Everything about Richard Bachman totally explained
Richard Bachman is a
pseudonym used by
horror fiction author
Stephen King.
Origin
At the beginning of Stephen King's career, the general view among publishers was such that an author was limited to a book every year at the utmost; any more, it was felt, wasn't acceptable to the public. King therefore wanted to write under another name in order to double his production. He convinced his publisher,
Signet Books, to print these novels under a pseudonym.
King also stated in his introduction to The Bachman Books that Bachman was an attempt to make sense out of his career and try to answer the question of whether his success was due to talent or luck. He says he deliberately released the Bachman novels with as little marketing presence as possible and did his best to "load the dice against" Bachman. King concludes that he's yet to find an answer to the "talent versus luck" question, though the fact that the Bachman book
Thinner sold 28,000 copies during its initial run--and then ten times as much when it was revealed that Bachman in fact was King--isn't encouraging.
The originally selected pseudonym was Gus Pillsbury (King's maternal grandfather); but at the last moment King changed it to "Richard Bachman", in tribute to crime author
Donald E. Westlake's long-running pseudonym
Richard Stark. The name Stark was used in King's novel
The Dark Half, a novel about an author with a pseudonym.
The surname was in honor of
Bachman-Turner Overdrive, a rock and roll band King was listening to at the time.
Identification
King dedicated Bachman's early books —
Rage (1977),
The Long Walk (1979),
Road Work (1981), and
The Running Man (1982) — to people close to him, and worked in obscure references to his own identity. These clues, not to mention the similarity between the two authors' literary styles, aroused the suspicions of horror fans and retailers.
King steadfastly denied any connection to Bachman and, to throw fans off the trail, dedicated Bachman's 1984 novel
Thinner to "Claudia Inez Bachman", supposedly Bachman's wife. There was also a phony author photo of Bachman on the dustjacket, credited to Claudia. He also has one of the characters describe how the strange happenings are like a "Stephen King" novel in the book.
Thinner was Bachman's first title to be published in hardback. It sold 28,000 copies before it became widely known that the author was really Stephen King, whereupon sales went up tenfold. The link became undeniable when a persistent bookstore clerk couldn't believe that Bachman and King were not one and the same, and eventually located publisher's records at the
Library of Congress naming King as the author of one of Bachman's novels. This led to a press release heralding Bachman's "death" — supposedly from "cancer of the pseudonym, a rare form of schizonomia". At the time of the announcement in 1985, King was working on
Misery, which he'd planned to release as a Bachman book.
Post-outing
In
1987, Bachman's
The Running Man inspired the
Arnold Schwarzenegger film of the same name. King insisted that his name not be on the credits, and the film is listed as being by Bachman.
King used the "relationship" between him and Bachman as a concept in his 1989 book
The Dark Half, a story in which a writer's darker pseudonym takes on a life of its own. King dedicated
The Dark Half to "the deceased Richard Bachman". Originally there were plans to make the book a collaboration between the two, although this was later scrapped.
In
1996, Bachman's
The Regulators came out, with the publishers claiming the book's manuscript was found among Bachman's leftover papers by his widow. Still, it was obvious from the book's packaging and marketing campaign that it was really written by King. There was a picture of a young King on the inside back cover, and the "also by this author" page listed not only works Bachman was credited with writing, but also works he wrote "as Stephen King".
The Regulators was released the same day as the King novel
Desperation, and the two novels featured many of the same characters; the two book covers were designed to be placed together to form a single picture.
Around the time of
The Regulators' release, King said that there may be another Bachman novel left to be "found". Recently, King has stated that another Bachman book had been found, with the announcement soon afterwards that his unpublished novel
Blaze was being rewritten, edited, and updated for a possible release. In February 2007 he confirmed that Scribner would be publishing this book in June 2007.
King has taken full ownership of the Bachman name on numerous occasions, as with the republication of the first four Bachman titles as
The Bachman Books: Four Early Novels by Stephen King in
1985. The introduction, titled "Why I Was Bachman", details the whole Bachman/King story.
Richard Bachman appeared in King's
Dark Tower series, albeit indirectly. In the fifth book,
Wolves of the Calla, the sinister children's book
Charlie the Choo Choo is revealed to be written by "Claudia y Inez Bachman". The spelling discrepancy of the added 'y' was later explained as a
deus ex machina on the part of "The White" (a force of good throughout King's
Tower series) to bring the total number of letters in her name to nineteen, a number prominent in King's series.
The original editions of the first four Bachman books are now among the world's most sought after original paperback novels, with resale prices in the hundreds of
dollars.
After the
Heath High School shooting, King announced that he'd allow
Rage to go out of print, fearing that it might inspire similar tragedies. Bachman's other novels are now available in separate volumes, although
Rage is available in
The Bachman Books, which is still in print in the
United Kingdom.
Other pseudonyms
King wrote a short story, "The Fifth Quarter", under the pseudonym John Swithen; it was reprinted in King's collection
Nightmares & Dreamscapes in 1993 under his own name.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Richard Bachman'.
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