Richard Laymon

American writer

Richard Carl Laymon
Born(1947-01-14)January 14, 1947
Chicago, Illinois, U.S
DiedFebruary 14, 2001(2001-02-14) (aged 54)
Los Angeles, California, U.S
OccupationNovelist
GenreHorror
Notable worksThe Cellar, The Beast House, The Midnight Tour, Island, The Traveling Vampire Show

Richard Carl Laymon (January 14, 1947 – February 14, 2001[1]) was an American author of suspense and horror fiction, particularly within the splatterpunk subgenre.

Life and career

Laymon was born and raised outside of Chicago, Illinois, then lived in Tiburon, California, as a teen. He graduated from Redwood High School, then pursued a BA in English Literature from Willamette University in Oregon and an MA in English Literature from Loyola University in Los Angeles.

His works include more than sixty short stories and more than thirty novels, a few of which were published under the pseudonym Richard Kelly. Twenty of his stories were published as part of the Fastback Mystery series—single short stories released in book form.

Early in his career, Laymon found greater commercial success in the United Kingdom and Europe, despite praise from prominent writers from within the genre, including Stephen King and Dean Koontz. Laymon believed that this was a result of a badly-edited first release of The Woods Are Dark, which had had over fifty pages removed. The poor editing and unattractive cover art also stalled his career in America after the success of The Cellar. Starting in 1999 and an association with Leisure Books, Laymon found delayed recognition in his homeland. Laymon's original version of The Woods Are Dark[2] was finally published in July 2008 by Leisure Books and Cemetery Dance Publications after being reconstructed from the original manuscript by his daughter, Kelly.

His novel Flesh was named Best Horror Novel of 1988 by Science Fiction Chronicle, and both Flesh and Funland were nominated for the Bram Stoker Award, as was his non-fiction work A Writer's Tale. He won this award posthumously in 2001 for The Traveling Vampire Show.

Richard was president of the Horror Writers Association (2000-2001).

The tribute anthology, In Laymon's Terms,[3] was released by Cemetery Dance Publications during the summer of 2011. It featured short stories and non-fiction tribute essays by authors such as Bentley Little, Jack Ketchum, Gary Brandner, Edward Lee, and many others.

Death

Laymon died in 2001 of a heart attack. He was 54.

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Cellar (1980) (First book in the Beast House Chronicles series)
  • Your Secret Admirer (1980) (writing as Carl Laymon - young adult novel)
  • The Woods Are Dark (1981)
  • Out Are the Lights (1982)
  • Nightmare Lake (1983) (writing as Carl Laymon - young adult novel)
  • The Lawmen (1983) (writing as Lee Davis Willoughby)
  • Night Show (1984)
  • A Stranger's Arms (1984) (writing as Carla Laymon)
  • Beware (1985)
  • Allhallow's Eve (1985)
  • The Beast House (1986) (Second book in the Beast House Chronicles series)
  • Tread Softly (1987) – a.k.a. Dark Mountain (writing as Richard Kelly)
  • Flesh (1987)
  • Midnight's Lair (1988) (writing as Richard Kelly)
  • Resurrection Dreams (1988)
  • Funland (1989)
  • The Stake (1990)
  • One Rainy Night (1991)
  • Darkness, Tell Us (1991)
  • Alarums (1992) a.k.a. Alarms
  • Blood Games (1992)
  • Dark Mountain (1993)
  • Savage: From Whitechapel to the Wild West on the Track of Jack the Ripper (1993)
  • Endless Night (1993)
  • In the Dark (1994)
  • Quake (1995)
  • Island (1995)
  • Body Rides (1996)
  • Bite (1996)
  • After Midnight (1997)
  • The Wilds (1998)
  • The Midnight Tour (1998) (Third book in the Beast House Chronicles series)
  • Cuts (1999)
  • Among the Missing (1999)
  • Come Out Tonight (1999)
  • Once Upon A Halloween (2000)
  • The Traveling Vampire Show (2000)
  • Friday Night in Beast House (2001) (Fourth book in the Beast House Chronicles series)
  • Night in the Lonesome October (2001)
  • The Halloween Mouse (with Alan M. Clark) (2001) – children's book
  • Triage (2001)
  • No Sanctuary (2001)
  • Amara (2003) a.k.a. To Wake the Dead
  • The Lake (2004)
  • The Glory Bus (2005) a.k.a. Into the Fire
  • The Woods are Dark Restored and Uncut (2008)[4]

Fastbacks (young adult short stories)

  • The Intruder (1984)
  • Shootout At Joe's (1984) a.k.a Meeting at Joe's
  • Dawson's City (1984)
  • The Caller (1985)
  • Cardiac Arrest (1985)
  • The Cobra (1985)
  • Guts (1985) a.k.a. The Hearse
  • The Last Hand (1985)
  • Live Bait (1985)
  • The Lonely One (1985)
  • The Trap (1985)
  • Marathon (1985)
  • Night Games (1985)
  • Night Ride (1985)
  • Beginner's Luck (1986)
  • Halloween Hunt (1986)
  • The Night Creature (1986)
  • The Beast (1986)
  • The Return (1987)
  • Thin Air (1987)

Short stories

  • "Bad News"
  • "Barney's Bigfoot Museum"
  • "Bedtime Stories"
  • "Blarney"
  • "The Bleeder"
  • "Boo" (first printed in October Dreams and reprinted in In Laymon's Terms)
  • "The Boy Who Loved the Twilight Zone" (included in Be Afraid: Tales of Horror selected by Edo Van Belkom 2000 Tundra Books)
  • "Cabin in the Woods" (included in The Children of Cthulhu Edited by John Pelan and Benjamin Adams 2002 Del Ray Books / Ballantine)
  • "The Champion"
  • "Choppie" (included in Subterranean Gallery Edited by Richard Chizmar and William Schafer 1999 Subterranean Press)
  • "Cut!" (Originally appeared in Besteller Magazine Issue #23, Pitman Learning, 1985 and reprinted in In Laymon's Terms)
  • "Desert Pickup"
  • "Dinker's Pond"
  • "The Direct Approach"
  • "The Diving Girl" (included in Dark Delicacies: Original Tales of Terror and the Macabre Edited by Del Howison & Jeff Gelb)
  • "Double Date"
  • "Dracusson's Driver"
  • "Eats"
  • "Fiends"
  • "Finders Keepers" (Originally appeared in Besteller Magazine Issue #26, Pitman Learning, 1985)
  • "First Date"
  • "The Fur Coat"
  • "A Good Cigar is a Smoke"
  • "The Good Deed"
  • "A Good, Secret Place"
  • "Good Vibrations"
  • "The Grab"
  • "Hammerhead" (included in The Horror Writers Association Presents - The Museum of Horror Edited by Dennis Etchison 2003 Leisure Books)
  • "The Hangman" (included in Skull Full of Spurs: A Roundup of Weird Westerns Edited by Jason Bovberg and Kirk Whitham 2000 Dark Highway Press)
  • "Herman"
  • "The Hunt" (also made in to an extended screenplay titled The Hunted and included in Screamplays - Published by Del Ray 1997)
  • "I'm Not a Criminal"
  • "Immediate Opening" (reprinted in In Laymon's Terms)
  • "In The Attic" (released as a chapbook - published by Camelot Books)
  • "Into the Pit"
  • "Invitation to Murder"
  • "The Job" (included in The Unexplained - Stories of the Paranormal Editor Ric Alexander Introduced by Peter James 1998 Millenium)
  • "Joyce"
  • "The Keeper" (released as a chapbook - published by Gauntlet Publications)
  • "Keeper of the Books" (Originally appeared in California School Libraries - (volume 48 issue 3) - Spring 1977)
  • "Kitty Litter"
  • "The Living Dead" (included in Mondo Zombie Edited by John Skipp 2006 Cemetery Dance Publications)
  • "Madman Stan"
  • "The Maiden"
  • "The Mask"
  • "The Mirror" (included in Discoveries: Best of Horror and Dark Fantasy Edited by James R. Beach and Jason V. Brock, 2018)
  • "Mess Hall"
  • "Mop Up"
  • "Oscar's Audition"
  • "Out of the Woods"
  • "Paying Joe Back"
  • "Phil the Vampire"
  • "Pickup on Highway One"
  • "Prudence" (included in Imagination Fully Dilated 2 Edited by Elizabeth Engstrom, Artwork by Alan M. Clarke, 2000)
  • "Roadside Pickup"
  • "Saving Grace"
  • "Slit"
  • "Special"
  • "Spooked"
  • "Stickman"
  • "Stiff Intruders"
  • "Tell Me A Tale" (released as a chapbook - published by Cemetery Dance)
  • "Ten Bucks Says You Won't" (included in The Darker Side - Generations of Horror Edited by John Pelan 2002 ROC Horror)
  • "The Tub"
  • "What Jimmy Saw" (first printed in Los Angeles Times Halloween 1998 - 25th October 1998, also found at https://rlk.stevegerlach.com/rlnews98.htm)
  • "Wishbone"
  • "The Worshipper"

Collections

  • Out Are the Lights: And Other Tales (1991) (includes: Out are the Lights | Mess Hall | Dinker's Pond | Madman Stan | Bad News | The Tub)
  • A Good, Secret Place (1992) (includes: Desert Pickup | Roadside Pickup | Oscar's Audition | Paying Joe Back | Out of the Woods | A Good Cigar is a Smoke | The Direct Approach | The Champion | Stiff Intruders | Barney's Bigfoot Museum | Blarney | Spooked | The Grab | Eats | The Bleeder | The Good Deed | Joyce | Stickman | The Mask | A Good Secret Place)
  • Fiends (1997) (includes: Fiends | Kitty Litter | The Bleeder | Desert Pickup | The Mask | Eats | The Hunt | Slit | Out of the Woods | Stiff Intruders | Special | Joyce | A Good, Secret Place)
  • Dreadful Tales (2000) (includes: Invitation to Murder | The Grab | Saving Grace | Barney's Bigfoot Museum | Herman | The Champion | The Maiden | A Good Cigar is a Smoke | I'm Not a Criminal | Oscar's Audition | Into the Pit | Spooked | The Good Deed | The Direct Approach | Good Vibrations | Phil the Vampire | Paying Joe Back | The Fur Coat | Blarney | Dracuson's Driver | Roadside Pickup | Wishbone | First Date | Stickman | Mop Up)
  • Madman Stan and Other Stories (2004) (includes: The Hunt | Eats | The Worshipper | The Maiden | Bedtime Stories | Desert Pickup | A Good Cigar is a Smoke | Invitation to Murder | The Champion | The Good Deed | Paying Joe Back | The Fur Coat | Blarney | A Good, Secret Place | Pickup on Highway One | Saving Grace | Spooked | Madman Stan | Kitty Litter | Slit)
  • Short Stories: The Mystery and Men’s Magazines (2014)

Anthologies

  • Bad News Anthology (2000) (includes: the short story Double Date by Richard Laymon and stories from other contributors)

Autobiography

  • A Writer's Tale (1998)

Tribute

  • In Laymon's Terms (2011[5])

References

  1. ^ Adrian, Jack (March 19, 2001). "Obituary: Richard Laymon". The Independent. p. 6.
  2. ^ "The Woods are Dark (The Original, Uncut Version): Cemetery Dance Publications". Archived from the original on May 5, 2008.
  3. ^ "In Laymon's Terms: Cemetery Dance Publications". Archived from the original on May 10, 2006.
  4. ^ "The Woods are Dark (The Original, Uncut Version): Cemetery Dance Publications". Archived from the original on May 5, 2008.
  5. ^ "In Laymon's Terms".

See also

External links

  • Richard Laymon Kills! The Official Website's New Home at Steve Gerlach
  • Beware! Laymon Ahead Website
  • Richard Laymon page on DLS Reviews
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