This
is the paperback First Edition (not sure if there was ever a hardback First
Edition) of Pan (© Birney
Dibble/Leisure Books, of Nordon Publications: New York, 1980 – reproduced here
on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes
only)
Written by American surgeon and novelist Birney
Dibble and first published in 1980, Pan
tells the harrowing and ultimately tragic story of the world's first chimpanzee-human
hybrid, created by a wholly unscrupulous rebel scientist, John Reynolds.
Assisted by his weak, acquiescent wife, Sylvia, Reynolds stops at nothing,
including kidnap, imprisonment, and murder, to achieve his obsessive,
Frankensteinian objective. His goal? By raising this unique entity, whom he
names Pan, as if he were his son, Reynolds hopes to divine and thence unlock
the hitherto arcane secrets of what truly makes a human human, and ultimately to
be the first scientist to discover, by conversing in depth with Pan once mature,
how the fusion of human and ape manifests within his mental and physical
development. The reality? Something very different, much darker, and so
devastatingly disappointing to Reynolds that his entire world is destroyed, and
Pan's transformed out of all recognition, on that fateful day when Reynolds and
Sylvia finally reveal to Pan who – and what – he really is. The official blurb
for Pan is as follows:
Science created
him, mankind rejected him!
He was the first
of a totally new species, the result of a unique scientific experiment.
Half-man, half-beast, he inhabited a world of shadows, torn between his human
and animal natures. The conflict within him threatened not only the success of
the experiment, but Pan's own life, and the life of the one person who cared
about him!
In this novel, Pan is named after the
demi-god Pan from classical Greek mythology, the mercurial deity of Nature who
was himself half-human, half-beast, and he becomes just as skilful musically as
was his legendary namesake, after whom panpipes are named.
Interestingly, Pan is one of three different novels dealing with
artificially-created ape-human hybrids that were all published within a
relatively space of time, but each took this basic theme along a very different
pathway from the other two.
One of these other two was Chimera by English screenwriter/novelist
Steven Gallagher, published in 1982, which I've read and enjoyed. It was
subsequently converted into an equally thrilling, and chilling, British TV mini-series
of the same title (but retitled Monkey
Boy for the American market), produced by Anglia TV for ITV and first
screened in 1991, which I have lately purchased on DVD. In this two-part show,
the laboratory-created hybrid, named Chad, has been produced by genetic
engineering at a top-secret governmental establishment, but his behaviour
becomes increasingly unstable as he grows older, and he finally escapes, to
wreak mayhem and murder in the outside world as his creators frantically seek
to recapture him.
Sometimes confused with Chimera by present-day TV enthusiasts is
another, slightly earlier but less famous British TV mini-series, this time
produced by the BBC, originally screened in 1988, and entitled First Born. Consisting of three
episodes, it stars Charles Dance as the rebel scientist figure, a genetic
researcher named Edward Forester, who produces a male human-gorilla hybrid. However,
his attempts to surreptitiously rear his creation, whom he names Gor, have horrifying
unforeseen consequences. Again, I have this series on DVD, but unlike Chimera I have not as yet read the novel
that inspired it – Gor Saga, written by
English novelist/playwright/poet Maureen Duffy and published in 1981.
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