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James John Herbert, OBE (8 April 1943 – 20 March 2013) [1] was an English horror writer. A full-time writer, he also designed his own book covers and publicity. His books have sold 54 million copies worldwide, and have been translated into 34 languages, including Chinese and Russian.
James Herbert (born 1938) is an American painter and filmmaker known for directing a series of music videos for the band R.E.M. He has also made over forty short films, including John Five (1992) and Jumbo Aqua (2001), and directed four independent features: Scars (1997), Speedy Boys (1998), Rabbit Pix (2005) and Abandoned House (2007).
Along the way, he makes friends with a red dog named Rumbo. Rumbo is killed when a car in a scrap yard the dogs live in falls on him. Fluke appears in numerous Herbert novels. Rumbo started life as a human, like Fluke. Towards the end of Fluke Rumbo comes back as a red squirrel and later appears in the James Herbert novels The Magic Cottage and ...
Campbell also defended Herbert's use of violence and indigence as both integral to The Rats' plot, and a break from the clichés of the horror fiction of that time period. [ 2 ] The underlying theme of the novel is the lack of care by the government toward the underclass and a lack of reaction to a tragedy until it is already too late.
The Fog is a horror novel by English writer James Herbert, published in 1975. It is about a deadly fog that drives its victims insane when they come into contact with it.
James D. Herbert (art historian) (born 1959), professor and chair of the art history department at the University of California Irvine; James D. Herbert (psychologist) (born 1962), psychologist, professor, and university administrator; Jim Herbert (runner) (1915-1997), winner of the 600 yards at the 1941 USA Indoor Track and Field Championships
The village of Hollow Bay in The Secret Of Crickley Hall is based on Lynmouth in Exmoor National Park, Devon; Devil's Cleave is the East Lyn Valley and Watersmeet.The book brings together two stories, child evacuees during the Second World War and the 1952 flood disaster that devastated Lynmouth.
The Magic Cottage, a book written by James Herbert The Magic Cottage (TV series) , a children's television series broadcast on the DuMont Television Network in the 1940s and 1950s Topics referred to by the same term