My first Slasher was Halloween. I was 10. My mom rented a couple of movies from UHaul—yes, at one point, you could do that—and I watched them over and over.
My older sisters were teenagers, and I was left to my own devices. My younger sister was too small to watch it, and I knew that after the first time through.
I remember the opening scene vividly. Michael stalking around the house. His mask went over his face, and he stabbed his sister.
The reveal of him being a kid blew me away.
Moving forward in time to the following parts of the movie, I loved it. It's still one of my favorite horror movies.
I always wondered what made Michael that way. Rob Zombie's version touched upon this, which I loved.
Stephen does something with this creation idea in I Was A Teenage Slasher. It's not what you expected; it certainly wasn't for me. I struggled to read this early on. I needed help understanding the connections or the placement of certain story aspects. When it all came together, I was blown away by all the connections.
I've read many of Stephen's books, but his Mapping The Interior is one of my favorites.
I'm halfway through the final book of The Lake Witch Trilogy. I had to set it down to finish book reviews, but I'll go back to it after I read Rabbit Hunt by Wrath James White, for which I'll write a review.
Stephen crafts a story with Slasher mainly about a loner, maybe a bit of an outcast, like Jade in the Lake Witch Trilogy. Having read the book's acknowledgments and seeing how personal Slasher was to him, I liked it better. He pulled a lot from his growing up in Texas. His acknowledging that made me think about my own writing and how I put bits of myself into it.
I felt a kinship with Tolly Driver. I know what it feels like to be an outcast. I was an outcast for most of my childhood. We moved around a lot. I attended five different elementary, three other middle schools, and three different high schools. I know that's a little for some. I was the new kid/outcast most of the time. I learned to make friends quickly.
Knowing how Tolly felt being at parties and having others treat him differently, and the reasons that come out in the story(spoilers), made me like him more.
He wants friends. He wants his classmates to like him, but instead, they shun him. His desire to be liked by someone leads him to be at a party. That's where the story actually starts.
We see Tolly being with his friend Amber; then it takes a turn I wasn't expecting. This event is sad to watch/read? Stephen's description is so amazing that I felt I was watching it.
What happens is the birth of The Slasher. Stephen takes all of the things in the movies and makes us see what it's like behind the mask. From the small things, quick movement, the ability to open any door to the more significant things, the indifference in the killer's eyes, and the ability to withstand any physical punishment, it's these things that really capture the idea of the book. As a fan of these types of movies, Stephen does this masterfully.
I can't give things away, but it does take a turn. The brutality of a Slasher movie is front and center in the kills. It stands out as the work of someone who loves the genre and takes care to make it feel natural to the reader.
Stephen is at the top of his game in this one. If this is a standalone, it's one of Stephen's best.