repetitions (Gordon, 31). This passage of the novel offers the reader a glimpse of the emotions
Howie felt as a child being trapped and not finding his way out. In this passage, Howie seems to
regress back to his childhood self and this way loses his calm and composed, newly created image.
It seems that the more Howie tries to distance himself from the person he used to be as a child –
and later as a troubled teenager – the more he is haunted by his past. It seems to be evident that at
some point he is forced to come to terms with his suppressed memories. In relation to these
haunting memories, Arthur Redding claims in his study on contemporary American Gothic fiction
that “the more we murder the past, the more it returns to make good its claims, the more these
absences and omissions themselves demand reparation” (37).
What finally happens in the present time – after the group finds their way out of the tunnels
with Danny's help – is that Howie finally seems to be able to overcome his past trauma and forgive
Danny. This is why the events taking place in this passage of the novel seem to function almost as a
cathartic experience for Howie. Once again, he is able to perform an escape from the "prison" inside
of him. This helps him to overcome his trauma and face the bad memories that have been with him
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his whole life. After the experience, he is finally able to let go of the grudge he has been holding
against his cousin Danny. Finally he seems to be able to let go of his past. As this following passage
shows, it almost seems as if Howie's trauma has been something concrete inside of him, and after
the experience he is also able to free himself of this “thing”. However, at the same time the “thing”
has been one of his defining features through his whole life: ”Howard sat on the ground, leaning
against the Medusa head spigot where Danny had seen the moving figures back when he was
wigging out. His elbows were on his knees, his head on his fists. Something had gone out of
Howard. Maybe Howard had gone out of Howard” (Egan, 205).
To continue with the idea of freeing oneself from the past, it is important to once again look at
the setting of the novel from this perspective. The reason behind the whole project of renovating the
castle is Howie's vision to build a sanctuary for modern people in need of spiritual healing. In the
following passage of the novel, Howie's wife Ann tries to explain the initial idea behind the castle to
Danny:
A woman travels there by herself. She's unhappy, she's shut down. Maybe her marriage
is in trouble; maybe she's alone. Whatever it is, she's become numb, dead to herself. So
she checks in and leaves her stuff in her room and then she comes through the garden to
this pool […] and it does something to her. Being in that water does something: it
wakes her up And when she gets back out of the pool, she feels strong again. Like she's
ready to start her life over (Egan, 47).
The pool is a very important thematic element in the novel, as events surrounding it keep recurring
in the novel. It is implied early on in the novel that the pool as a setting will be important in the
storyline. In the events that lead to little Howie's entrapment, Danny and his cousins first lure
Howie to look into a pool, and then push him in. In his past, the pool functioned as a trap for little
Howie. A complete opposite to this happens at the end of the novel, when Ann's premonition of the
pool's healing powers is actualized, as Ray's teacher Holly travels to the castle and dives into the
pool. It could be argued that the pool in the novel symbols both a trap, which results in Howie' s
lifelong trauma, but also a purifying, cathartic device, almost similar to the pool of life. This
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duplication in the novel is contradictory, as the pool represented in the novel is both a device for
entrapment and a passageway for freedom and release.
The pool of the castle has a haunting story behind it, as people tell the tale of the two twins
who drowned in it a long time ago. This story itself paralles the haunting storylines of classic
Gothic tales, and it adds a supernatural element to the story, as Danny goes through a hallucinatory
sequence, and sees the twins as ghosts in the courtyard of the castle. In this tale, the pool had
functioned as a trap for the children. In the novel, this Gothic ghost story becomes intertwined with
modern people and their modern way of living.
For Howie, the purpose of the castle's pool is to provide an escape for people who would visit
his hotel. In his mind, the pool would also function as a device through which they could release
their imaginations which have suffered – or even imprisoned – because of the constant stream of
entertainment modern people are exposed to every day. He claims in the novel that “You know how
I think of this? The Imagination Pool. You dive in and – bang – your imagination is released: it's
yours again, not Hollywood's, not the networks of Lifetime TV or Vanity Fair or whatever crap
video game you're addicted to. You make it up, you tell the story, and then you're free. You can do
anything you want” (47).
As it has become evident, both thematic and actual events keep repeating themselves
throughout the novel. However, there is one thing that connects them all: they all seem to lead to an
escape of some sort
–
some being figurative and some concrete.
In regards to the more figurative means of escape, the theme of imagination is another
recurring element in the novel
.
Howie as a character is a perfect example of the power of
imagination, as he is able to survive his days in the caves with the help of his own mind. In the
novel, he states that “I escaped with my mind. I got out of there because I wasn't going to make it
otherwise. I went into a game. Rooms in my head” (Egan, 206).
Ray as a character goes through a similar experience, as the reason for him to begin writing in
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the first place is the way it makes him feel; he feels that through his writing he is able to mentally
escape from the prison. The idea of escaping relates closely to the idea of being free. I would argue
that the concept of freedom and what it means to be free are treated in The Keep as very postmodern
themes.
What makes the novel then Gothic postmodern is the way these themes are embedded in the
story full of Gothic imagery and visual elements.
The feeling of freedom is treated as a very subjective experience in the novel, as being free
for most of the characters means freeing themselves of a personal trauma or an addiction of some
kind. In other words, the prison that they are escaping from is the one inside their own minds. This
relates to the way postmodernism gravitates towards individualism and subjectivity. Beville calls
this “a turning in on the 'self'” (46). When at the end of the novel, Ray says to Holly that “Don't you
get it? You're free”, it is for the reader to decide in what sense and what this freedom actually
means.
Imagination is one very important theme in the novel, and, relating to this, the idea of the
supernatural world around us. The protagonists often yearn for earlier times, as they seem to think
that people had more imagination back then. This next passage sums up the idea behind this
yearning, as Howard tries to explain Danny the history behind the castle:
Think about medieval times, Danny, like when this castle was built. People were
constantly seeing ghosts, having visions – they thought Christ was sitting with them at
the dinner table, they thought angels and devils were flying around. We don't see those
things anymore. Why? Was all that stuff happening before and then it stopped?
Unlikely. Was everyone nuts in medieval times? Doubtful. But their imaginations were
more active. Their inner lives were rich and weird (Egan, 44).
Here they are, two modern men living in a modern, secular society and surrounded by all kinds of
activities and possibilities imaginable, and still they think that they have lost something that has
been there before – their imagination. After all, their whole relationship has been about them using
their imaginations, whether it is the role playing game they played together as children, or the way
Howie had to use his imagination to be able to escape the caves. Many times in the novel the act of
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escaping is executed through the use of imagination, therefore making the act of escaping a mental
thing rather than something concrete.
A similar kind of sudden – and surprising – sense of freedom happens to Danny, when he
accidentally loses his beloved satellite antenna that he uses to be able to get online. Danny is
obsessed with technology, and it seems that his devices offer him a way of escaping his reality, and
his haunting memories and feelings of inadequacy and failure: ”Danny had advanced skills when it
came to not thinking: he would picture himself deleting things, disconnecting them from his brain
so they disappeared the way digital stuff disappears – without a memory. But sometimes he still felt
them, the disappeared things, hanging around him like shadows” (Egan, 104).
Danny dropping his satellite dish in the pool seems to be the first step towards him finding
some kind of freedom. His whole existence has been dependent on his online life, and even though
he has not achieved a lot, the internet offers him the opportunity to be whatever he wants to be:
“Danny had not much going on and no real prospects on the horizon, but what about all those
prospects floating around maybe an inch or two beyond the horizon?” (Egan, 71).
This passage shows how being online is a promise of a greater future for Danny – the
possibilites that could be right around the corner. In a way, Danny's whole existence seems to echo
the postmodern ways of escaping reality. This is emphasized by the way the novel twists and turns
and makes it almost impossible for the reader to know what is real and what is not. At first it seems
to be clear that the storyline involving the cousins is a product of Ray's imagination. It is only later
on that the reader finds out that Ray's story was actually something more than only a piece of
creative writing. This is an example on how the novel stretches the boundaries between reality and
fiction in a very postmodern way.
Relating to the idea of reality and fiction merging with each other, I would consider the
following passage from the novel, where Howie confronts Danny of his addiction to his wi-fi
connection:
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What's real, Danny? Is reality TV real? Are confessions you read on the internet real?
The words are real, someone wrote them, but beyond that the question doesn't even
make sense. Who are you talking to on your cell phone? In the end you have no fucking
idea. We're living in a supernatural world, Danny. We're surrounded by ghosts (Egan,
130).
I would like to emphasize here how the word ghosts is used in this passage, and throughout the
novel as well. I will return to the idea of postmodern ghosts versus Gothic ghosts in the next chapter
with more analysis, but to tie this passage of the novel with the idea of escape and being free, for
Danny, freedom eventually seems to come from letting go of the satellite antenna that has kept him
grounded and online. The moment when he drops it to the pool – the antenna slowly sinking to the
bottom and Danny being unable to grasp it – functions as a turning point for him in the story.
It could be argued that escaping real life through the use of technology is a postmodern way
of distancing oneself from the mundane reality, with its boring routines and problems. Relating to
this, Brian McHale has analyzed postmodern means of escape; however, it must be noted that as
McHale's study was written in the 1980s, it does not include the most recent form of escapism – the
internet and social media. McHale argues the following about modern ways of escaping reality:
These “escapes” from the world of paramount reality range from mental strategies of
ironic disengagement through hobbies, games, gambling, sex, holidays, mass-media
entertainment, therapy, the use of alcohol and drugs, to the extreme of radical escapes
such as religious conversion, Utopian alternative societies, and, ultimately,
schizophrenia (38).
McHale sees these escape attempts as being “shuffling among worlds” (38). This means that our
modern life involves different kinds of “worlds” through which people navigate in their everyday
life. I would argue that in this way McHale's view of the postmodern world is similar to postmodern
fiction with its many layers and dimensions created by devices such as metafiction.
McHale mentions drugs as one example of these postmodern means of escape in his study.
Drugs are an important theme also in The Keep, since for many of the characters drug use has
functioned as a form of escaping. In his teenage years, Howie resorted to drugs in order to forget his
childhood trauma. His teenage years were a stark opposite to what kind of a person he was before
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his entrapment. In the novel, the change in his character is described as follows: “after the
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