientist, Dr. Gregory Allen. Dr. Allen is a
specialist in the possible chemical means of halting or even reversing the
effects of aging. Sir Denis correctly believes Dr. Allen’s research will draw
him to the attention of Dr. Fu Manchu. He makes plans to attend Dr. Allen’s
lecture at King’s College with Dr. Petrie who is flying in from Cairo.
Rohmer mines one of his own life’s episodes
when he encountered and began an extramarital affair with a young bohemian woman
while on a voyage to Madeira. Here, Gregory Allen meets a young bohemian woman
named Mignon while crossing the English Channel. Mignon is an artist and, upon
learning Gregory abandoned his study of art for science, she makes some pointed
remarks about his abandoning the bohemian life of freedom and truth for one of
compromised values as part of the Establishment. Her words seem to sting Dr.
Allen as much as her beauty and youth charm him just as Rohmer, the former
bohemian turned established bestselling author and husband must have felt when
he began his own affair with a younger free spirit on his voyage to Portugal
years before.
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