The thing is, one book is all most writers want to produce or can produce in the course of a year and some of them only publish a book every two years. Ed McBain is another novelist who publishes multiple books in some years and his original name was Evan Hunter. That’s the name he’s always published under and he adopted the pen name of Ed McBain for the same reason I adopted Richard Bachman and that was what made it possible for me to do two books in one year. I just did them under different names and eventually the public got wise to this because you can change your name but you can’t really disguise your style. The name Richard Bachman actually came from when they called me and said we’re ready to go to press with this novel, what name shall we put on it? And I hadn’t really thought about that. Well, I had, but the original name—Gus Pillsbury—had gotten out on the grapevine and I really didn’t like it that much anyway, so they said they needed it right away and there was a novel by Richard Stark on my desk so I used the name Richard and that’s kind of funny because Richard Stark is in itself a pen name for Donald Westlake and what was playing on the record player was “You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet” by Bachman Turner Overdrive, so I put the two of them together and came up with Richard Bachman.1
Written in first person,
The MacDonald Triad, proposed in 1963 by psychiatrist J. M. MacDonald, points to three actions that tend to indicate later violent tendencies: arson, cruelty to animals, and enuresis.
He then keeps his fellow students hostage in a classroom with the power of his gun, reveling in a level of control he has never felt before. That is, until the police force their way in after a four-way stand-off, maiming Charlie and taking him into custody.
While the plot of
As referenced in the study, there is also a rise in adolescents rather than adults as the perpetrators, and a possible theory as to why: “Another alarming trend is that the overwhelming majority of 21st century shooters were adolescents, suggesting that it is now easier for adolescents to access guns and adolescents are more frequently suffering from mental illness or limited conflict resolution skills.”2 They also point out that in less than twenty years we have been inflicted with a stunning amount of gun violence in our institutions of learning: “To date, the 21st century shootings have resulted in sixty-six deaths as opposed to fifty-five for the entirety of the 20th century.” The school-shooting epidemic is at the center of today’s media and politics.
The youngest school shooter is six-year-old Dedric Darnell Owens, who fatally shot a classmate in 2000.