This is still breaking news, and I don't have a lot of details. Renowned fantasy and horror author Richard Matheson has passed away at age 87. According to Matheson's daughter Ali, from a statement on John Shirley's Facebook page: "My beloved father passed away yesterday at home surrounded by the
people and things he loved...he was funny, brilliant, loving, generous,
kind, creative, and the most wonderful father ever...I miss you and love
you forever Pop and I know you are now happy and healthy in a beautiful
place full of love and joy you always knew was there..."
Matheson had been ill for some time. His most famous work was the novel I am Legend. He also wrote The Shrinking Man, screenplays for many of the best horror films of the 1960s, and a number of Twilight Zone episodes, including the classic "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet", starring William Shatner. I'm working on a deadline tonight and will post a longer tribute in the next day or so. I'll just say for now that Matheson was one of the major fantasy authors to come out of what became known as the California School in the 1950s, which included such authors as Ray Bradbury, Charles Beaumont, William F. Nolan, and George Clayton Johnson. I devoured his stories when I was a teenager.
Matheson had been ill for some time. His most famous work was the novel I am Legend. He also wrote The Shrinking Man, screenplays for many of the best horror films of the 1960s, and a number of Twilight Zone episodes, including the classic "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet", starring William Shatner. I'm working on a deadline tonight and will post a longer tribute in the next day or so. I'll just say for now that Matheson was one of the major fantasy authors to come out of what became known as the California School in the 1950s, which included such authors as Ray Bradbury, Charles Beaumont, William F. Nolan, and George Clayton Johnson. I devoured his stories when I was a teenager.
Every writer has their own voice, but I will still say we might never read the likes of him again. He was a giant. (p.s. - you'll want to edit your post title)
ReplyDeleteI agree. He was a giant. And thanks for the heads-up on the typo. I was stealing time from something with a tight deadline and typed too fast.
DeleteI was on a bus when I read the dog scene in I am Legend and it practically had me in tears. So many great stories for so many years. RIP, sir.
ReplyDeleteGauntlet Press has been keeping his work in print: His short fiction is available in three inexpensive paperbacks: (open page and scroll down)
Deletehttp://www.gauntletpress.com/cgi-bin/gauntletpress/perlshop.cgi?ACTION=thispage&thispage=psdbi/Authors.html&ORDER_ID=193908508
The scene that sticks with me from I Am Legend is when the hero realizes his watch has stopped. He is out from his base, it is dusk, and he must flee across town to get home while the vampires swarm.
DeleteWhen he realized his watch is stopped, I literally said, "Oh, f*&^." aloud. It's not very often a book makes me react audibly. It is a fantastic unexpected moment of terror.
Yes, sorry to hear of this.
ReplyDeleteI was surprised to hear he had written the short story Real Steel, on which the film was loosely based. And even better, he liked the movie and approved of the changes in the story. I need to read some of his stuff.
ReplyDeleteYes. You do. Try I am Legend or one of the short story collections.
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