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You Love Horror? You should read Richard Laymon!

  • exxposuremagazine
  • Jul 26, 2025
  • 2 min read

Richard Laymon wrote over 30 horror novels. Most of which are excellent reads. His works tend to lean more toward the extreme horror and makes S. King's books even seem tame. I would give a chance.

Laymon was born and raised outside of Chicago, Illinois, then lived in Tiburon, California, as a teen. He graduated from Redwood High School, then pursued a BA in English Literature from Willamette University in Oregon and an MA in English Literature from Loyola University in Los Angeles.


His works include more than sixty short stories and more than thirty novels, a few of which were published under the pseudonym Richard Kelly. Twenty of his stories were published as part of the Fastback Mystery series—single short stories released in book form.


Early in his career, Laymon found greater commercial success in the United Kingdom and Europe, despite praise from prominent writers from within the genre, including Stephen King and Dean Koontz. Laymon believed that this was a result of a badly-edited first release of The Woods Are Dark, which had had over fifty pages removed. The poor editing and unattractive cover art also stalled his career in America after the success of The Cellar. Starting in 1999 and in association with Leisure Books, Laymon found delayed recognition in his homeland. Laymon's original version of The Woods Are Dark[2] was finally published in July 2008 by Leisure Books and Cemetery Dance Publications after being reconstructed from the original manuscript by his daughter, Kelly.


His novel Flesh was named Best Horror Novel of 1988 by Science Fiction Chronicle, and both Flesh and Funland were nominated for the Bram Stoker Award, as was his non-fiction work A Writer's Tale. He won this award posthumously in 2001 for The Traveling Vampire Show.


Laymon died in Los Angeles, California of a heart attack in 2001, aged 54.


I am currently reading Flesh, it is amazing book. I am trying to get through his entire collection of works, I have read about 10 thus far, and loved them all.


I recommend starting with The Traveling Vampire Show.

 
 
 

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