BLOCH, Robert (Albert)

BLOCH, Robert (Albert)
(1917-1994)
   US writer of FANTASY, HORROR, thrillers and a relatively small amount of sf. Born in Chicago, RB was extremely active from 1935 in his several areas of specialization, but is best known for Psycho (1959), from which Alfred Hitchcock made the famous film (1960), and to which RB wrote two sequels, Psycho II (1982) - not related to the 1983 film sequel of the same name - and Psycho House (1990).RB began as a devotee of the work of H.P. LOVECRAFT, who treated him with kindness. His first published story was "Lilies" (1934) in the semi-professional MARVEL TALES; his first important sale, "The Secret in the Tomb" (1935), appeared in Weird Tales, the magazine which, along with Fantastic Adventures, published most of the over 100 stories he wrote in the first decade of his career. Towards the end of this period he contributed the 22 Lefty Feep fantasy stories to Fantastic Adventures (1942-6); most were later assembled as Lost in Time and Space with Lefty Feep (coll 1987). He published a booklet in the AMERICAN FICTION series, Sea-Kissed (coll 1945 chap UK), the title story of which was originally "The Black Kiss" (1937) by RB and Henry KUTTNER; but his first book-length volume, collecting much of his best early fantasy and horror and published by ARKHAM HOUSE, was The Opener of the Way (coll 1945; in 2 vols as The Opener of the Way 1976 UK and House of the Hatchet 1976 UK); confusingly, a US compilation volume was published with a very similar UK vt, Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper (coll 1962; vt The House of the Hatchet, and Other Tales of Horror 1965 UK), extracting a different mix of stories from The Opener of the Way plus some from the later Pleasant Dreams - Nightmares (coll 1960; cut vt Nightmares 1961; with fewer cuts and some additions vt Pleasant Dreams 1979); Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper was accompanied by More Nightmares (coll 1962), selected from the same sources. These titles have fortunately been superseded as overviews of his career by The Selected Stories of Robert Bloch (coll 1988 in 3 vols: Final Reckonings - which single volume is misleadingly vt The Complete Stories of Robert Bloch, Volume 1: Final Reckonings 1990 - Bitter Ends and Last Rites). During this period and afterwards, RB remained an active sf and fantasy fan; a collection of fanzine articles, The Eighth Stage of Fandom (coll 1962), ed Earl KEMP, was assembled for the 1962 World Science Fiction CONVENTION. It is quite likely that his use of the term INNER SPACE, in his 1948 World Science Fiction Convention speech, was the first formulation of the concept later articulated by J.B. PRIESTLEY and J.G. BALLARD; the speech was printed in the Torcon Report, issued by the convention committee. In the first decade of his career RB also turned to radio work: Stay Tuned for Terror (1945), a 39-episode syndicated programme of adapted RB stories, became popular. RB sometimes used the pseudonym Tarleton Fiske during this period, and also contributed work to sf and horror magazines under various house names, including E.K. JARVIS and later Will Folke, Wilson KANE and John Sheldon. His best-known story from this time was Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper (1943 Weird Tales; 1991 chap); much later he amplified his treatment of the fog-shrouded phenomenon of 1888 in The Night of the Ripper (1984). After the 1940s he continued to produce a wide variety of material, though less prolifically than before. Much of his later work, after the success of Psycho, was in Hollywood. His numerous collections published from 1960 combine old and new work, so that much of his pre-WWII work has become available.His output of sf proper has been comparatively slender; the stories assembled in Atoms and Evil (coll 1962) are representative. A witty, polished craftsman, he laced his horror with a wry humour which only occasionally slips into whimsy. For half a century he was active as an sf fan and patron, and his writing shows complete professional control over sf themes when the need arises; Once Around the Bloch: an Unauthorized Autobiography 1993) reveals a humorous, self-deprecating person fully - but modestly - aware of his wide competence. He was awarded a 1959 HUGO for Best Short Story for "That Hell-Bound Train" (1958), though strictly speaking it is fantasy, not sf; and was given a Special Award in 1984.
   JC
   Other works: Terror in the Night and Other Stories (coll 1958); Blood Runs Cold (coll 1961; with 4 stories cut 1963 UK); Horror-7 (coll 1963); Bogey Men (coll 1963); Tales in a Jugular Vein (coll 1965); The Skull of the Marquis de Sade (coll 1965), the title story of which was filmed as The Skull (1965) and later published separately as The Skull of the Marquis de Sade (1945 Weird Tales; 1992 chap); Chamber of Horrors (coll 1966); The Living Demons (coll 1967); This Crowded Earth (1958 AMZ; 1968 dos) and Ladies' Day (1968 dos), bound together; Dragons and Nightmares (coll 1968), humorous fantasies; Bloch and Bradbury (anth 1969; vt Fever Dream and Other Fantasies 1970 UK); Fear Today, Gone Tomorrow (coll 1971); It's All in Your Mind (1955 Imaginative Tales as "The Big Binge"; 1971); Sneak Preview (1959 AMZ; 1971); The King of Terrors (coll 1977); Cold Chills (coll 1977); The Best of Robert Bloch (coll 1977); Strange Eons (1978); Out of the Mouths of Graves (coll 1978); Such Stuff as Screams are Made Of (coll 1979); Mysteries of the Worm: All the Cthulhu Mythos Stories of Robert Bloch (coll 1981); The Twilight Zone: The Movie * (coll of linked stories 1983), screenplay adaptations; Out of my Head (coll 1986); Midnight Pleasures (coll 1987); Fear and Trembling (coll 1989); Lori (1989), horror; The Jekyll Legacy * (1990) with Andre NORTON, a sequel to the Robert Louis STEVENSON novella; Psycho-Paths (anth 1991) and Monsters in our Midst (anth 1993), both with (anon) Martin Harry GREENBERG; The Early Fears (coll 1994), mostly early work reprinted elsewhere.Associational: Two omnibuses conveniently assemble RB's most interesting non-genre novels: Unholy Trinity: Three Novels of Suspense (omni 1986), which contains The Scarf (1947; vt The Scarf of Passion 1949; rev 1966), The Deadbeat (1960) and The Couch * (1962), from the 1962 film; and Screams: Three Novels of Terror (omni 1989), which contains The Will to Kill (1954), Firebug (1961) and The Star Stalker (1968). Further associational titles of interest include The Kidnapper (1954), Spiderweb (1954), Shooting Star (1958 dos), Terror (1962), The Todd Dossier (1969) as by Collier Young, Night-World (1972), American Gothic (1974), There is a Serpent in Eden (1979; vt The Cunning 1981).
   About the author: "Robert Bloch" in Seekers of Tomorrow (1966) by Sam MOSKOWITZ; The Complete Robert Bloch: An Illustrated, Comprehensive Bibliography (1987) by Randall D. Larson.
   See also: FANTASY; MACHINES; The MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION; RELIGION; ROBOTS; SF IN THE CLASSROOM; SEX; SOCIOLOGY.

Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. . 2011.

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