stephen king c/d?

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'On Writing' was an excellent read, either as biography or as manual (and I've no intention of ever writing tbh, it's and interesting sunject though)

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 16:28 (fifteen years ago)

^ this is why i've no intention of ever writing

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 16:28 (fifteen years ago)

yeah, i love his writing about writing. it's what made me want to go back and read some of his stuff. my mom was a big fan (she always says her favorite people her age are david letterman, the clintons and stephen king, lol) and i read and enjoyed a lot of his stuff as a youth. i don't think his short stories are for me, tbh.

proprietor of gib (roxymuzak), Thursday, 9 September 2010 16:41 (fifteen years ago)

I can name television hosts and politicians my age, but I can't think of one popular author.

S/he's probably spending three hours a day on a messageboard somewhere.

Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 9 September 2010 16:51 (fifteen years ago)

Thought this was revived because of this:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2010/09/universal-nbc-stephen-king-the-dark-tower-ron-howard-brian-grazer.html

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 9 September 2010 17:13 (fifteen years ago)

Looking back, the last Ron Howard movie I've seen was Willow. What does this portend?

hypo ilxa/hermes ban (kkvgz), Thursday, 9 September 2010 17:18 (fifteen years ago)

Val Kilmer as Roland, obv.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 9 September 2010 17:19 (fifteen years ago)

Loved the first three Dark Towers, found the fourth a snooze and haven't read any of the others. Maybe I'll be arsed one day, but I think it would involve ploughing through the first four again. Or I could just wait for the films!

rhythm fixated member (chap), Thursday, 9 September 2010 17:25 (fifteen years ago)

i don't think his short stories are for me, tbh.

I think a lot of his best writing is in novella/short story format. Maybe that's because his long stories all have, well, ridiculous mcguffins. Many of his short stories are similarly batshit horror, but there's real skill and change of pace in a lot of them too.

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:30 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, I'd say that maybe 3 out of 4 times, King can really nail a short story.

hypo ilxa/hermes ban (kkvgz), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:37 (fifteen years ago)

my husband, a book reviewer among other things, is a serious SK fan (from youth, mostly) and he just had the chance to review SK's latest book of novellas. acc to him it's REALLY good. i didn't read it yet.

The Great Jumanji, (La Lechera), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:39 (fifteen years ago)

the short stories in night shift and skeleton key, and the novellas in different seasons are incredibly classic. i haven't read one of his novels since Needful Things (about which I remember nothing) and never got past book 3 of the dark tower. looking forward to films of it though. I suppose one day when I'm old and bored I'll go read all the rest of his crap.

akm, Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:43 (fifteen years ago)

i think nightmares and dreamscapes has a good mix, myself.

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:44 (fifteen years ago)

I also haven't read a new novel of his since Needful Things, but there's been a lot of talk elsewhere on here about Under the Dome.

hypo ilxa/hermes ban (kkvgz), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:45 (fifteen years ago)

i admire the dude's discipline and rod serling-esque endless fountain of ideas. they may not all be well executed, but he sure has a lot of ideas.

that's more than i can say for people who spend their entire careers writing novels about rich people's family problems.

The Great Jumanji, (La Lechera), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:50 (fifteen years ago)

! different spheres tbf

i may be the only person on the planet who was not disappointed with insomnia, but maybe since then his novels haven't rocked my world (tho now i think about hearts in atlantis had some great and poignant moments)

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:55 (fifteen years ago)

yeah, i know, i guess i prefer imagination to a microscope
or at least i do today

The Great Jumanji, (La Lechera), Thursday, 9 September 2010 19:57 (fifteen years ago)

favourite stephen king shrt story nomination thread and poll y/n

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 20:07 (fifteen years ago)

quickest second thoughts ever actually. sod that for work

k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 20:07 (fifteen years ago)

three weeks pass...

i found a 25 cent hardcover copy of "it" this weekend at a yard sale. i haven't read it since i was a kid; no idea what spurred me to pick it up (other than the price point was right). somehow i imagine myself reading this thing in about four days, despite it being one billion pages long, and still feeling like i got swindled give when i remember about his TERRIBLE, TERRIBLE ENDINGS. though having read about 150 pages so far, in a short burst yesterday afternoon, i will say the man knows how to keep those pages turning. it's kinda fun to read something so breezy (if that's even the right word for a book about a child-dismembering ick slumbering beneath middle america) for a change, even if king's prose is sometimes O_o'ingly bad.

strongohulkingtonsghost, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:20 (fifteen years ago)

given WHAT i remember about his endings.

strongohulkingtonsghost, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:22 (fifteen years ago)

classic of teenage classics, tho

i dont love everything, i love football (darraghmac), Monday, 4 October 2010 18:24 (fifteen years ago)

that's more than i can say for people who spend their entire careers writing novels about rich people's family problems.

― The Great Jumanji, (La Lechera), Thursday, September 9, 2010 7:50 PM (3 weeks ago) Bookmark

amen

insecure ultra rico suave crossover star (latebloomer), Monday, 4 October 2010 18:25 (fifteen years ago)

yeah! i remember reading IT in high school and being freaked out and disappointed at the turtle/universe ending

Mr. Que, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:25 (fifteen years ago)

i actually kind of liked the mystical weirdness. the pre-teen gang bang was pretty O_O though, of course.

insecure ultra rico suave crossover star (latebloomer), Monday, 4 October 2010 18:29 (fifteen years ago)

it was kind of exciting to read something known for being O_O scary. I remember the school librarian told me I was brave, that it gave him nightmares and I walked away thinking, "Ha ha, what a baby."

and it was awesome when my parent's friends would come over and say "What are you reading?" and I'd show them and they'd give me that "Um, you're not right in the head" look...or flip out at how big the book was.

I was okay with the ending. It made more sense once I read the Dark Tower stuff later down the line.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:30 (fifteen years ago)

xp

ah thats the point of it he's on some magical innocence or prepuberty/puberty trip the whole book tbf

i dont love everything, i love football (darraghmac), Monday, 4 October 2010 18:31 (fifteen years ago)

not sure *anything* made more sense to me once i'd finished the dark tower tbh

i dont love everything, i love football (darraghmac), Monday, 4 October 2010 18:31 (fifteen years ago)

ha ha...yeah, I guess 'sense' is the wrong word. But all that turtle/universe stuff sort of tied it back to IT and other stuff and it was fun fitting all the parts together.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:32 (fifteen years ago)

But he is definitely one for just going 'ah fuck it I don't know how to end this' and making up some weird alien thing/mystical thing that leaves you going, okay what just happened.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:34 (fifteen years ago)

haha yeah i totally stole "it" from my mom's stash of "adult books" when i was 12ish or so.

stephen king certainly never shied away from depicting a wife-beating, i will say that.

strongohulkingtonsghost, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:47 (fifteen years ago)

the one thing i've totally loved about the book so far -- even if they're also overwritten, as per -- is the little "derry" interludes, presented as being taken from book about the town that one of the characters was writing. it really manages to get across this sense of unease about some basic evil running through a town's history without the overloaded sentiment of the actual narrative sections. like lovecraft but, you know, tighter. ("tighter" being something you could only say about king in comparison with lovecraft.)

strongohulkingtonsghost, Monday, 4 October 2010 18:56 (fifteen years ago)

pre-teen gang bang

http://s.ytimg.com/vi/hKUBTX9kKEo/0.jpg

a seminar on ass play for kids or something (Phil D.), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:07 (fifteen years ago)

somehow i imagine myself reading this thing in about four days

That's what I did when I first read it, during a few sick days from school. It's a page-turner, that's for sure, although after re-reading the unexpurgated "Stand" recently I went back and tried to re-read "It" and just kinda lost interest. Still love it, though; King has a way with that coming-of-age nostalgia stuff, like "Stand By Me" and "Christine," that works better for me than some of his other terrain.

Taller than the president (Dan Peterson), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:16 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah he always seemed to write kids really well

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:19 (fifteen years ago)

i thought this was the thread where i went on about under the dome but i guess it isn't

thomp, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:23 (fifteen years ago)

I took It to the beach, found a comfortable spot to read, looked up a few hundred pages later and realized I had the worst sunburn of my life.

Brad C., Monday, 4 October 2010 19:24 (fifteen years ago)

Sounds like It hurt!

Matt P, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:26 (fifteen years ago)

would have been totally worth it if the ending were better

Brad C., Monday, 4 October 2010 19:28 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, ending of "It" is pretty much univerally derided. Also (unless you want to avoid spoilers of all sorts) the Wiki entry for the book has a hyper-detailed synopsis that had me LOLing at just how crazy MUCH plot he crammed into it.

Taller than the president (Dan Peterson), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:30 (fifteen years ago)

Best parts of IT were all the historical digressions - the Fire at the Black Spot, the Kitchener Ironworks Disaster, all that - and then the scenes of mayhem in the outside world as the kids are down in the sewers, like the shopping mall getting destroyed and the standpipe falling over, etc.

kkvgz, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:33 (fifteen years ago)

One of my friends did an extra credit project in 8th grade English where he made an annotated timeline of the history of Derry, ME as depicted in the book IT. He got like a bazillion points of extra credit, to the point where I think he was able to skip an entire unit of the class and still get an A+.

I still think The Tommyknockers is his worst ending ever ans Needful Things is actually his best.

THE CHOMPING DUCK GETS HIS FATTY OUT FOR VADAR (HI DERE), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:37 (fifteen years ago)

lol the tommyknockers was the king book where, after gorging on his shit from 11 to 13 or so, i was finally like "fuck this"

strongohulkingtonsghost, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:39 (fifteen years ago)

xp: Where the guy just *poof* turns into a goblin at the end.

kkvgz, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:40 (fifteen years ago)

"Caveat emptor! Gree-hee-hee!"

kkvgz, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:41 (fifteen years ago)

Tommyknockers & Gerald's Game were two I definitely hated. Never gave up on him fully though.

VegemiteGrrrl, Monday, 4 October 2010 19:50 (fifteen years ago)

Those were the two that made me give up on reading his books.

(¬_¬) (Nicole), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:51 (fifteen years ago)

i read under the dome!

it was long

cathy: ACK-er (s1ocki), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:51 (fifteen years ago)

tommyknockers would be a good name for a strip club, tbh

cathy: ACK-er (s1ocki), Monday, 4 October 2010 19:52 (fifteen years ago)


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