Author (and Stephen King collaborator) Richard Chizmar writes horror novels that celebrate life (2024)

When Richard Chizmar was 10 years old, he wrote a story about a snowman who couldn’t melt. The thermometer climbed, and the sun blazed, but the snowman remained standing, watching his once hard-packed buddies dissolve into slush.

“He was so lonely,” Chizmar recalled and grinned. “I always saw the world differently than the other people around me. Even then, I was exploring the dark side.”

Now, the Bel Air resident is an acclaimed author who has penned six novels including four bestsellers. Two were co-written with horror icon Stephen King, who praises Chizmar’s “really interesting, innovative ideas.”

Chizmar has co-authored screenplays for the big and small screen, including one episode of Showtime’s “Masters of Horror” anthology series, and two episodes of NBC’s “Fear Itself.”

What’s more, the horror magazine-turned-publishing company founded by Chizmar when he was a senior at the University of Maryland is thriving. Cemetery Dance Publications, now in its 36th year, has published a roster of A-list authors from Ray Bradbury to William Peter Blatty of “The Exorcist” fame.

Even Chizmar’s personal life is rosy.

Author (and Stephen King collaborator) Richard Chizmar writes horror novels that celebrate life (1)

He’s still married to Kara, the green-eyed girl he fell in love with as a kid. His seventh novel, “Memorials,” will be published in October, one month after the couple’s eldest son, Billy, releases his debut novel, “Them.” The second and youngest son in the family, Noah, is a star lacrosse player at the University of Virginia, where he has displayed a toughness on the field that has been praised by Sports Illustrated.

So life for the 58-year-old Chizmar is looking pretty, well, sunny.

“When my friends finally started reading my work, they’re like, ‘Rich, where does this all this solemn stuff come from?'” he recalled.

“A bookseller in New Hampshire who got an advance copy of my new novel, “Memorials,” messaged me yesterday and said, ‘I’ve had nightmares two nights in a row. You’re going to mess people up.'”

An expression of pure joy crossed Chizmar’s face.

“I just loved that,” he said. “I told her, ‘I can do no better, unless I can make people cry.'”

He knows that an awful lot of people crave being scared out of their wits, though exactly how that mechanism works remains mysterious. What is it about feeling bad that makes some people feel so good?

Behavioral scientist Haiyang Yang, an associate professor at the Johns Hopkins University’s Carey Business School, speculated in a university blog post last fall that fans of horror and suspense are unusually self-assured. People who flock to scary movies are confident they can overcome the obstacles fate throws in their paths, he wrote — a description that fits Chizmar like the cover of a book.

“When we first began publishing the magazine, I would go out to the newspaper box in front of my apartment building at 1 a.m.,” Chizmar said.

“I knew that by that time, no one was going to buy what was left. I would plunk a quarter into the box and take out all the newspapers and use them to pack up the books. We shipped them in boxes we found in dumpsters. I remember thinking, ‘Can you imagine being successful enough to buy boxes to pack your products in?'”

Author (and Stephen King collaborator) Richard Chizmar writes horror novels that celebrate life (2)

Chizmar and King have known each other professionally since 1989. At the time, King had been famous for nearly two decades, and when he sent Chizmar a signed promotional blurb for the fledgling “Cemetery Dance” magazine, it pretty much guaranteed that the new publisher could continue paying his bills for at least the next few months.

Over time, and after thousands of text exchanges and good-natured jibes about the rising and falling fortunes of the Baltimore Orioles and Boston Red Sox, King became familiar with the younger man’s fiction. And when he found himself facing writer’s block, he turned to Chizmar for help.

The result was “Gwendy’s Button Box,” the first novel of a trilogy. The first and last books were written jointly by the two authors, while the second was penned by Chizmar alone.

“Rich basically bailed me out,” King said.

“He has a good feel for suburban life, for middle-class Baltimore and its backyard barbecues and the room in the basem*nt where the kids hang out. I would call what he does ‘middle-class fantasy horror make-believe, with a kind of ‘Twilight Zone’ feel.'”

Even when Chizmar was growing up in Harford County, the youngest of five children of an airman who worked on the Aberdeen Proving Ground and an Ecuadorian homemaker, he was possessed of a keen sense that the best moments in life are fleeting.

He remembers one time in particular when that revelation struck him hard.

“I was about 14,” he recalled. “We had been sledding, but all my friends had gone home. It was dusk and the snow was falling and the lights were glowing. I could see my house off in the distance. I thought, ‘Nothing is ever going to be the same after this. We’re all growing up. People are going to leave, and some of us are never coming back.'”

That’s the moment that made Chizmar a writer.

Author (and Stephen King collaborator) Richard Chizmar writes horror novels that celebrate life (3)

“I am the one who is cursed and blessed to remember everything,” he said. “It helps to put it down on paper. I became a writer to help people make sense of the world.”

Perhaps. But it also seems likely that Chizmar became a horror writer because he likes to surprise people and make them laugh. His acute sense of life’s darker moments is paired with an equally well-developed mischievous streak.

A case in point are his two cinema-verite books, “Chasing the Boogeyman” and “Becoming the Boogeyman,” in which Chizmar goes to great lengths to trick his readers into thinking they’re reading a memoir instead of a novel.

The books are narrated by a young man named Richard Chizmar who moved back home with his parents to save money for his upcoming wedding — all details pulled from the author’s life. The books mix historic events, including a real-life criminal known in the 1980s as the Phantom Fondler, with a made-up serial killer.

The novel even includes black-and-white photos purporting to show the “killer” being handcuffed by police officers. In reality, the murderer and cops were costumed actors, and Chizmar took the photos himself.

“I’m just a big kid,” he admitted.

That turned out to be a very good thing. The author’s innate playfulness has helped him cope with occasional but genuine hardships, including his encounter at age 29 with a real-lifeserial killer: testicular cancer.

“After I was diagnosed, I had two operations,” Chizmar said. “And then my doctors declared me clear. They said there was a 99% chance the cancer would never come back.”

But six months later, Chizmar went to the emergency room after he found himself once again in great pain.

“My poor doctor had to tell me the cancer had spread to both lungs, my liver, my stomach and my lymph nodes,” he said. “I was given a 50% chance of survival.”

And still, the snowman refused to melt.

“I said, ‘If anyone can beat this, it will be me,” Chizmar recalled. “I told my doctors, ‘Tell me what to do, and I will do it better than any patient you have ever had.'”

As he had vowed that he would, Chizmar recovered fully. But even as he and Kara rejoiced, they were hit with another setback.

“After 12 weeks of chemotherapy, the doctors told us that so much poison was being shot into my body that we would not be able to have children the natural way,” he said.”But five years later, there came Billy. And four years after that, there came Noah. I wake up grateful every day.”

More than most of us, Chizmar knows how easily human existence can be snuffed out. But instead of frightening him, he views that painful reality as a cause for celebration.

“Life is fragile, but I’m an optimist,” he said, and then segued into a related thought:

“People tell me that the good thing about my stories is that they always contain a ray of hope.”

Originally Published:

Author (and Stephen King collaborator) Richard Chizmar writes horror novels that celebrate life (2024)

FAQs

What inspired Stephen King to write horror novels? ›

King shared in his non-fiction book Danse Macabre (1981) that his calling to the horror genre happened when he found a paperback version of a collection of short stories by H.P. Lovecraft, sharing in an interview in 2009 that he “knew he had found home when he read that book”.

Is Richard Chizmar Stephen King? ›

Richard Chizmar is a New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Amazon, and Publishers Weekly bestselling author. He is the co-author (with Stephen King) of the novella, Gwendy's Button Box and the founder/publisher of Cemetery Dance magazine and the Cemetery Dance Publications book imprint.

What books did Stephen King write as Richard Bachman? ›

Up to the present-day, King has published no less than seven novels under the pen name Richard Bachman: Rage (1977), The Long Walk (1979), Roadwork (1981), The Running Man (1982), Thinner (1984), The Regulators (1995), and Blaze (2007). The uncovering of Bachman's identity sparked shortly after Thinner came out.

Who is Stephen King's partner? ›

Who is Stephen King's Favourite author? ›

King has admitted to many of his favorite authors being among George Orwell, J.R.R. Tolkien, and William Golding. None of these authors specialize in the horror genre. Instead, these writing geniuses work along the lines of science fiction, fantasy, and young adult fiction.

Who has written the most horror novels? ›

Any list of famous horror authors wouldn't be complete without Stephen King, a prolific author known for his horror and suspense novels. He has published over 60 books, many of which have been adapted into movies and television series.

Who inspired horror? ›

Horror films have existed for more than a century. Early inspirations from before the development of film include folklore, religious beliefs and superstitions of different cultures, and the Gothic and horror literature of authors such as Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, and Mary Shelley.

Why is Stephen King's writing so scary? ›

Both his books and adaptations are riddled with lines and moments that hint at what's to come. This is why King's stories have an overarching sense of doom and dread. Unlike most horror novels and films, it's not the uncertainty of danger that has you on edge, but exactly when that danger will finally happen.

Is Stephen King a ghost writer? ›

King is a well-known and well-respected author, and based on what he has said in interviews, he takes great pride in his creative process. He also seems to have quite an imagination, which helps him to develop new characters and plots. Thus, all evidence indicates that his books were written by him, and only him.

Which of his books does Stephen King like the most? ›

Both “Survivor Type” and “The Body” were both originally published in 1982. As for the novels, King shared that MiseryOpens in a new tab, The Stand, and Lisey's Story are among his favorites. The latter he even adapted into the Apple TV+ limited seriesOpens in a new tab starring Julianne Moore.

What is Stephen King's favorite of his own books? ›

Undoubtedly, King has been asked this question several times in the past, and as he's constantly adding to his oeuvre, the answer is liable to change. On this day, however, King replied concisely, “Lisey's Story. “

Why did Stephen King change his name? ›

At the beginning of King's career, the general view among publishers was that an author was limited to one book per year, since publishing more would be unacceptable to the public. King therefore wanted to write under another name in order to increase his publication without saturating the market for the King "brand".

Whose pseudonym is Stephen King? ›

In the autumn of 1966, Stephen King — later publishing this book under the pseudonym Richard Bachman — began a novel filled with tyrannical cynicism that would change the pace of his writing career. Thirteen years passed, and the book remained untouched until King was a few books into his prolific career.

Why are Stephen King's books so famous? ›

Stephen King's work is known for its recurring themes and motifs, which have become synonymous with the horror genre. One of the most prominent themes in his work is the concept of fear itself, and how it can manifest in different ways.

Are any of Stephen King books connected? ›

I love that you asked this, because almost every single Stephen king book is connected. There's even a Stephen king “universe.” Such as his fictional towns of Castle Rock and Derry, both located in Maine. Many characters are also mentioned or seen in his other books.

What authors does Stephen King recommend? ›

28 books recommended by Stephen King
  • On Writing. Stephen King.
  • The Dutch House. Ann Patchett.
  • The Shadow of the Wind. Carlos Ruiz Zafón.
  • The Haunting of Hill House. Shirley Jackson.
  • Bright Orange for the Shroud. John D. Macdonald.
  • Worth Dying For. Lee Child.
  • The Deep Blue Good-By. John D. Macdonald.
  • Full Throttle. Joe Hill.

Who was Stephen King influenced by? ›

Writing Style. King says that he owes much of his literary identity to Richard Matheson and Ray Bradbury, and you can see many influences in his works from H. P. Lovecraft and Bram Stoker.

Who does Stephen King publish with? ›

Stephen King Books | Simon & Schuster.

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