The finale of
The fact is this: a couple of outlaws from North America were gunned down in a Shootout with the Bolivian military, but nobody knows for sure who they were. Many people
But who knows?
While my finale stands on its own, it achieves its real potential by playing off the reader’s familiarity with Goldman’s movie,
I’ve just finished re-reading
Though several scenes had remained vivid in my memory over the past fifteen years, I found that I’d forgotten much of the story. I read the book with nearly fresh eyes. And liked what I read.
It’s full of colorful characters, some horrific violence, a bit of humor here and there, romance and love and sex, unexpected plot twists, accurate historical and geographical details, and a birth scene and some infant behavior that had obviously been based on my own experiences.
(My daughter was two years old when I wrote
And grinned as I read it.
Amazed that I’d been able to pull off such a stunt.
And the only one ‘written by me. According to the first royalty statement after its publication, it apparently sold about 20,000 copies.
The 1982 paperback, so far, is the only edition of
On December 18, 1981, a month after finishing
By then, my career in the U.S. was down the toilet. But things were still popping along in the U.K. In November, 1982, New English Library purchased
There was at least one editor who intended to buy
Because of the disaster at Warner, most publishers in the U.S. would not touch a Richard Laymon book. The situation caused a four year gap between the publication of
Thomas Doherty Associates Tor eventually came along and took a chance on me. Tor offered me a contract for
During the heyday of the “slasher movie era,” the Culver showed a new horror movie almost every week. And I went to most of them. Kelly was a baby then, so Ann stayed home and took care of her while I drove off, one night every week, to see whatever scary movie happened to be playing at the Culver.
Though I felt guilty about leaving Ann and Kelly behind, I felt that it was my professional obligation to see the movies.
After all, I considered myself to be a horror writer. I needed to see what was being done in the field. So I went anyway. By myself.
The Culver Theater was an old place across Washington Boulvevard from the Culver City studios of MGM (now Sony). Once a “movie palace,” it had been split up into a crazy patchwork of small theaters with stairways leading in strange directions. The seating for one of the screens actually seemed to be the former balcony.
The place had real atmosphere.