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BLAZE
Richard Bachman
Scribner
Fiction
ISBN-10: 141655484X
ISBN-13: 9781416554844
Read a Review
Dear Constant Reader,
This is a trunk novel, okay? I want you to know that while you've still got
your sales slip and before you drip something like gravy or ice cream on it,
and thus make it difficult or impossible to return. It's a revised and updated
trunk novel, but that doesn't change the basic fact. The Bachman name is on
it because it's the last novel from 1966-1973, which was that gentleman's period
of greatest productivity.
During those years I was actually two men. It was Stephen King who wrote (and
sold) horror stories to raunchy skin-mags like Cavalier and Adam, but it was
Bachman who wrote a series of novels that didn't sell to anybody. These included
Rage, The Long Walk, Roadwork, and The Running Man. All four were published
as paperback originals.
Blaze was the last of those early novels the fifth quarter, if you like. Or
just another well-known writer's trunk novel, if you insist. It was written
in late 1972 and early 1973. I thought it was great while I was writing it,
and crap when I read it over. My recollection is that I never showed it to a
single publisher -- not even Doubleday, where I had made a friend named William
G. Thompson. Bill was the guy who would later discover John Grisham, and it
was Bill who contracted for the book following Blaze, a twisted but fairly entertaining
tale of prom-night in central Maine.
I forgot about Blaze for a few years. Then, after the other early Bachmans
had been published, I took it out and looked it over. After reading the first
twenty pages or so, I decided my first judgment had been correct, and returned
it to purdah. I thought the writing was okay, but the story reminded me of something
Oscar Wilde once said. He claimed it was impossible to read "The Old Curiosity
Shop" without weeping copious tears of laughter. So Blaze was forgotten,
but never really lost. It was only stuffed in some corner of the Fogler Library
at the University of Maine with the rest of their Stephen King/Richard Bachman
stuff.
Blaze ended up spending the next thirty years in the dark. And then I published
a slim paperback original called The Colorado Kid with an imprint called Hard
Case Crime. This line of books, the brainchild of a very smart and very cool
fellow named Charles Ardai, was dedicated to reviving old "noir" and
hardboiled paperback crime novels, and publishing new ones. The Kid was decidedly
softboiled, but Charles decided to publish it anyway, with one of those great
old paperback covers. The whole project was a blast except for the slow royalty
payments.
About a year later, I thought maybe I'd like to go the Hard Case route again,
possibly with something that had a harder edge. My thoughts turned to Blaze
for the first time in years, but trailing along behind came that damned Oscar
Wilde quote about "The Old Curiosity Shop." The Blaze I remembered
wasn't hardboiled noir, but a three-handkerchief weepie. Still, I decided it
wouldn't hurt to look. If, that was, the book could even be found. I remembered
the carton, and I remembered the squarish type-face (my wife Tabitha's old college
typewriter, an impossible-to-kill Olivetti portable), but I had no idea what
had become of the manuscript that was supposedly inside the carton. For all
I knew, it was gone, baby, gone.
It wasn't. Marsha, one of my two valuable assistants, found it in the Fogler
Library. She would not trust me with the original manuscript (I, uh, lose things),
but she made a Xerox. I must have been using a next-door-to-dead typewriter
ribbon when I composed Blaze, because the copy was barely legible, and the notes
in the margins were little more than blurs. Still, I sat down with it and began
to read, ready to suffer the pangs of embarrassment only one's younger, smart-assier
self can provide.
But I thought it was pretty good -- certainly better than Roadwork, which I
had, at the time, considered mainstream American fiction. It just wasn't a noir
novel. It was, rather, a stab at the sort of naturalism-with-crime that James
M. Cain and Horace McCoy practiced in the thirties. I thought the flashbacks
were actually better than the front-story. They reminded me of James T. Farrell's
Young Lonigan trilogy and the forgotten (but tasty) Gas-House McGinty. Sure,
it was the three Ps in places, but it had been written by a young man (I was
twenty-five) who was convinced he was WRITING FOR THE AGES.
I thought Blaze could be re-written and published without too much embarrassment,
but it was probably wrong for Hard Case Crime. It was, in a sense, not a crime
novel at all. I thought it could be a minor tragedy of the underclass, if the
re-writing was ruthless. To that end, I adopted the flat, dry tones which the
best noir fiction seems to have, even using a type-font called American Typewriter
to remind myself of what I was up to. I worked fast, never looking ahead or
back, wanting also to capture the headlong drive of those books (I'm thinking
more of Jim Thompson and Richard Stark here than I am of Cain, McCoy, or Farrell).
I thought I would do my revisions at the end, with a pencil, rather than editing
in the computer, as is now fashionable. If the book was going to be a throwback,
I wanted to play into that rather than shying away from it. I also determined
to strip all the sentiment I could from the writing itself, wanted the finished
book to be as stark as an empty house without even a rug on the floor. My mother
would have said "I wanted its bare face hanging out." Only the reader
will be able to judge if I succeeded.
If it matters to you (it shouldn't -- hopefully you came for a good story,
and hopefully you will get one), any royalties or subsidiary income generated
by Blaze will go to The Haven Foundation, which was created to help freelance
artists who are down on their luck.
One other thing, I guess, while I've got you by the lapel. I tried to keep
the Blaze time-frame as vague as possible, so it wouldn't seem too dated. It
was impossible to take out all the dated material, however; keeping some of
it was important to the plot. If you think of this story's time-frame as "America,
Not All That Long Ago," I think you'll be okay.
May I close by circling back to where I started? This is an old novel, but
I believe I was wrong in my initial assessment that it was a bad novel. You
may disagree but "The Old Curiosity Shop" it ain't. As always, Constant
Reader, I wish you well, I thank you for reading this story, and I hope you
enjoy it. I won't say I hope you mist up a little, but --
Yeah. Yeah, I will say that. Just as long as they're not tears of laughter.
Stephen King (for Richard Bachman)
Sarasota, Florida
January 30th, 2007
Excerpted from BLAZE © Copyright 2008 by Richard Bachman. Reprinted with permission by Scribner. All rights reserved.
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