What Dreams May Come (25 page)

Read What Dreams May Come Online

Authors: Richard Matheson

BOOK: What Dreams May Come
6.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

———. Apparitions and Survival of Death. New Hyde

Park, N.Y.: University Books, Inc., 1973.

Borgia, Anthony. Life in the World Unseen. London: Od-hams Press, Ltd., 1954.

———. More About Life in the World Unseen. London:

Odhams Press, Ltd., 1956.

———. Here and Hereafter. New York: The Citadel

Press, 1959.

Boss, Judy. In Silence They Return. St. Paul, Minn.: Llewellyn Publications, 1972.

Brandon, W. Incarnation. New York: C. & R. Anthony, Inc., 1936.

——. Love in the Afterlife. New York: C. & R. Anthony, Inc., 1956. ——-. We Knew These Men. New York: C. & R. An-

thony, Inc., 1957.

-. Open the Door! New York: C. & R. Anthony,

Inc., 1958.

Brennan, J. H. Five Keys to Past Lives. New York: Samuel Weiser, Inc., 1971.

Brown, R. Unfinished Symphonies. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1971.

Cayce, Hugh Lynn. Life After Death (cassette). Hollywood, Calif.: Dak Enterprises, 1975.

Colton, Ann Ree. Men in White Apparel. California: Arc Publishing Co., 1961.

Conan Doyle, Arthur. The New Revelation. New York: George H. Doran Co., 1918.

Crookall, Robert. Intimations of Immortality. Greenwood, S.C.: The Attic Press, Inc., 1965.

———. The Next World—and the Next. London: Theo-

sophical Publishing House, 1966.

Daniels, Dr. John C. Incarnation and Reincarnation. New York: Pillar Books, 1975.

Delacour, J. B. Glimpses of the Beyond. New York: De-lacorte Press, 1974.

Desmond, Shaw. You Can Speak With Your Dead. London: Methuen & Co., 1941.

Dresser, C. Spirit World and Spirit Life. San Jose, Calif.: Cosmos Publishing Co., 1927.

Ebon, Martin. They Knew the Unknown. New York: The World Publishing Co., 1971.

Evans-Wentz, W. Y. The Tibetan Book of the Dead. New York: Oxford University Press, 1960.

Farthing, Geoffrey. When We Die. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1968.

Findlay, Arthur. On the Edge of the Etheric. Great Britain: Psychic Press, 1931.

———. The Way of Life: A Guide to the Etheric World.

London: Psychic Press, Ltd., 1956.

Ford, Arthur. The Life Beyond Death. New York: Berkley Medallion Books, 1971.

———. Unknown but Known. New York: Harper & Row,

1968.

Fortune, Dion. Through the Gates of Death. London: The Aquarian Press, 1968.

Francis, J. R. The Encyclopedia of Death. Amherst, Wisconsin: Amherst Press, 1896.

Garrett, Eileen. Does Man Survive Death, ed. with Introduction.and Notes. New York: Helix Press, 1957.

Great Mystery of Life Hereafter, The. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1957.

Hampton, Charles. The Transition Called Death. Illinois: Theosophical Publishing House, 1943.

Heindel, Max. The Passing—and Life Afterward. Ocean-side, Calif.: The Rosicrucian Fellowship, 1971.

Heywood, Rosalind. Beyond the Reach of Sense. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1961.

Hodson, Geoffrey. Through the Gateway of Death. India: Theosophical Publishing House, 1967.

———. Reincarnation: Fact or Fallacy? Wheaton, 111.:

Theosophical Publishing House, 1967.

Jacobson, Nils O., M.D. Life Without Death. New York: Dell Publishing Co., 1973.

Keith, M. R. What Everybody Ought to Know About Heaven. Palmer Publications, 1968.

———. So You ‘re Going to Heaven. Palmer Publications,

1969.

Kennedy, David. A Venture in Immortality. Gerrards Cross, England: Colin Smythe, 1973.

Langley, Noel. Edgar Cayce on Reincarnation. New York: Paperback Library, 1967.

Leadbeater, C. W. The Life After Death. India: Theosophical Publishing House, 1952.

Leek, Sybil. Reincarnation: The Second Chance. New York: Stein & Day, 1974.

LeShan, Lawrence. The Medium, the Mystic and the Physicist. New York: The Viking Press, 1974.

Lodge, Sir Oliver. Raymond. New York: George H. Doran Co., 1916.

Loehr, Franklin. Diary After Death. Los Angeles: Religious Research Frontier Books, 1976.

Matson, Archie. Afterlife. New York: Harper & Row, 1977.

Medhurst, R. G. Crookes and the Spirit World. New York: Taplinger Publishing Co., 1972.

Michael, Russ. There Is No Death. Lakemont, Georgia: CSA Press, 1971.

Montgomery, Ruth. A World Beyond. New York: Fawcett Crest, 1971.

Moody, Raymond, M. D. Life After Life. New York: Bantam Books, 1977.

Moore-Douglas. Reincarnation. York Cliffs, Maine: Arcane Publications, 1968.

Moss, Thelma. The Probability of the Impossible. Los Angeles: J. P. Tardier, Inc., 1974.

Osis, Karlis & Nester, Marian L. ‘ ‘Deathbed Observations by Doctors and Nurses,” International Journal of Parapsychology, Vol. 14, No. 2.

Owen, The Rev. G. Vale. The Life Beyond the Veil in five volumes: The Lowlands of Heaven; The Highlands of Heaven; The Ministry of Heaven; The Battalions of Heaven; The Outlands of Heaven. London: The Greater World Association, 1964.

Panchadasi, Swami. The Astral World. No publisher or publication date given.

Pauchard, A. The Other World. London: Rider & Co., 1952.

Perkins, James S. Through Death to Rebirth. Wheaton, 111.: Theosophical Publishing House, 1961.

Ramacharaka, Yogi. The Life Beyond Death. Chicago: Yogi Publication Society, 1937.

Randall, Edw. C. Frontiers of the After-Life. New York: Alfred Knopf, 1922.

Roberts, Jane. Seth Speaks. New York: Prentice-Hall,

1972. ———. The Seth Material. New York: Prentice-Hall,

1975. Rogo, D. Scott. NAD, A Study of Some Unusual “Other

World” Experiences. New York: University Books,

1970. Sculthorp, F. C. Excursions to the Spirit World. London:

Almorris Press, Ltd., 1962. Sherman, Harold. You Live After Death. New York: C. &

R. Anthony, Inc., 1949. ———. You Can Communicate With the Unseen World.

New York: Fawcett Gold Medal, 1974. Sherwood, Jane. The Country Beyond. London: Neville

Spearman, 1969.

Smith, Suzy. The Book of James. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1974. Spiritual Unfoldment: One. Hampshire, England: The

White Eagle Publishing Trust, 1972. Spragget, Allen. The Case for Immortality. New York:

New American Library, 1974. St. Clair, Mae Gimbert. On Life and Death: The Edgar

Cayce Readings. Compiled by. Virginia Beach, Va.:

Association for Research and Enlightenment, 1973. Steam, Jess. The Search for a Soul. New York: Doubleday

and Company, Inc., 1972. Sullivan, Eileen. Arthur Ford Speaks from Beyond. New

York: Fawcett Crest, 1975.

Thomas, The Rev. C. Drayton. Beyond Life’s Sunset. London: Psychic Press, Ltd., 1940. Van Dusen, Wilson. The Presence of Other Worlds. New

York: Harper & Row, 1974. Vivian, Margaret. The Doorway. London: Psychic Press,

Ltd., 1941. Watson, Lyall. The Romeo Error. New York: Doubleday,

1975. Weiss, J. E. The Vestibule, ed./written. New York: Pocket

Books, 1974.

Welch, William Addams. Talks With the Dead. New

York: Pinnacle Books, Inc., 1975. White, S. E. & H. Across The Unknown. New York: E. P.

Dutton & Co., 1939. White, Steward Edward. The Stars Are Still There. New

York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1946. ———. The Betty Book. New York: Berkley Medallion

Books, 1969. Willink, A. The World of the Unseen. New York: Mac-

Millan & Co., 1893. Wright, L. L. After Death—What? San Diego, Calif.:

Point Loma Publications, 1974.

Afterword

Both the novel that you have just read and the man who wrote it, changed my life forever—twice.

Now, I realize that is a rather extreme statement—and film producers are known to succumb to hyperbole every now and then—but, in this case, it is, if anything, an understatement. To better explain, I need to go back to meeting Richard Matheson, twenty-two years ago.

In January 1976,1 was twenty-nine years old and looking for a job in the movie business. A friend recommended I read a book named Bid Time Return, by Richard Matheson. As soon as I finished the book, I knew I had to get in the movie business right away so I could produce the film version of the book. A month later, I managed to get myself hired by a film producer named Ray Stark as his assistant. My very first phone call on my very first day of work was to Richard’s agent to arrange to meet Richard.

The next week, we met for lunch at an old restaurant in Burbank named Sorrentino’s. We became instant friends and, in a handshake, he promised we could work out a deal to develop Bid Time Return as a film. It took three years, but the collaboration bore fruit. In 1979, I produced my first film—Somewhere in Time, based on Bid Time Return. (Richard wrote the screenplay as well.) During those three years, Richard became a loving and patient mentor, introducing me to the concepts of metaphysics and consciousness and changing my perspectives on what it truly may mean to be human; hence the first time Richard and his work changed my life.

(I have recently been amused to hear from Somewhere in Time devotees that someone named Stephen Simon is claiming to have produced Somewhere in Time when the listed producer is Stephen Deutsch. To clarify this, only recently have I legally returned to my birth name of “Simon” from my adopted name of “Deutsch.” So Deutsch did produce Somewhere in Time, but now he is Simon, or perhaps I should say Simon produced Somewhere in Time, but he was Deutsch. . . . Well, anyway, you get the idea.)

Just before we commenced pre-production of Somewhere in Time (late 1978), Richard asked me if I wanted to read the galleys of a new book he had written. Of course, I was thrilled. Early that evening, I read What Dreams May Come for the first time. I read it in one sitting and cried—no, sobbed—all the way through. When I finished, I felt like I had gone through an initiation into mysteries of love and life that I had been looking for forever. I didn’t sleep that night. In the wee hours, I read the book again, and sobbed through it again. In that moment, I became a conscious metaphysician and a man determined to find a way to bring the most unique love story ever written to the screen; hence, the second time Richard and his work changed my life.

The next morning, I rushed to Richard’s house to hug him, thank him, and beg him to “let me run” with What Dreams May Come, that is, pursue it as a film. Richard had been very pleased with Somewhere in Time so that, combined with his recognition of and his bemusement with my obsessive passion to do it, convinced Richard to make another handshake deal with me. And, I assured him, it “wouldn’t take three years this time.” Well, I was kind of right—it’s taken nineteen years! My partner, Bar-net Bain, and I have now produced the screen version of What Dreams May Come through our production company, Metafilmics, in association with Ted Field’s Inter-scope Communications. The film was financed and will be distributed worldwide by PolyGram. It stars Robin Williams, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Annabella Sciorra, and Max von Sydow and was directed by Vincent Ward, who most recently directed another wonderful love story entitled Map of the Human Heart. Academy Award-winning screenwriter, Ron Bass (Rainman), adapted the book for the screen.

Unknown

The tale of those nineteen years is, obviously, another story. Suffice it now to say that both Ted Field (Interscope Communications) and Michael Kuhn (PolyGram) are major heroes in the saga.

So to the book itself, why my passion? Why has it become such a “cult” classic that it has changed people’s lives?

First, and I believe foremost, it is a powerful and totally original love story. It is said that the keys to a great love story are the obstacles-which the lovers must overcome; further, the biggest challenge of a story which transpires in the afterlife is the question of jeopardy. What sure jeopardy can there be if one cannot die? Richard’s genius addressed both of the issues in one bold and innovative plot development.

Second, the bold way in which Richard creates a whole cosmology in the afterlife giving the reader the opportunity to truly experience a whole world—not just glimpses through the “tunnel,” but a whole world.

Third, over the years, I’ve participated in and witnessed another phenomenon about the book. Many people have read this book for the first time literally as they entered the last days or even hours of their lives. For example, the mother of a dear friend of mine was dying of cancer. The woman was terrified of death because she had never been exposed to a belief system which held life as a passage between incarnations and other realms of consciousness. I gave this book to my friend who read it and passed it on to her mother. Her mother’s entire demeanor changed. Her fear passed. When she did “cross over” a few days later, my friend was at her side and reported to me that her mother was peaceful and even anticipatory in those last few moments; further, my friend had the distinct impression that her mother’s spirit lingered in the room to comfort my friend and let her know that all was well with her mother. Now when a work of art (as this book truly is) can help a reader transcend life itself, it deserves to be viewed in a very special light all its own.

What Dreams May Come is a truly visionary novel written by a visionary author at the top of his powers. We need to remember that the self-examination and consciousness of the 90s didn’t exist twenty years ago when Richard wrote the book. Today, every branch of the entertainment industry acknowledges and embraces themes is Richard’s writings. In music today, the record stores have whole areas devoted to Enya, Yanni, when twenty years ago, it was a corner bin in the back—maybe. Remember? In the world of books today, The Celestine Prophecy sells twelve million copies, Deepak Chopra’s books sell way into the millions, and the bookstores and bestseller lists are replete with such books. Twenty years ago, you had to go to specialty bookstores to find “that” kind of material. And, in my industry, there are a lot of good reasons why I couldn’t find financing for the film until now—neither the industry nor the world was ready for Richard’s version of twenty years ago, until now.

Richard Matheson saw a lot of this coming. He sensed the approaching awareness of our era, the questions he knew would be asked about the nature of existence, and he wrote a truly evolutionary novel. Into it, he suffused his love for his wonderful wife, Ruth. Only someone who loves as deeply as Richard loves Ruth could write the epic love story depicted in these pages.

Over the years, Richard and I have laughed—and cried, that he wrote a novel that was way ahead of its time. He did. Wonderfully, though, unlike others before him, Richard is still very much around to see his vision recognized and come to fruition. This special edition and the film about to be released validate and recognize Richard’s genius. The vision and the visionary converge in the magical illusion we call life.

If you want to know what issues humanity will be facing twenty years from now, there’s a guy sitting at his desk in Southern California who has, I assure you, already seen that world. In fact, he’s probably writing about it as you read this.

I can think of no greater honor than being asked to write this afterword about an extraordinary adventure into love and life.

—Stephen Simon

Other books

All Light Will Fall by Almney King
Pleasure Island by TG Haynes
Mary Balogh by A Counterfeit Betrothal; The Notorious Rake
Tek Net by William Shatner
A Wicked Choice by Calinda B
Destiny Unleashed by Sherryl Woods