stephen king c/d?

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i just remember somethign about green pubes from that story

'steen suicide (don't drive it) (s1ocki), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:25 (fourteen years ago) link

imagine being so successful that you could put a pre-teen sex romp at the end of a 1,000+ page best seller and NOBODY SEEMS TO NOTICE FOR OVER A DECADE

da croupier, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:26 (fourteen years ago) link

and yeah green pubes was the lingering image i had too

da croupier, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:27 (fourteen years ago) link

The best thing about that is that the train happens TWICE; once when they first confront IT as kids and once when they vanquish him as adults.

nate dogg is a feeling (HI DERE), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:29 (fourteen years ago) link

lol no it doesn't

da croupier, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:32 (fourteen years ago) link

IIRC, they all have sex again in order to get out of the cavern, as part of the "recreate the past as closely as possible" thing they were doing to get rid of IT in the first place. I'd need to look it up in the book, though.

nate dogg is a feeling (HI DERE), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:34 (fourteen years ago) link

nah, eddie's dead and they basically just split. though it'd be great if bill was like "oh shit, looks like we're lost in the sewers again, bev. let me just put my catatonic wife down over here..."

da croupier, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:36 (fourteen years ago) link

nah, she never had sex with them again the second time.

Amateur Darraghmatics (darraghmac), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:37 (fourteen years ago) link

xpst she has a flashback to it while shagging bill as an adult

Amateur Darraghmatics (darraghmac), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:37 (fourteen years ago) link

Okay why do I have such a clear recollection of them doing all that nonsense again, then??? Probably I was yelling at the end of the book by that point and made that up, and it stuck as an actual memory of the book.

xpost: oh maybe that's what I'm remembering

nate dogg is a feeling (HI DERE), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:39 (fourteen years ago) link

cuz they're the only ones that FEEL crazy in that special stephen king way.

let us not forget King's own directorial debut:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7K44PqV2Idk

Pillbox, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:39 (fourteen years ago) link

Creepshow is a pretty faithful translation of King's tone, I feel.

A Foul Night-Weird (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:48 (fourteen years ago) link

No.... I think Beverly and Bill do spend a night together, but there's no crazy similar scene with the adults.

Which would have been way more appropriate than middle schoolers, but whatever; this didn't disturb me when I read the book when I was 15!

The more I think about this book, the less I remember about it. wtf

Sara R-C, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:49 (fourteen years ago) link

I remember the kid who was found with his half-chewed head in the toilet, yeesh.

nate dogg is a feeling (HI DERE), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:50 (fourteen years ago) link

xxpost: agreed, & same goes for the relatively undersung Creepshow 2, esp the raft-in-lake & zombie hitch-hiker segments.

Pillbox, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:53 (fourteen years ago) link

thanks for the ride, lady!

Pillbox, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:54 (fourteen years ago) link

Which would have been way more appropriate than middle schoolers

If you can call the summer before 6th grade middle school.

kingkongvsgodzilla, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:57 (fourteen years ago) link

Has anyone seen the Nightmares and Dreamscapes miniseries? I'm curious, as I feel like King's short stories are some of his stronger work, but I fear that it might be as crap as everything else of his that's been adapted for television.

A Foul Night-Weird (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 19:58 (fourteen years ago) link

I watched a recent haunted house mini-series. Bloody Tiffany or something like that. Really depressingly bad, like "damn, House 2 was pretty decent" bad.
"The Mist" is by far the King I have the fondest memories of. That was some exciting stuff for a wee lad.

Øystein, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:04 (fourteen years ago) link

Err, should've googled that BEFORE posting. The series in question was "Rose Red".

Øystein, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:04 (fourteen years ago) link

If you can call the summer before 6th grade middle school.

Okay, this is freaking me out totally since my son is going into 6th grade this year!

Sara R-C, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:07 (fourteen years ago) link

i re-read a bunch of the shorts recently and they were better than i thought they'd be with time ("survivor type"!) but not half as scary as when i first read them as a wee thing obviously ("survivor type" :(). dude really is incapable of pulling back and reconsidering when the opportunity to go o-t-t (as regards the prose or characterizations) presents itself. yeah yeah genre fiction and yeah yeah covert biography but did the guy really have to be a raging asshole junk-head who hates his father for the baldest embarrassed-child-of-immigrants reasons? also, for a horror writer (at least in the early days), pacing is *not* the man's forte.

kinda afeared to revisit any of the novels. and i think even at 11 or 12, when i barely had my head around the concept of sex period, i was unsettled by the gang bang starring the little rascals.

strongohulkingtonsghost, Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:34 (fourteen years ago) link

I remember The Library Policeman has a pretty graphic depiction of a little boy getting raped out back.

Eric H., Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:47 (fourteen years ago) link

nb: wound up at the It wiki from the Dreamcatcher wiki because a friend texted me that she might have "pooped out a Dreamcatcher alien." (Budweiser in a can, it does a body good)

ice cr?m paint job (milo z), Tuesday, 18 August 2009 20:58 (fourteen years ago) link

three months pass...

Is anyone reading Under the Dome ?

calstars, Sunday, 6 December 2009 15:19 (fourteen years ago) link

Is that porn?

Pooping And Crying (Deric W. Haircare), Sunday, 6 December 2009 15:30 (fourteen years ago) link

still muddling through the last short story collection

kamerad, Sunday, 6 December 2009 17:08 (fourteen years ago) link

I downloaded his entire oeuvre. Woohoo. Mainly interested in his seventies work.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Sunday, 6 December 2009 17:13 (fourteen years ago) link

that last story in just after sunset. oh my god

kamerad, Monday, 7 December 2009 03:49 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

Man, I have no memories of posting to this thread over the years.

Still, just finished the Tommyknockers for the first time. Why does it seem that every King book needs a massively high body count, and a climax involving the hero suffering some massive injury described in high detail?

kingfish, Wednesday, 13 January 2010 11:34 (fourteen years ago) link

messiah figures?

Not a reactionary git, just an idiot. (darraghmac), Wednesday, 13 January 2010 11:45 (fourteen years ago) link

I just recommended the shining to one of my esl students cause it's you know, interesting, but hen he showed me the first page and I had no idea he is relatively idiosyncratic as a writer (for an esl student anyway)

(҉) (dyao), Wednesday, 13 January 2010 12:58 (fourteen years ago) link

seven months pass...

Lunch at the Gotham Cafe is dumb, but I did enjoy the description of the maitre d

proprietor of gib (roxymuzak), Thursday, 9 September 2010 15:50 (thirteen years ago) link

Stephen King On Writing was very good. I've never been that big of a fan of his, but have always been interested in how the dude sits at a typewriter and constantly churns out four novels a year. Sure cocaine's a helluva drug, but to retain focus and a narrative through all of that is impressive.

He goes through step-by-step how to do it. It's not easy, it doesn't sound fun, but it makes sense. Spend three hours a day writing. Do that every day for three months. When you're done, don't read it for another month or two. Then spend another three months editing it.

He goes into more detail about the process, including where he thinks your desk should be in the room, how to find an agent, staying away from Tom Swifties. But it was a very plain-spoken how-to manual.

I'm just too lazy to sit around, imagining what a rat's tail snapping about in the nest of my throat would feel like and being bothered to sit down and put it in words from 4 - 7 am every day for a winter.

Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 9 September 2010 16:26 (thirteen years ago) link

'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 (thirteen years ago) link

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

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

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

Val Kilmer as Roland, obv.

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

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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 (thirteen years ago) link

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

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

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 (thirteen years ago) link


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