Pages

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Living in Fear: A History of Horror in Mass Media by Les Daniels (1975): Immaculately Frightful

 
Despite being able to Google any and all topics at any and all times, I still cherish having my own nonfiction collection of horror reference books. I've always been interested in author biographies and critical appreciations of the genre, especially for the general reader and not (necessarily) the literary academic. While my shelf of these titles pales in comparison to my shelves of actual horror fiction, this latest addition to my library deserves a post of its own.

Living in Fear: A History of Horror in the Mass Media (Da Capo Press oversize paperback, 1983) is virtually a one-stop shop for most of your horror literacy requirements. Author Les Daniels (1943-2011) made his bones in the early Seventies when he published Comix: A History of Comic Books in America, one of the very first books on the topic. He gained a reputation as a serious, but not stuffy, chronicler of the overlooked, the forgotten, the thrown-away popular enjoyments of the past. (Hmm, sounds familiar...)

 
Daniels continued to write about comic books, with histories of Superman, Wonder Woman, and others following later. As his favorites had been the notorious EC horror comics of the Fifties, it's no wonder that he soon turned his attention to that also much-maligned genre in toto. We should be glad he did, because he almost effortlessly draws a line from Greek mythology, Biblical mystery plays, epic poetry, and proto Gothic literature to early American religious sermons, and then more recognizable horror fare like The Monk, Frankenstein, Varney the Vampyre, Dracula, Poe, Bierce, Washington Irving, et. al. 

But of course he's practically just getting started. The Order of the Golden Dawn, Weird Tales, the Lovecraft circle, "Inner Sanctum," Universal monster movies, Boris Karloff, William Gaines, Richard Matheson, Rod Serling, Hammer flicks, even a brief consideration of the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison, and Alice Cooper in the context of psychological horror and nihilism—all come under his discerning eye and fluid pen. Daniels also generously included several classic short stories to serve as markers of their era, from Poe, M.R. James, Machen and more, including a solid-gold personal fave-rave, Matheson's "Blood Son."

 
I haven't even mentioned the lovely b&w art that accompanies the text, vintage illustrations from down the ages,woodcuts, iconic movie stills, comic and magazines covers (but nary a single, believe it or not, actual book cover) even a full-length EC Comics story. I can't tell you how excited I was to learn about Irish artist Harry Clarke's Art Nouveau-inspired drawings for Poe's dreadful tales (above). 

 
 
As for "modern" horror, Daniels seems almost dismissive of both film adaptations of Rosemary's Baby and The Exorcist, which maybe made sense back then but today I find inexplicable: those two movies are, along with their base novels, the tent poles of modern horror entertainment. Thomas Tryon gets a mention of a paragraph, as does non-horror author John Fowles, and a few other "contemporary" writers, but Daniels wrote this book prior to Stephen King's ascension and domination of even the very concept of "horror." Daniels himself would start to publish his own horror novels, a historical series about the vampire Don Sebastian de Villanueva, in the ensuing years. The final words are about the monster cereals of the Seventies, perhaps an ignominious end to such a towering work, alas...

1975 Scribner hardcover
 
Obviously a precursor to King's chummy horror/Cold War kid memoir Danse Macabre from 1981, Living in Fear is a reference work at heart. I think anyone attempting to read it from cover to cover would simply get bogged down by the sheer weight and heft of Daniels' approach. You may be thinking now that this isn't the type of book you read straight through, and you'd be right.

Indeed, I see many fans online make this mistake with Danse, and then give up in frustration. I was introduced to King's book in 19-effing-86 and I still don't think I've read it in its entirety. Books like these are to nosh and nibble at, appetizers and hors d'oeuvres for the brain. It is something to keep on your shelf and when you run across some horror blank spot and you think, What did ol' Les Daniels have to say about "The Night Stalker"? Or Creepy magazine? Or Robert Bloch? Think how ridiculous it'd be if you tried to eat an entire Thanksgiving dinner spread all by yourself. No, you help yourself to a serving, go back for seconds later, eat some leftovers for a midnight snack or the day after.

I'll be honest: Daniels writes with such casual authority, from such a wellspring of knowledge and experience, in such clear prose, that I found myself dealing with pangs of jealousy as I read. While I knew of many of the topics and names and stories contained herein, it is the brisk aplomb with which Daniels sets down his insights that impressed me most mightily. His ability to synthesize and summarize decades upon decades of fearsome entertainments, to move from classic literature to pulp fiction, from silent film to the Seventies cinematic excesses, from radio to television and magazines, is nothing short of magnificent. 

Striking a path between the academic and the aficionado, Daniels has offered up a clear, deep well to drink from. Despite it being almost half a century old, Living in Fear provides so much context, insight, enthusiasm, and appreciation for the origins of, and the genre as a whole, that it belongs in every serious horror and pop culture fan's library.

6 comments:

  1. I remember reading this book in the 1978 Scribner hardcover edition in my local library's main branch (a friend of mine bought it from them and, as far as I know, still has it to this day).

    One thing I remember is that he liked GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS! (1956), but was scornful of every monster film that came out later from Japan (granted, this was before the original Japanese version, GODZILLA (1954) became readily available; I wonder what he'd think of that film? Well, I guess I'll never know).

    ReplyDelete
  2. (Zwolf again)
    I've read Danse Macabre straight through several times, and probably a dozen other times if you added together all the skipping around I do in it. It's one of my favorite King books, and I never have any trouble at all reading it cover to cover... so, I might want to do that with Daniels' book. Anyway, it sounds like one I should definitely be looking for. :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. You know, I owned the 'electric purple' version of this book back in the late 70s........I lost it during the passage of time, and forgot all about it. But your post brought memories back to the surface. Given that used copies of the hardcover are available for reasonable prices (under $15), sounds like I owe it to myself to get 'Living in Fear' !

    During the 1970s Les Daniels and Peter Haining were the two people who did the most to raise the profile of horror media in pop culture. They truly were giants in the field.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I coveted my copy of LIVING IN FEAR back in the day and it is still part of my library. Haining's THE GHOULS and other works are also touchstones of horror history. King's DANSE MACABRE is one of his best books, IMHO. Treasures, all!

    Daniels also wrote a series of vampire novels, including YELLOW FOG and CITIZEN VAMPIRE.

    ReplyDelete
  5. John, Will refers to the series of vampire novels in his review, those you cite are Don Sebastian novels (the series begins with THE BLACK CASTLE...it's notable that however evil Sebastian might be, the mess he finds himself in the middle of in each novel is at least as riddled with common human evil as anything he brings to the part...quite obviously Daniels's point).

    This was the first book of horror criticism/history I read, and I, too, read it straight through, borrowing a fairly recent library copy in 1975, and loving the short stories included as well as the runthroughs of the Daniels text (not without the occasional error, as I could see even then, as when he suggests Gene Roddenberry had anything to do with THE OUTER LIMITS).

    Wrote it up for my blog some years back: http://socialistjazz.blogspot.com/2009/11/fridays-forgotten-books-living-in-fear.html

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ooh, "Killer" by Peter Tonkin is some good man vs nature survival horror... no spoilers to say that the killer orca has been trained by the US govt to kill Vietnamese frogmen!

    ReplyDelete