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James Herbert

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This article is about the English horror writer; for the American music video director, see James Herbert (director).
James Herbert
Born (1943-04-08) 8 April 1943 (age 81)
OccupationWriter, Author
NationalityBritish
GenreHorror

James Herbert, OBE (born 8 April 1943, London[1]) is a best-selling English horror writer who originally worked as the art director of an advertising agency. He is a full-time writer who also designs his own book covers and publicity.

Family

Herbert lives near Brighton with his wife and daughters. He is the son of a stall-holder at London's Brick Lane Market. He has two brothers; Peter, also a market trader (retired) and John, an insurance broker.[2]

Overview

His first two books, The Rats and The Fog, are disaster novels with man-eating Giant Black Rats in the first and an accidentally released chemical weapon in the second. Herbert has written three sequels to The Rats; Lair deals with a second outbreak of the mutants, this time in the countryside around Epping Forest rather than in the first book's London slums; In Domain, one of Herbert's bleakest and most ironic books, a nuclear war means that the rats have become the dominant species in a devastated city. The third sequel, the graphic novel The City, is an adventure set in the post-nuclear future.

With his third novel, the ghost story The Survivor, Herbert used supernatural horror rather than the science fiction horror of his first two books. In Shrine, he explored his Roman Catholic heritage with the story of an apparent miracle which turns out to be something much more sinister. Haunted, the story of a sceptical paranormal investigator taunted by malicious ghosts, began life as a screenplay for the BBC, though this was not the screenplay used in the eventual film version. Its sequel was The Ghosts of Sleath. Others of Herbert's books, such as Moon, Sepulchre and Portent, are structured as thrillers, and include espionage and detective story elements along with the supernatural. The Jonah is in large part the story of a police investigation, albeit by a policeman whose life is overshadowed by a supernatural presence. The Spear deals with a neo-Nazi cult in Britain and an international conspiracy which includes a right-wing US general and an arms dealer.

'48 is set in an alternate world of 1948 in which the Second World War ended with the release of a devastating plague by the defeated Hitler and, like The Spear, features British characters who sympathise with the Nazis. Others presents the story of a physically deformed private detective. Herbert had previously tackled the theme of reincarnation in his fourth novel, Fluke, the story of a dog who somehow remembers his previous life as a human being. Rumbo, one of the characters from Fluke also turns up in The Magic Cottage. Once... includes another reference to the character of Rumbo.

Nobody True continues the theme of life after death, being narrated by a ghost whose investigation of his own death results in the destruction of his illusions about his life. Herbert has described 'Creed' as his Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein. The character Joe Creed is a cynical, sleazy paparazzo who is drawn into a plot involving fed-up and underappreciated monsters.

The novel, The Secret of Crickley Hall, originally scheduled for release in April 2006, was eventually released in October. A long novel about a haunted country house in England, it examined the relationship between religious zealotry and child abuse. One of the characters in this novel is named after a real person, who won the honour by having the winning bid in the 2004 BBC Radio 2 Children in Need Auction. Various biographical and critical pieces by and about Herbert have been collected in James Herbert: By Horror Haunted, edited by Stephen Jones, and also in Devil in the Dark, edited by Craig Cabell.

Herbert released a new novel virtually every year from 1974 to '88, wrote six novels during the 1990s and to date has released three new works in the 2000s. "I am very insecure about being a writer", he stated in the book Faces of Fear. "I don't understand why I am so successful. And the longer I stay that way, the better it's going to be, because that's keeps me on the edge, striving if you like." Herbert was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2010 Birthday Honours.[3]

Works

Adaptations

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Illustrated by Ian Miller.
  2. ^ Collection of works and interviews, edited by Stephen Jones. See Jones 1992.
  3. ^ Photographs by Paul Barkshire.
  4. ^ "Maurice and Mog", about a man living in his nuclear shelter with a cat, was originally a chapter excised from some editions of Domain. In: Williamson 1987, 1988 & 2001 and Jones 1992.
  5. ^ "Breakfast", about a woman who continues with her chores after the armageddon, was originally a chapter excised from some editions of Domain. In: Masterton 1989 and Jones 1992.
  6. ^ "Halloween's Child" was an original story first published in the Daily Mail. In Etchison 1991a & 1991b and Jones 1992.
  7. ^ "They Don't Like Us". In: Jones 1992 and Francis & Upton 1996.
  8. ^ "Extinct". In: Cabell 2003.
  9. ^ "Cora's Needs" is the restoration of a chapter of Sepulchre that was edited down before publication. In: Cabell 2003.

References

  1. ^ Cabell 2003, p. 3.
  2. ^ Kugler, Oliver (7 April 2006). "Kugler's people: Peter Herbert". Guardian G2: 14–15.
  3. ^ "Birthday Honours—United Kingdom". London Gazette. No. 59446. 12 June 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2011. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |notarchive= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |startpage= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |supp= ignored (help)

Bibliography

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