Richard Matheson (1926–2013)
Author of I Am Legend {story collection}
About the Author
Richard Matheson was born on February 20, 1926 in Allendale, New Jersey. He was eight when his stories appeared in a local newspaper, the Brooklyn Eagle. He served during World War II. He received a degree in journalism from the University of Missouri in 1949. In 1950 he first was noticed as an show more upcoming writer-to-watch, starting with the short story Born of Man and Woman. He wrote numerous novels and short stories during his lifetime including I am Legend, The Shrinking Man, What Dreams May Come, and Hell House. He won the World Fantasy Convention's Life Achievement Award, the Bram Stoker Award for Life Achievement, the Hugo Award, the Golden Spur Award, and the Writer's Guild Award. He also was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2010. When Hollywood approached him for the rights to his novel The Shrinking Man, he negotiated the chance to write the screenplay. This began a long career in screenwriting and adapting. He wrote the screenplay for Steven Spielberg's Duel and 16 episodes of the television series The Twilight Zone. He won an Edgar Allan Poe Award in 1973 for The Night Stalker. He died on June 23, 2013 at the age of 87. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
Richard Matheson is not the same person as his son, Richard Christian Matheson.
Series
Works by Richard Matheson
The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series [1959 - 1964 TV Series] (2016) — Writer — 87 copies, 1 review
Richard Matheson Thrillers: I Am Legend, Someone is Bleeding, Ride the Nightmare, Fury on Sunday (2020) 12 copies
Richard Matheson Suspense Novels: The Shrinking Man, Camp Pleasant, Hunger & Thirst, 7 Steps to Midnight (2020) 9 copies
Prey 8 copies
Bibliothek der besten SF- Stories. Die fünfziger Jahre I. ( 1950 - 1954 ). (SF- Spezial). (1981) — Contributor — 8 copies
Witch War 7 copies
Dress of White Silk 6 copies
The Funeral 6 copies
Visions of Death: Richard Matheson's Edgar Allan Poe Scripts (House of Usher & Pit and the Pendulum) (2007) 6 copies
Mad House (Short Story) 4 copies
The Distributor [short story] 4 copies
The Likeness of Julie 3 copies
The Near Departed 3 copies
Buried Talents 3 copies
He Wanted to Live 3 copies
1984 1/2 3 copies
Drink My Blood [short story] 3 copies
Halfwas helden rond Bastogne : roman 3 copies
Shoo Fly [short story] 3 copies
Gigamesh 42 3 copies
The Box (2009) 3 copies
First Anniversary 3 copies
Hinter dem Horizont 3 copies
Terzo dal sole 2 copies
Legion of Plotters 2 copies
Long Distance Call 2 copies
Wet Straw 2 copies
The Children of Noah 2 copies
The Holiday Man 2 copies
Old Haunts (short story) 2 copies
Mother by Protest [short story] 2 copies
Blood Son 2 copies
Two O'clock Session 2 copies
A Splendid Source [short story] 2 copies
Lover When You’re Near Me 2 copies
Purge Among Peanuts 2 copies
Man with a Club 2 copies
Em Algum Lugar do Passado 2 copies
The Last Blah in the ECT 2 copies
Where There's a Will 2 copies
Short Story Collection Volume I 2 copies
The Window of Time [short fiction] 2 copies
Crescendo 2 copies
The Last Day [short story] 2 copies
The Cost is Not Important 1 copy
Der Omega Mann 1 copy
Collected Stories, Volume 3 1 copy
Duell 1 copy
Куда приводят мечты 1 copy
Collected Stories, Volume 2 1 copy
Metà Luna Metà Marte 1 copy
De slag rond Bastogne 1 copy
Varulven — Contributor — 1 copy
Shock3 1 copy
Shock 4 1 copy
Button, Button [short story] 1 copy
The Foodlegger (short story) 1 copy
Eliminazione lenta 1 copy
Finger prints [short story] 1 copy
When the Waker Sleeps 1 copy
Sorry, Right Number 1 copy
Nat stro 1 copy
Les enfants de Noé 1 copy
Counterfeit Bill 1 copy
Matheson Richard 1 copy
Undeva, candva 1 copy
Shipshape Home 1 copy
The Test [short story] 1 copy
Deadline [short fiction] 1 copy
Mundo de Vampiros 1 copy
Trespass [novelette] 1 copy
Person to Person 1 copy
From Shadowed Places 1 copy
Куди приводять мрії 1 copy
Associated Works
The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One: The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time (1970) — Contributor — 2,111 copies, 34 reviews
75 Short Masterpieces: Stories from the World's Literature (1961) — Contributor — 319 copies, 2 reviews
American Fantastic Tales : Terror and the Uncanny from the 1940's to Now (2009) — Contributor — 298 copies, 5 reviews
The Vampire Archives: The Most Complete Volume of Vampire Tales Ever Published (2007) — Contributor — 217 copies, 5 reviews
Masterpieces of Terror and the Unknown: A Treasury of Bizarre Tales Old and New (1993) — Contributor — 213 copies, 2 reviews
He Is Legend: An Anthology Celebrating Richard Matheson (2009) — Contributor — 208 copies, 6 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Second Annual Collection (1987) — Contributor — 207 copies, 1 review
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories to Be Read with the Door Locked (1975) — Contributor — 188 copies, 4 reviews
American Science Fiction: Nine Classic Novels of the 1950s (2012) — Contributor — 122 copies, 3 reviews
Dogs of War: Ten Classic Stories of Men and Machines in War (2002) — Contributor — 116 copies, 1 review
Science Fiction Showcase: Eleven Extraordinary Stories by Eleven Masters of Science-Fiction and Fantasy (1959) — Contributor — 111 copies, 3 reviews
A Clutch of Vampires: These Being Among the Best from History and Literature (1929) — Contributor — 106 copies, 2 reviews
The Prentice Hall Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy (2000) — Contributor — 100 copies, 2 reviews
Rivals of Weird Tales: 30 Great Fantasy & Horror Stories from the Weird Fiction Pulps (1990) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
Alfred Hitchcock Presents : Stories My Mother Never Told Me (1963) — Contributor — 94 copies, 2 reviews
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction: A 30-Year Retrospective (1980) — Contributor — 94 copies, 1 review
The World That Couldn't Be and 8 Other Novelets From "Galaxy" (1959) — Contributor — 86 copies, 5 reviews
La dimension fantastique, Tome 1 : Treize nouvelles de Hoffmann à Claude Seignolle (1998) — Contributor — 80 copies, 2 reviews
The Best Fantasy Stories from the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (1985) — Contributor — 77 copies, 2 reviews
To Sleep, Perchance to Dream...Nightmare: 30 Terrifying Tales (1993) — Contributor — 54 copies, 1 review
The Best Horror Stories from The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (1988) — Contributor — 52 copies, 1 review
Science Fiction Hall Of Fame Volume Two. The Greatest Science Fiction Stories Of All Time Chosen By The Members Of The Science Fiction Writers Of America (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 41 copies
The Best Horror Stories from the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Vol. I (1989) — Contributor — 27 copies
Van Jules Verne tot Isaac Asimov de vijftig beste science fiction verhalen (1981) — Contributor — 17 copies, 1 review
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction June 1963, Vol. 24, No. 6 (1963) — Contributor — 15 copies
Midnite Movies Double Feature: Panic in Year Zero / The Last Man on Earth (2005) — Writer — 15 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction February 1962, Vol. 22, No. 2 (1962) — Contributor — 11 copies
Midnite Movies Double Feature: The Fall of the House of Usher / The Pit and the Pendulum (2004) 11 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction October 1957, Vol. 13, No. 4 (1957) — Contributor — 9 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction August 1958, Vol. 15, No. 2 (1958) — Contributor — 8 copies
Amazing Stories Vol. 27, No. 4 [April-May 1953] — Author — 4 copies
Hammer Films Double Feature Volume Three: Maniac / Die! Die! My Darling! — Writer — 2 copies
The Day After Doomsday; Earth Abides; I Am Legend; On The Beach; Alas, Babylon; Lucifer's Hammer (Leather Bound)(5 Vol Set) (2012) 2 copies
Tordenøglen - og andre historier fra fremmede verdener (1982) — Author, some editions — 2 copies, 1 review
The Vincent Price Collection: Volume 3 — Writer — 1 copy
Configurations: American Short Stories for the EFL Classroom, Advanced Level (1984) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Ռիչարդ Մեթսոն
- Legal name
- Matheson, Richard Burton
- Other names
- Swanson, Logan
- Birthdate
- 1926-02-20
- Date of death
- 2013-06-23
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Missouri (BA ∙ journalism ∙ 1949)
- Occupations
- novelist
short story writer
screenwriter - Organizations
- Southern California Sorcerers
- Awards and honors
- Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement (1991)
International Horror Guild Living Legend (1999)
World Horror Convention Grand Master Award (1993)
Science Fiction Hall Of Fame (2010)
World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement (1984)
Bram Stoker Award (1989, 2002) (show all 9)
Spur Award (1991)
Geffen Award (2008)
Saturn Visionary Award (2013) - Relationships
- Matheson, Richard Christian (son)
Matheson, Christopher (son) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Allendale, New Jersey, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
Calabasas, California, USA - Place of death
- Calabasas, California, USA
- Map Location
- California, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- Richard Matheson is not the same person as his son, Richard Christian Matheson.
Members
Discussions
I Am Legend - Smeared Ink Chapter headings . . . is it planned, or a printing error? in Folio Society Devotees (December 2022)
What's your Opinion of Richard Matheson? in Thing(amabrarian)s That Go Bump in the Night (January 2011)
Reviews
A fun but disposable time-travel adventure from an author whose pen has been better deployed elsewhere. Richard Matheson has delivered thought-provoking modern fables in I Am Legend and in episodes of The Twilight Zone, but Somewhere in Time is rather frivolous.
Originally published as Bid Time Return, the novel tells the story of a modern man (or 1971 – around the time Matheson wrote the book) who becomes infatuated with a photograph of a beautiful actress from the 1890s, to such an extent show more that he decides to travel back in time to be with her. The book is more romantic fantasy than science-fiction: the method of time-travel is not a machine or a rift in spacetime but the rather flimsy concept of self-hypnosis. When the protagonist, Richard Collier, actually achieves this, there begins a sickly sentimental romance between him and the actress, Elise McKenna. It's romantic in a Mills-and-Boon-ish sort of way, with all the obvious limitations that implies.
It's a decent concept (star-crossed lovers; even time can't keep them apart) but the execution is cloying and overblown. The characters begin to test our patience and the prose style is like wading through mush: every thought, act and setting is explained in detail, forcing the reader to scan and self-edit to avoid becoming drained. It is in these flaws that the film adaptation from 1980 proves itself superior. Christopher Reeve gives a clean and innocent charm to Richard where the book version is needy and borderline-creepy, and Jane Seymour gives a vivacity to Elise, who in the book is a perfect doll, the female wish-fulfilment of Richard (Collier or Matheson?) The film also recognises it's a piece of light entertainment, and can be considered a hidden gem, whereas the book is overburdened by the needless prose weight and romantic syrup that Matheson ladles on top. The story is one to enjoy, but – on this occasion – not in book but film. show less
Originally published as Bid Time Return, the novel tells the story of a modern man (or 1971 – around the time Matheson wrote the book) who becomes infatuated with a photograph of a beautiful actress from the 1890s, to such an extent show more that he decides to travel back in time to be with her. The book is more romantic fantasy than science-fiction: the method of time-travel is not a machine or a rift in spacetime but the rather flimsy concept of self-hypnosis. When the protagonist, Richard Collier, actually achieves this, there begins a sickly sentimental romance between him and the actress, Elise McKenna. It's romantic in a Mills-and-Boon-ish sort of way, with all the obvious limitations that implies.
It's a decent concept (star-crossed lovers; even time can't keep them apart) but the execution is cloying and overblown. The characters begin to test our patience and the prose style is like wading through mush: every thought, act and setting is explained in detail, forcing the reader to scan and self-edit to avoid becoming drained. It is in these flaws that the film adaptation from 1980 proves itself superior. Christopher Reeve gives a clean and innocent charm to Richard where the book version is needy and borderline-creepy, and Jane Seymour gives a vivacity to Elise, who in the book is a perfect doll, the female wish-fulfilment of Richard (Collier or Matheson?) The film also recognises it's a piece of light entertainment, and can be considered a hidden gem, whereas the book is overburdened by the needless prose weight and romantic syrup that Matheson ladles on top. The story is one to enjoy, but – on this occasion – not in book but film. show less
Matheson's first short story collection, which hasn't been reprinted since the 50s, is back in a new fine press edition. Having read Penguin's The Best of Richard Matheson last year, he quickly became one of my favorite mid-century horror writers (a period I consider both my favorite period of horror literature, and one of the most underrated) alongside Charles Beaumont. This collection contains his most "hard" science fiction stories (and I say "hard" in quotes, because the techno stuff is show more really kept to an absolute minimum). You can tell he was still finding his bearings here, because there are some excellent stories, including the Kafkaesque F---, but there's also some that are dated and goofy. The title story still retains its power to creep and shock after all these decades. Suntup Editions set the book in ragged-right as opposed to justified text, which gives it the feel of picking up a journal of grotesqueries. The most powerful story for me was the final one, The Traveller, which tells of an atheist time traveler who goes to witness the crcufixition and comes back with a newfound faith, not in miracles, but in human resilience. As much as I love these fine press illustrated editions, they are rather pricey, and if you're squeezed, Tor has published all of Matheson's collected short stories over four volumes, and Valancourt has published all his finished Uncollected Stories in Offbeat. But it's always interesting to see how authors originally presented their work. show less
I get tired of the special-effects driven horror movies, all motion and no plot. Whatever happened to the stories where I felt a genuine sense of dread, and anticipation? Did they all disappear after Richard Matheson wrote his novella?
If you are wondering where all the zombie/vampire motifs originated from, you're looking at it. It's unsettling thinking about being surrounded by people - perhaps dead but still very much active - who are looking to you for their next meal. It's about being show more very lonely, after locking all the toxic people out of your life. Is it worth the fight to stay alive, if you are doomed to be alone?
The plot moves quickly and it's a page-turner. No slow spots. Try not to read it on a lonely winter night at your cottage, like I did. show less
If you are wondering where all the zombie/vampire motifs originated from, you're looking at it. It's unsettling thinking about being surrounded by people - perhaps dead but still very much active - who are looking to you for their next meal. It's about being show more very lonely, after locking all the toxic people out of your life. Is it worth the fight to stay alive, if you are doomed to be alone?
The plot moves quickly and it's a page-turner. No slow spots. Try not to read it on a lonely winter night at your cottage, like I did. show less
I just happened to finish rereading this as I got the news of Richard Matheson's death. Sad news, indeed. His body of work hasn't been consistent, but it has been entertaining, and I suspect I have not read enough of it.
*There are spoilers in the last paragraph of this review.*
The Shrinking Man offers a somewhat contrived what-if scenario: what if a man started shrinking 1/7 of an inch every day? This could have been a gimmicky conceit, but Matheson turns it into a meditation on what it show more means to be a man. The hero's masculinity is chipped away each day by fractions of an inch, and the story chronicles his growing helplessness and frustration as he loses all of the authority he had been so accustomed to -- at first, over his wife; then, his daughter and other children; then, over household pets; and finally, over all animals such as birds and spiders. He is banished from work and his marital bed, then made to live in a dollhouse, and finally condemned to the cellar. The only way he can reassert his masculinity is to devise ways to survive, even though he feels like he has a clear end date.
In a lot of ways, The Shrinking Man reminds me of the much better Matheson novella, I Am Legend. Each stays in the head of a solitary hero, isolated by unnatural events beyond his control, struggling to hold onto his sanity and his sense of self.
The Shrinking Man is clearly a product of its time, an anguished and often cynical view of the emasculation of men in a changing era. Matheson does hold out hope in the end, that the Shrinking Man may not be completely extinguished by the forces around him, but may instead discover new worlds where he can reinvent and reassert himself. Depending on how the reader feels about masculinity, this may or may not be a happy ending. For me, it was an unexpected ending, and one that elevated this short novel well above a mere gimmick. show less
*There are spoilers in the last paragraph of this review.*
The Shrinking Man offers a somewhat contrived what-if scenario: what if a man started shrinking 1/7 of an inch every day? This could have been a gimmicky conceit, but Matheson turns it into a meditation on what it show more means to be a man. The hero's masculinity is chipped away each day by fractions of an inch, and the story chronicles his growing helplessness and frustration as he loses all of the authority he had been so accustomed to -- at first, over his wife; then, his daughter and other children; then, over household pets; and finally, over all animals such as birds and spiders. He is banished from work and his marital bed, then made to live in a dollhouse, and finally condemned to the cellar. The only way he can reassert his masculinity is to devise ways to survive, even though he feels like he has a clear end date.
In a lot of ways, The Shrinking Man reminds me of the much better Matheson novella, I Am Legend. Each stays in the head of a solitary hero, isolated by unnatural events beyond his control, struggling to hold onto his sanity and his sense of self.
The Shrinking Man is clearly a product of its time, an anguished and often cynical view of the emasculation of men in a changing era. Matheson does hold out hope in the end, that the Shrinking Man may not be completely extinguished by the forces around him, but may instead discover new worlds where he can reinvent and reassert himself. Depending on how the reader feels about masculinity, this may or may not be a happy ending. For me, it was an unexpected ending, and one that elevated this short novel well above a mere gimmick. show less
Lists
Which house? (1)
um actually (1)
1970s Horror (1)
SF Masterworks (1)
Best Audiobooks (1)
A Novel Cure (1)
Ghosts (1)
1970s (1)
Macho Fiction (1)
Horror: Top 10 (1)
Kayla (2)
Best Dystopias (2)
SF Masterworks (2)
Overdue Podcast (2)
1950s (3)
Horror Stories (2)
Favourite Books (1)
Lucy's Long List (1)
Maine (1)
On the pile (1)
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 292
- Also by
- 173
- Members
- 30,245
- Popularity
- #662
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 968
- ISBNs
- 763
- Languages
- 26
- Favorited
- 109

















































