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Last edited by AgentSapphire
August 17, 2024 | History

Peter Straub

Peter Straub was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on 2 March, 1943, the first of three sons of a salesman and a nurse. The salesman wanted him to become an athlete, the nurse thought he would do well as either a doctor or a Lutheran minister, but all he wanted to do was to learn to read.

When kindergarten turned out to be a stupefyingly banal disappointment devoted to cutting animal shapes out of heavy colored paper, he took matters into his own hands and taught himself to read by memorizing his comic books and reciting them over and over to other neighborhood children on the front steps until he could recognize the words. Therefore, when he finally got to first grade to find everyone else laboring over the imbecile adventures of Dick, Jane and Spot (“See Spot run. See, see, see,”), he ransacked the library in search of pirates, soldiers, detectives, spies, criminals, and other colorful souls, Soon he had earned a reputation as an ace storyteller, in demand around campfires and in back yards on summer evenings.

This career as the John Buchan to the first grade was interrupted by a collision between himself and an automobile which resulted in a classic near-death experience, many broken bones, surgical operations, a year out of school, a lengthy tenure in a wheelchair, and certain emotional quirks. Once back on his feet, he quickly acquired a severe stutter which plagued him into his twenties and now and then still puts in a nostalgic appearance, usually to the amusement of telephone operators and shop clerks. Because he had learned prematurely that the world was dangerous, he was jumpy, restless, hugely garrulous in spite of his stutter, physically uncomfortable and, at least until he began writing horror three decades later, prone to nightmares. Books took him out of himself, so he read even more than earlier, a youthful habit immeasurably valuable to any writer. And his storytelling, for in spite of everything he was still a sociable child with a lot of friends, took a turn toward the dark and the garish, toward the ghoulish and the violent. He found his first “effect” when he discovered that he could make this kind of thing funny.

As if scripted, the rest of life followed. He went on scholarship to Milwaukee Country Day School and was the darling of his English teachers. He discovered Thomas Wolfe and Jack Kerouac, patron saints of wounded and self-conscious adolescence, and also, blessedly, jazz music, which spoke of utterance beyond any constraint: passion and liberation in the form of speech on the far side of the verbal border. The alto saxophone player Paul Desmond, speaking in the voice of a witty and inspired angel, epitomized ideal expressiveness, Our boy still had no idea why inspired speech spoke best when it spoke in code, the simultaneous terror and ecstasy of his ancient trauma, as well as its lifelong (so far, anyhow) legacy of anger, being so deeply embedded in the self as to be imperceptible, Did he behave badly, now and then? Did he wish to shock, annoy, disturb, and provoke? Are you kidding? Did he also wish to excel, to keep panic and uncertainty at arm's length by good old main force effort? Make a guess. So here we have a pure but unsteady case of denial happily able to maintain itself through merciless effort. Booted along by invisible fears and horrors, this fellow was rewarded by wonderful grades and a vague sense of a mysterious but transcendent wholeness available through expression. He went to the University of Wisconsin and, after opening his eyes to the various joys of Henry James, William Carlos Williams, and the Texas blues-rocker Steve Miller, a great & joyous character who lived across the street, passed through essentially unchanged to emerge in 1965 with an honors degree in English, then an MA at Columbia a year later. He thought actual writing was probably beyond him even though actual writing was probably what he was best at - down crammed he many and many a book, stirred by

American novelist and poet (1943–2022)

Born 2 Mar 1943

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  • Cover of: Floating Dragon  Can
    First published in 1984 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Floating Dragon Signed Edition

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  • Cover of: The general's wife
    First published in 1982 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Ghost Sty
    First published in 1980 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Hellfire Club. Reise in die Nacht.

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  • Cover of: Houses without Doors
    First published in 2002 1 edition

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  • Cover of: If You Could See Me Now
    First published in 1989 1 edition

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  • Cover of: If You See Me Now
    First published in 1983 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Ishmael.
    First published in 1972 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Isn't It Romantic?
    First published in 2000 1 edition

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  • Cover of: La Camara Oscura/ in the Night Room

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  • Cover of: La Gorge
    First published in 2002 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Le club de l'enfer
    First published in 1999 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Le dragon flottant
    First published in 1998 1 edition

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  • Cover of: The Little Blue Book Of Rose Stories

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  • Cover of: Magie de la terreur
    First published in 2001 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Mrs God/Boxed Signed Edition
    First published in 1991 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Mr. X
    First published in 2002 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Open air.
    First published in 1972 1 edition

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  • Cover of: Perdidos
    First published in 2005 1 edition

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American novelist and poet (1943–2022)

Born 2 Mar 1943

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August 17, 2024 Edited by AgentSapphire merge authors
September 30, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot add ISNI
October 28, 2019 Edited by dcapillae Fixed date
November 22, 2018 Edited by LeadSongDog merge authors
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user initial import