Richard Christian Matheson
Autor(a) de Created By
About the Author
Image credit: Richard Christian Matheson
Obras por Richard Christian Matheson
Hell Comes To Hollywood II: Twenty-Two More Tales Of Tinseltown Terror (Volume 2) (2014) 3 exemplares
Arousal 3 exemplares
Vampire 3 exemplares
Transfiguration 2 exemplares
Menage a Trois [short fiction] 2 exemplares
Venturi 2 exemplares
Battleground [2006 Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King TV Episode] (2006) — Writer — 1 exemplar
The Dark Ones 1 exemplar
City of Dreams 1 exemplar
Promotie 1 exemplar
Red 1 exemplar
Bulimia [short story] 1 exemplar
Mutilator 1 exemplar
Graduation 1 exemplar
Making Cabinets 1 exemplar
The Film 1 exemplar
Sentences 1 exemplar
The Great Fall 1 exemplar
Hiding 1 exemplar
Mr. Right 1 exemplar
Oral 1 exemplar
Associated Works
Alien Sex: 19 Tales by the Masters of Science Fiction and Dark Fantasy (1990) — Contribuidor — 484 exemplares
The Mammoth Book of Halloween Stories: Terrifying Tales Set on the Scariest Night of the Year! (2018) — Contribuidor — 62 exemplares
Lethal Kisses: 18 Tales of Sex, Horror, and Revenge (1996) — Contribuidor, algumas edições — 54 exemplares
Four for Fantasy: A Quartet of Fantastical Stories Collected for World FantasyCon 2013 (2013) — Contribuidor — 14 exemplares
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome canónico
- Matheson, Richard Christian
- Data de nascimento
- 1953-10-14
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Ocupações
- screenwriter
horror writer - Relações
- Matheson, Richard (father)
Membros
Críticas
Listas
Prémios
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 35
- Also by
- 67
- Membros
- 343
- Popularidade
- #69,543
- Avaliação
- 3.6
- Críticas
- 7
- ISBN
- 24
- Línguas
- 2
- Marcado como favorito
- 3
It's an inherent feature of any fiction that the characters and situations of the story never existed. And yet, the best fiction can take on a life of its own. Sometimes that's to do with the quality of the writing itself, or the nature of the story - how it is told, how relevant it seems to the listener, viewer or reader, and how realistically the story is integrated into what most of us think of as "reality". Sometimes, the life that the characters take on comes about because of their placing. For instance: in 1891, the population of London was some 5.5 million people, yet the citizen of London that most people will have heard of, and for whom there is perhaps the most complete and detailed documentary evidence, is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional detective, Sherlock Holmes. The detail that Doyle put into the Holmes stories locates Holmes in time and place and with a high level of what we now call 'granularity'; far more than the vast majority of London's other inhabitants of the time enjoyed. Sherlock Holmes is no less real for us today, 130 years on, than a large number of those Londoners. It's a different sort of 'reality', it's not one that has left verifiable proof beyond a series of stories that are becoming myth over time, but it is a reality of sorts. Take another popular fictional milieu - the universe of Gene Roddenberry's 'Star Trek'. Here we have a series of tv shows about the future; though as the supposed back story of the show, which first aired in 1966, is now covered by our history, we know that events turned out differently, that the future of 'Star Trek' is not our future. Yet the shared world that Roddenberry and his successors created has captivated millions of viewers and has spawned a number of spin-off films, sequel tv series, novels and concordances. The universe of 'Star Trek' has a consensus reality, even though it has not yet happened and most likely never will. Yet it is "real" for very many people, and that "reality", is just as tangible even though no one will ever directly experience it.
The same applies to the central character in 'Created by', a Hollywood tv writer who has an idea for a ground-breaking action show, 'The Mercenary'. Intended to break the mould of previous tv in its depiction of sex and violence, the writer, Alan White, begins to find that his reality is beginning to merge with the world of the show as his life begins to become embroiled in a downward spiral of horror and violence. Is it coincidence? Copycat re-enactments? Or has White tapped into something deep in his own soul which is emerging and taking on a life of its own, literally? And if it fully emerges, what will be left of Alan White at the end of it?
The story is told in a series of vignettes which chart White's descent into terror. And how can he emerge from this fugue state? RCM tells the story in a highly telegraphic way with a sardonic turn of phrase that seems totally in keeping with his characters. Some have called the characters in this book shallow; but if they are, they are drawn from life and their lack of depth is true to life. The author drops the right names in the right places (though as a UK reader, I suspect there are some which I missed or mistook for fictional people).
Written and set when broadcast terrestrial tv was looking at the challenge of home video, this is as much a picture of a time and place that generated a lot of "product" as it is a horror story. It won't be to everyone's taste, reflecting as it must the sex and violence of 'The Mercenary' itself, but it has the ring of authenticity in its settings and characters, no matter how stereotypical they may seem. In our time of Netflix and Amazon Prime, this story still comes over as well told and relevant.… (mais)