Richard Matheson was a well known writer who published many novels and short stories, penned teleplays for The Twilight Zone, and wrote the novel Psycho—which later became Alfred Hitchcock’s classic thriller—but his 1962 supernatural novel A Stir of Echoes is a bit obscure. It’s probably better known as a 1999 movie starring the ubiquitous Kevin Bacon. The story here deals with a man whose talent as a medium is accidentally unleashed when he’s hypnotized at a party. The book isn’t elegantly written. A typical sentence: He walked weavingly toward the door. But you don’t have to be a master stylist to tell a good story and that’s what Matheson did over the course of his long career, churning out great concept after great concept, here unspooling the tale of a man who can’t control his unbidden psychic talent. With the power to see the future, the protagonist gains unwanted knowledge of kidnapping, adultery, a shooting, and other violent and nightmarish occurrences. It defies belief that all this happens in a week or two on a formerly quiet suburban street, but A Stir of Echoes is an entertaining story with a nice twist ending. We haven’t seen the movie but we’re curious now.
I see dead people. Not next week's lottery numbers. Not future stock fluctuations. Just useless, creepy dead people.