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Fear: History of Horror in the Mass Media

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A history of horror in the mass media

271 pages, Paperback

First published December 31, 1975

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132 people want to read

About the author

Les Daniels

50 books27 followers
Les Daniels was one of the earliest historians of comic books and an author of horror novels.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Peter.
4,127 reviews814 followers
May 16, 2023
This non fiction book with fiction inside (one story at the end of each chapter by authors like Bierce, M.R. James, Machen, Lovecraft) deals with the origins of horror. You'll find many great photos, illustrations and pictures inside. The chapters shine a light on Gothic ghosts, imps and the perverse (Clarke's superb illustrations for Poe tales), Varney, Carmilla, secret societies, mass media, horror comics (The Vault of Horror), illustrated horror (Creepy or Vampirella). The book is from 1975 and not a bit dated in my opinion. Here you find the true pillars of fear. Really recommended!
1 review
August 11, 2023
The information is extremely robust and well-researched but — pardon my academic jargon — it is dry as all fucking shit. The Gobi in August.
Profile Image for Doris Sutherland.
Author 21 books4 followers
February 9, 2022
Les Daniels is remembered mainly for his writing for and about comics, but he also wrote Living in Fear (title shortened to Fear for paperback), which is the single best overview of horror that I’ve ever read. Okay, it was published in 1975, so it’s a few decades out of date, but it more than makes up for this with its sheer breadth of scope in examining horror’s history. Daniels covers literature, cinema, television, theatre, music, comics and even religious tracts; his analysis kicks off in earnest with the gothic novels of the 18th century and continues up to the 1970s. Horace Walpole, Vampirella, Bram Stoker, John Zacherle and depressing pop songs about dead teenagers all have parts to play in the grand narrative. He also reprints a few classic horror stories, each one representing its general period. Well worth tracking down if you want a thorough assessment of how the horror genre took shape.
Profile Image for Williwaw.
486 reviews31 followers
Want to Read
October 13, 2012
This is a generously illustrated book, which contains b&w reproductions of classic and pulp illustrations, movie stills, paintings, engravings, historic frontispieces, and even a complete E.C. Comics horror story! It is a scholarly treatment of the horror genre, in all its historic manifestations. Most chapters include an exemplary short story, to give the reader a first-hand experience of the source materials which Daniels has drawn upon. Authors include Poe, Machen, Lovecraft, Bierce, and Joseph Payne Brennan.

I'm sad to report that the author, celebrated as the first historian of the comic book, passed away in November of 2011.

I just read the first 50 pages or so of "Living in Fear." It is well-written and enlightening. Definitely a keeper!
Profile Image for Edward.
40 reviews
November 28, 2011
Great study of horror in popular culture, literature and film from the distant past to the early 1980's, interspersed with some terrific, if sometimes familiar shorts horror stories. Well worth a look. Les Daniels, who recently passed wrote with a light touch, but was always extremely informative and his enthusiasm for the subject shines through on every page.
Profile Image for Satyros Brucato.
109 reviews9 followers
May 2, 2025
I got this book as a kid in the mid-1970s, and it opened my world to Lovecraft, Tarot, the Golden Dawn, Ambrose Bierce, Gothic literature, the Decadent art movement, and so very much more. The single best book I've read on the subject, LIVING IN FEAR is dated, but crying out for a revised edition.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews