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  1. In American Gothic (1974), he fictionalized the horrors of real-life serial killer H. H. Holmes, who brutally murdered a number of people during the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. Lastly, Bloch ended his long association with Jack the Ripper in 1984 with The Night of the Ripper. An acclaimed entry in the Ripper canon, the book is notable for ...

  2. Welcome! This website, authorized by the Bloch Estate, provides insight into the breadth of Robert Bloch’s versatility as a writer—at home in the worlds of fantasy and horror, but equally adept at writing thrillers, science fiction, detective/crime, and humor. The author of over 25 novels and hundreds of short stories has cemented Bloch’s ...

  3. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Robert_BlochRobert Bloch - Wikipedia

    Robert Bloch. Robert Bloch nel 1943. Robert Albert Bloch ( Chicago, 5 aprile 1917 – Los Angeles, 23 settembre 1994) è stato uno scrittore e sceneggiatore statunitense autore di libri gialli, noir e fantastici.

  4. YOUR CART. Psycho . First Published: 1959. Publisher: Simon & Schuster. Format: Hardcover. Summary: Norman Bates, a middle-aged bachelor, lives with his domineering and overly possessive mother in a house that overlooks the Bates Motel. The motel, a small ten-room property in the city of Fairvale, California, rarely receives visitors now ...

  5. Sep 25, 1994 · Robert Albert Bloch was born on April 5, 1917, in Chicago. A main influence in his youth was H. P. Lovecraft, the writer of fantasy and horror, who corresponded with him and encouraged his writing.

  6. Robert Bloch. Robert Bloch wrote a fan letter to H P Lovecraft at the age of 16. Lovecraft encouraged the young boy to begin writing fiction and to submit his stories to Weird Tales. Thus began a 60-year writing career that is one of the most distinguished in the horror and mystery field. Bloch is today most famous as the author of Psycho.

  7. Nov 18, 2014 · Robert Bloch’s Norman Bates lived for only 275 pages or so, but his legacy lived on, spreading his madness like a virus from one person to the next. Bloch spun this epic tale, as unlikely as it seems, without resorting to the occult—aside from a silly theory spun by one character in Psycho House —but rather explains it all through psychological reasoning and logic.