My Love Affair With Richard Matheson
December 12, 2007 - Author: newscoma - Comments are closedYeah, my normal stuff is by the way side this very cold, yet balmy, yet confusing evening.
I’m writing about a love affair of mine that is passionate and filled with so much desire I cannot stand the tingling I feel.
It’s filled with craving of things I cannot write, but I admire.
I love Richard Matheson. I like horror novels like I Am Legend so this is up there with one of the best. It was written 11 years before I was even born and it is extremely timely for the world we live in.
You don’t know him? Yeah you do. Have you seen Duel, the first film of Steven Spielberg?
There is so much more. You may not know his name, but YOU know him.
He wrote I Am Legend in 1954. Yeah, you get the picture. In my second month of blogging, I talked of this of my extreme joy of reading this book. Matheson, Jack Finney, Harlan Ellison …
I adore you.
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson – If you like horror novels, and I do, this one rocks. Who is the bad guy in this novel? Sort of reminds me of what’s going on right now in the world, the isolation, need for social grounding and the fact that nothing appears at it seems.
What I didn’t say almost two years ago is how that this novel deconstructs the vampire myth in a way that, if you like horror novels, will make your throat clench. How it throws away the Romanticism of the undead and knocks it on it’s head because it’s not about eternity, but about survival is just … sweetly horrific.
It’s more than about the undead, it’s about changes in evolution.
It’s about the death of a society, of a generation.
And, it’s about things that wipe out the planet. The Ebola Virus, Aids, War … it’s about the annihilation of our planet due to things we have no control of.
And how one man must survive.
The claustrophobia in this book, written more than a half a century ago, will make you retreat into your darkest place. Because it’s just damn well scary.
Man, I’m sure that non-fans will scoff but how sweet, how exquisite I’m making this out to be, cut dangit, it is.
How evil, yet not. See, that’s what this is about. It’s about the human condition during fear and loss of control. It’s about changes in this world. Oh, Richard, you are my idol. I’m so serious.
The novel is about how the one man’s isolation against the apocalypse. It’s about evolution of our species. And, it’s about sometimes we are right.
Then sometimes we aren’t.
Oh, dear, this is sweet. And I’m looking at this novel as we speak.
Now, I haven’t seen the latest movie, but I will say that Vincent Price’s The Last Man on Earth was very much a Vincent Price movie.
Charleton Heston’s The Omega Man was not bad, but not great.
I’m so hoping, Will Smith, because I dig you and I think you are groovy. Please, let this be good. Third time is the charm.
Yes, the book is delicious. Will the third movie honor Richard Matheson’s work?
I hope so. Because Robert Neville is the Holden Caulfield for those of us who love the horror genre.
Mr. Matheson, thanks for changing it up. You are inspirational.
I’ve gushed enough. Whoops.
Now, go here if you are bored by my love of the horror genre. Yeah, I know, I know.
Categories: Tennessee - Tag: Apocalypse, Death, Duel, Fiction, Horror, I Am Legend, Richard Matheson, Steven Spielberg, Zombies



Discussion (No Comments)
I can’t go see it. The previews show Will Smith with a german shepherd.
Horror + dogs = no Cathy
You know, Matheson is one of those guys that everybody keeps telling me that I need to read. I may even have one or three of his books floating around, that I’ve picked up on the cheap somewhere. But I’ve never picked one up to read–I’m always afraid I’ll be let down.
Glowing reviews like this one do make me look that way, at the shelf. I think one of these days, I’m gonna HAVE to read it…
The book is very claustrophobic. As a social person, it was downright like drowning.
Tommy, have you read Jack Finney? They sort of both remind me of that 50′s sense of paranoia.
Robert Neville is the Holden Caufield for those of us who love the horror genre — best sentence i’ve read all month.
other than the many fine episodes of Twilight Zone which Matheson wrote, his screenplay for The Incredible Shrinking Man is one of my favorites.
It is.
How are you, my horror-loving friend.
well, ‘Coma, i has been so immersed in doing the It’s A Wonderful Life play, that i am in need of some bona-fide horror, rather than all the emotional ‘gifts’ usually jammed into Santa’s sleigh-full-of-good-cheer.
while Wonderful Life dips lightly into the dark side of Pottersville, i remain forever entranced with A Christmas Carol – ghosts arrive with dire warnings, time travel ensues and finally Death itself arrives all hooded and vacant to remind Scrooge he’d be better off with ‘mankind as his business’. it’s the bestest christmas horror yarn ever told.