March 2013 saw the tragic news that horror novelist James Herbert had died in his Sussex home. Here are some interesting facts about the horror author.
- James Herbert was born 8th April, in 1943, and he died on 20th March, in 2013.
- He hails from London, England.
- He has two brothers; Peter and John.
- His father, Herbert Herbert, was a stall-holder at Brick Lane Market in London.
- His childhood home was at the back of Petticoat Lane in Whitechapel – a place where infamous killer Jack the Ripper roamed.
- The area he grew up in was half gutted by WWII bombing raids.
- At playtime at school, children would crowd around Herbert to listen to his stories.
- He had a passion for drawing and painting, as well as writing.
- At age 10, Herbert won a scholarship to attend St. Aloysius Grammar School, in Highgate.
- He studied graphic design, print and photography at Hornsey College of Art.
- He was involved with a band as a teenager, exploring his musical tastes.
- Herbert became the Art Director and Group Head in an advertising agency.
- He married his wife Eileen in 1967. They have three daughters together; Kerry, Emma and Casey.
- He preferred to write a draft of a novel long hand in a “jumbo notepad”.
- He began writing his first book The Rats at the age of 28. It took ten months to write.
- The Rats is about mutant, flesh-eating rodents who roamed London.
- It sold over 100,000 copies within two weeks of publication.
- Herbert has published 23 novels. They have been translated into more than 30 languages.
- In 2010, Herbert was granted an OBE by the Queen.
- During the same year, he was honoured with the World Horror Convention Grand Master Award by Stephen King.
- The Rats was released as the film Deadly Eyes in 1982, by Canadian film maker Robert Clouse.
- It was also a video game for Commodore 64 and Sinclair Spectrum.
- Samuel L. Jackson starred in the adaptation of Herbert’s novel Fluke (1995).
- Kate Beckinsale starred in the adaptation of Herbert’s novel Haunted (1995).
- The Secret of Crickley Hall was a three-part television adaptation of the novel of the same name in 2012. It starred Suranne Jones and Tom Ellis.
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