Showing posts with label RichardMatheson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RichardMatheson. Show all posts

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Nightmare at 20.000 feet


A variety of short stories, each one ending horrifyingly.
I was almost dreading how a somewhat innocent take on day-to-day events or things could be turned into something scary.

And I'm actually talking about very basic things. Imagine the following to become the stuff of nightmares:

A Tv-set
Adult tantrums
A speeding ticket (maybe if you've read some King novels, you would've seen this one coming)
Crickets

Just to name a few.

The most famous story is of course the title of the collection. It has been televised during The Twilight Zone and referenced to in many TV-shows, about seeing things no one else is seeing.
I enjoyed it, nothing more. It's difficult to get a sense of the story when it is over so quickly (the reason I believe my road to hell would be paved with short stories).

But it you're into classic horror with a nice twist, you'll like this collection. Matheson has a way of finding horror in just about everything.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Hell House


If you like ghost stories, this might be a story you'd like.
I've read a number of novels by Richard Matheson, where he has had me equally awed and apalled, but this one never hit home in either ballpark.

The story it quite simple.
Four people are investigating the haunting of a peculiar house with a very peculiar and violent history.
Each of them has their own notion of what is causing the phenomena recorded already in the house and are hired to set the house free from any wandering spirits and the like.

Lionel Barret and his wife Edith, are the scientific approach. Barret is convinced that the phenomena are caused by lingering electro-magnetic residue of those departed inside the house and he has brought a mammoth machine to erase it once and for all.

Florence (I forgot her last name) and Fischer are medium, so viewing this house from an alltogether point of view.

It's safe to state that both sides clash and that it causes a lot of events around them to be misinterpret.

It's an entertaining story, maybe a bit too long. It has a good balance between descriptive and active parts, it even being a bit raunchy at time. The ending wasn't as good as the rest, but that's just my opinion.
Overall I enjoyed it.


Saturday, January 27, 2018

What Dreams May Come


Hmm.. how do I describe what I think about this novel?

First of all.. I have fair amount of doubt with there being an afterlife. So, I thought  this novel was basically a pamphlet for making people feel better who have lost someone. It seems it has been helpful in that area, but to me this felt like a condescending piece of literature doing what religion has done for ages.

It basically tells you, afterlife is what you make it. So, whatever your say, you can never go wrong, because it's all subjective.
It's a cheap way and it's abhorring to notice people who think he made sense. Believe what you want, but stop thinking that someone else has the answer when you've got doubts. It's all in one's mind and when you need proof, you ain't a believer.

Back to the story.
It centers around a guy, Chris, killed in a car accident, leaving his wife and four grown children. His spirit sticks around and feels terribly bad for leaving his wife, who seems to be a nervous wreck, and eventually kills herself.
Before Chris founds out, he remains to feel uneasy about not helping his wife. When he's told what she did, he moved heaven and earth to try and help her, which he ultimately kind of does. You'd think this was a romantic love story reading my short summary, but to me it seemed far from it, not to the author's intent, it's probably just the curse of that day and age.

Chris feels like a very dominant male who doesn't seem to think his wife is capable of surviving without his strong male presence. When she proves him right, he plunges in deep to save her. To me, it seems like she's someone who has been living under the influence of severe dominance, maybe not from her husband but some kind of childhood trauma has occurred into which isn't dug deeper, which might take the protectionism of Chris to a dangerous level, whereas she seems to forego life because he isn't in it anymore. The fact the Matheson sells this as them being soul mates, is even more horrific. Basically, you're a cold-hearted bitch if you can picture a life without the one you loved and lost.
Ultimately when Chris saves Ann from the world she imprisoned herself in after she has committed suicide, she chooses not to stay with him but be immediately reborn. Seems like she trying to get from underneath his controlling love and starting all over again, but it seems he's intent of following her none the less. Stalker much. My first thought was actually that he just needed to back off and give her time to grow and strengthen herself, instead of swooping in and taking care of her. Which is actually what he is going to do, he sets himself up to be a doctor, since she will have a sleep deprivation affliction.

The novel itself doesn't feel consistent in its manner to portray the romance between Chris and Ann. When Chris enters Summerland or heaven as we like to call it, he's been told that Ann will join him eventually and he even gets a date when she will do so.
Her suicide simply means that she has to spend the time remaining to her planned death, in a kind of purgatory.
When Chris gets her out of there, she chooses to leave Summerland immediately and go back to earth, being born again. Which isn't an option discussed in the beginning. It simply feels like one arrives here, without the risk of one of them deciding to go back to earth.

So.. if summerland is all in one's mind. Why couldn't Chris just envisage his wife there? And why is so certain that his wife would join him. Maybe if she hadn't been intent on killing herself, she might have met someone else and chosen to be with him, leaving Chris wretched and alone.
So, would the meaning of Summerland not be more accurate, if anyone got the afterlife he wanted WITH the people they loved, instead of playing the waiting game and still be disappointed. Doesn't same like heaven to me, more like a kind of laidback earth filled with its insecurities and doubts.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

A Stir of Echoes


I've just finished reading this novel and boy oh boy, it was good.

This morning while we (me, hubby and kiddy) were driving to a local swimming pool, I had taken my e-reader so I could spend the half hour reading up because I'm lacking in time to do so. I was already halfway through the novel and thought I might get a few pages farther down the line if kiddy kept quiet in the car.
She did, sort of, and a little over halfway the novel suddenly reached a steep climb to its climactic event, which was quite a shock, even in a novel about clairvoyance.

The premise of the novel is a guy who perceives thought, feelings and images of the people around him after he lets himself be hypnotised at a next door neigbours' party. Afterwards he feels a little jumbled up inside and before we know it, his mind takes us on a trip during which we can't escape the terrible and embrace the good.

I've read only one novel of Richard Matheson before, which was I am Legend, and was pretty legend in my opinion.
Stir of echoes is scaled lower than I am Legend, not for its style or anything, but Legend is a masterpiece, while Stir of Echoes is a great horror story which deserves credit on a whole other scale. It would be like comparing apples and oranges. They're both fruit and they're round, but the comparison stops right there.

I'm compelled to watch the adaptation starring Kevin Bacon, but could it honestly portray the dismay and despair felt in this novel? I genuinely doubt that.

But maybe all this upper body tension serves enough to give it a go?


Just kidding, I got me all of that just where I need it  ^^

I'll leave with this and I'll be on to my next book (which I, as of yet, have no idea which one that will be)


Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Review of The Incredible Shrinking Man


Richard Matheson.
Be his memory forever.
I've read only one novel of his before I began this one, but I Am Legend is more than just a story about vampires. It's almost the bible concerning everything bloody and bitey.
But since I've read that one a few miles ago, I'm going to review my current read.

My first thought about The Incredible Shrinking Man was mainly that I thought it would be a ridiculous book. The reason I began reading it is that I'm working on an A-Z challenge and I had nothing else beginning with 'I' on my e-reader.
I'm not sorry I stumbled in such a way onto this novel. Otherwise I probably would have never touched it and would've missed the entire perplexity that's this novel.

The Incredible Shrinking Man tells the story of a man slowly shrinking. It sets out with the main character on a boat being sprayed with a peculiar substance and shortly after he begins to diminish.
You'd think it would be fantastic novel, maybe scoring a few laughs here and there, portraying this particular problem against the funny side of life, but Matheson does nothing of a sort. He portrays a man slowly losing his identity, his sense of pride and lust for life. Someone eager to be the man he always was and being able to further support his wife and daughter but not being able to. He's angry at the world, hoping a cure will be found, hoping the process can be returned.
With every inch he's shrinking he's losing his masculine identity, beginning with a strained relationship with his wife, then the loss of authority over his daughter and ending with trying so survive the mere elements and animals he never thought of being scared of hunted by.

I loved this novel. I guess it's pretty obvious when you've read my review. Despite the title, The Incredible Shrinking Man has so much emotion and contains so much food for thought that I'm definitely going to reread it some point in time. I feel like I didn't get the to the bottom quite yet and I'm still thirsty.

Personal score: 4 stars

Check out these other reviews!!!