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I wasn't in to authors, yet -- except for Charles Dickens, of whom I was keenly aware. But after I put down The Survivor, I noted the name of the author: James Herbert, and immediately sought out more of his books. Lucky for me, I found one at my middle school library book sale. A copy of The Rats, with the cover torn off. I devoured that one right up. Finding no Herbert books on the local library shelves, I took to the back pages of the paperback, where they had an order form for his other books at Signet. I scraped up some of my snow shoveling money and sent off for a copy of The Fog.
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I became a regular at the mall bookstore, heading straight to the Horror section, looking for, and awaiting the next of his books. The first "new" paperback I was treated to was Fluke, a definite change of pace from the mind bending horror of flesh eating rats, killer fog and torturous ghosts. Fluke, instead, was a murder mystery involving a man who reincarnates in to a dog. I was undaunted by the change. This was Jame Herbert, afterall, so it's got to be good. And it was. Just as page turning as the previous books.
Every year after that, like clockwork, I was treated to another of Herbert's mind-whirling horror novels. Some were mildly tedious (The Dark, Moon), others brilliant (the continuing Rat series), but all were welcomed. And not only was I on the lookout for Herbert novels, I quickly became a fan of his (American) publisher, Signet. When there wasn't a new Herbert paperback to chew on, I found that most of the other Signet horror novels would do to fill in the gaps. Books like The Cats, New Blood, Rooftops, Phone Call, Savage Snow. And authors like, David Lippencott, Nick Sharman, and Guy N. Smith.
The late 70s and early 80s were really such a great time to be a horror reader. This is when King ruled, and he did good by it. But, I've always been a James Herbert fan. He drew me in before I'd even heard of Stephen King -- and he soon became known as the British Stephen King -- but, my heart goes to Herbert... My pulsating, bloody, quivering, lusty heart.
Goodbye James. Thanks for the wonderful nightmares.