Nightmare at 20,000 feet Horror stories

Richard Matheson, 1926-2013

Book - 2002

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Matheson, Richard
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Matheson, Richard Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Tor 2002.
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Matheson, 1926-2013 (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Tom Doherty Associates book."
Introduction by Stephen King.
Physical Description
335 pages
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780312878276
  • Introduction
  • 1.. Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
  • 2.. Dress of White Silk
  • 3.. Blood Son
  • 4.. Through Channels
  • 5.. Witch War
  • 6.. Mad House
  • 7.. Disappearing Act
  • 8.. Legion of Plotters
  • 9.. Long Distance Call
  • 10.. Slaughter House
  • 11.. Wet Straw
  • 12.. Dance of the Dead
  • 13.. The Children of Noah
  • 14.. The Holiday Man
  • 15.. Old Haunts
  • 16.. The Distributor
  • 17.. Crickets
  • 18.. First Anniversary
  • 19.. The Likeness of Julie
  • 20.. Prey
Review by Booklist Review

This volume collects 14 classic horror stories by an old master of the genre. The title story became one of the best-known Twilight Zone episodes, starring a young William Shatner, and was remade for the TZ movie. "Blood Son" explores the longing to be a vampire. "Witch War" deals with military use of occult powers in a highly original way. "Mad House" and "Slaughter House" both persuade us that not only can't you go home again but you probably shouldn't if you value your health and sanity. The other nine stories continue to vary in theme while remaining high in quality, though Matheson's short stories aren't as accomplished as such novels of his as I Am Legend (1954) and The Shrinking Man (1956). Still, there are plenty of good frights to be had herein. --Roland Green

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The Grand Master of Horror (the astral classic What Dreams May Come (1978), recently filmed with Robin Williams) offers 20 chillers from over the years. The jacket copy says that the sheaf includes Matheson's famed "Duel," the basis for boy-wonder Stephen Spielberg's notable 1971 first film (a paranoid tractor-trailer chases a mild-mannered traveling salesman across the desert)-but, alas, it's not here. Even so, torrential paranoia rules throughout this shivery, if generally far-fetched, collection. Two classics stand out: the title piece (once adapted for The Twilight Zone), in which a passenger in a DC-7 sees a semihuman entity hopping about the wing in lightning flashes and tearing the cowling off a turboprop-though no one else can see the evil, grinning monster. In "Prey," a woman hounded by her monstrously needy mother buys a Haitian voodoo doll for her anthropologist boyfriend, but then is chased about her apartment by the living horror. "Dress of White Silk" is a retarded child's obsessive monologue about his (or her) late mother's wedding gown-a fixation that leads to bloodshed. Far more amusing and successful is "Blood Son," in which another retarded youth memorizes Bram Stoker's Dracula, becomes obsessed with transforming himself into a vampire, steals a vampire bat from the zoo so it will drink his blood and maybe change him into-well, you know. "Through Channels" is told as a police tape-recording of a boy accused of, hmm, let's just say four viscous victims are found watching television. The longest and high-spiritedly overwritten entry is "Slaughter House," in which two brothers with a taste for the Victorian buy the abandoned Slaughter House beloved since their youth. In their restored, candlelit mansion, the two, caressed by ghostly hands, turn against each other while the ectoplasmal Clarissa Slaughter roams their rooms. In his intro, Stephen King bows to the Master for regenerating a stale genre. Indeed, The Shining bears touches of "Slaughter House."

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.