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Read Stalking The Nightmare (1982)

Stalking the Nightmare (1982)

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Rating
4.15 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0932096166 (ISBN13: 9780932096166)
Language
English
Publisher
phantasia press (huntington hills, mi)

Stalking The Nightmare (1982) - Plot & Excerpts

With an introduction by Stephen King and an amalgam of short stories and essays, Stalking the Nightmare is an entertaining read. As with any collection of tales from a single writer, some stand out more than others. In this case, the most memorable ones include:"Grail" - in which a man spends his life searching for true love only to learn that it's an artifact that has been traded around the world."The Outpost Undiscovered by Tourists" - A parody of the three wise men in modern times after searching 2000 years for Christ. They now drive a Rolls Royce and sleep on air mattresses while fighting the "forces of chaos". Eventually, they find the savior in The Manger, a hotel by Hyatt, and surrounded by various folks including accountants, pet-store owners, and hairdressers."Night of Black Glass" - this one interested me mostly as it was written in 5 hours in a B. Dalton bookstore window after news anchor Tom Brokaw challenged Harlan to write a story based on one line: "August afternoon a person walking along a rocky beach in Maine picks up a pair of broken sunglasses.” "Djinn, No Chaser" - a young couple walks into a mysterious antique shop that materializes from thin air. They purchase a cheap lamp before the owner kicks them out just as the shop vanishes once more. Later, the couple finds that the lamp contains a sadistic genie who turns their lives into a living hell, sending the husband into an asylum. Later, his wife discovers a way to turn their situation completely around..."Invasion Footnote" - another farce about a megalomaniacal robot hell-bent on world domination, until his own kind turn on him. Predictable but funny."The Hour That Stretches" - Harlan fills in for Jerry Pournelle as a guest on a radio show and decides to allow callers to phone in one-line prompts to which Harlan will conjure up a story premise on the spot. After awhile, it becomes an exhausting exercise for Harlan, until the final caller..."The Day I Died" - not so much a story, but a series of possible ways in which Harlan will die, with exact descriptions and dates ranging from 1973 to 2010.In my opinion, the first three essays are actually more interesting than the stories. "The 3 Most Important Things in Life" offers moments from Harlan's life that deal with sex, violence, and labor relations. The latter of which is an incident that occurred when he was hired to write for Disney...and fired within hours of arrival."Saturn, November 11th" details Harlan's visit to JPL as a guest of Jerry Pournelle when the Voyager satellite begins sending pictures back of Saturn and its moons."Somehow, I Don't Think We're In Kansas, Toto" is a recount of Harlan's ludicrous experiences with Hollywood when The Starlost TV series went into production based on his story, “Phoenix Without Ashes". All told, Stalking the Nightmare is an enjoyable read and further evidence of Harlan's vivid imagination and reputation for fearless, and even experimental, storytelling.

I found this collection of stories buried in a mound of books at a flea market back in 2004. There were so many books piled on multiple tables that I had a hell of a time sorting through all of them. The place was busy and packed and each book was being sold for fifty cents or less. I found I didn't have the space or time to read through books before deciding to purchase, so I dove in and bought a bunch of random titles.It wasn't until I brought the books home and looked through that I realized Stalking the Nightmare has a foreword by Stephen King. I knew nothing about the stories or the author. I had never heard of the author before. And so I bought a book with some of the must fluid and chilling prose for fifty cents.Best fifty cents I ever spent. Now go stalk your own nightmare.

What do You think about Stalking The Nightmare (1982)?

This book was my first introduction to the writing of Harlan Ellison, and I'm glad that I encountered it first. It has fiction, science fiction, non-fiction, and an irreverent writing style that caused me to want to read everything that Mr. Ellison had to offer. If it weren't for this book, I would not have gone on to read the rest of Mr. Ellison's works, I would not have been permanently influenced to constantly strive to understand the workings behind things that most take for granted, and I might not have gone on to read Neil Gaiman... or basically, I wouldn't be the person that I am today. Thank goodness I ran into this book when I was in high school and felt compelled to give it a shot.
—Litho Fayne

Harlan Ellison is one of my favorite authors. He's a master storyteller and he's hard to classify as he is adept at writing in many genres. This book is a collection of his short stories including Djinn, No Chaser. I highly recommend it. * Foreword by Stephen King * Introduction: Quiet Lies the Locust Tells * Grail * The Outpost Undiscovered By Tourists * Blank... * Scenes From the Real World: I - The 3 Most Important Things In Life * Visionary (written with Joe L. Hensley) * Djinn, No Chaser * Invasion Footnote * Scenes From the Real World: II - Saturn, November 11th * Night of Black Glass * Final Trophy * !!!The!!Teddy!Crazy!!Show!!! * The Cheese Stands Alone * Scenes From The Real World: III - Somehow, I Don't Think We're In Kansas, Toto * Transcending Destiny * The Hour That Stretches * The Day I Died * 3 Tales From the Mountains of Madness: Tracking Level, Tiny Ally, The Goddess In The Ice * Scenes From The Real World: IV - Gopher In the Gilly
—John W

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