Here
is the official Biography of Richard Bachman:
Born in New York, Richard Bachman’s early years are somewhat
of a mystery.
As a young man, Bachman served a four-year stint in the
Coast Guard, which he then followed with ten years in the
merchant marine.
Bachman finally settled down in rural central New Hampshire,
where he ran a medium-sized dairy farm. He did his writing
at night (he suffered from chronic insomnia), after the cows
came home.
Bachman and his wife, Claudia Inez Bachman, had one child, a
boy, who died in an unfortunate, Stephen King-ish type
accident at the age of six. He apparently fell through a
well and drowned. In 1982, a brain tumor was discovered near
the base of Bachman’s brain; tricky surgery removed it.
Bachman died suddenly in late 1985, of cancer of the
pseudonym, a rare form of schizonomia.
At the time of his death, Bachman had published five novels:
Rage - 1977
The Long
Walk - 1979
Roadwork -
1981
The
Running Man - 1982
Thinner - 1984
The first four novels were published as paperbacks, but as
Bachman had been gaining quite a constant readership, his
last novel, Thinner, was published in hardcover and was well
received by the critics.
At the time of his death, he was toying with an idea for a
new novel, a rather gruesome suspense novel which would have
been titled Misery, had he lived to write it. (Note: This
title was later plagiarized by a well-known horror writer.)
Bachman fans received a bit of good news recently. In 1994,
while preparing to move to a new house, the widow Bachman
discovered a cardboard carton filled with manuscripts in the
cellar. The carton contained a number of novels and stories,
in varying degrees of completion. The most finished was a
typescript of a novel entitled, The Regulators.
The widow took the manuscript to Bachman’s former editor,
Charles Verrill, who found it compared well with Bachman’s
earlier works. After only a few minor changes, and with the
approval of the author’s widow (now Claudia Eschelman), The
Regulators will be published posthumorously in September of
1996 by Dutton. As of this time, no other information has
been forthcoming as to the possibility of the remaining
unpublished cartonworks being published.
As a brief side note, Charles Verrill also happens to edit
the works of Stephen King, a writer whose works have been
compared to the late Richard Bachman’s. When asked his
opinion of Bachman, King replied, "A nasty man....I'm glad
that he's dead." |