Friday, September 21, 2018

Notes For September 21st, 2018


This Day In Literary History


On September 21st, 1947, the legendary American writer Stephen King was born in Portland, Maine. When King was two years old, his father left the house, claiming that he was going to buy cigarettes. Instead, he walked out on the family.

King's mother, Ruth, was left to raise him and his older brother David alone. She moved the family around several times, to several different states, before returning to live in Durham, Maine, where Ruth also cared for her ailing parents until they died.

As a young boy, Stephen King apparently witnessed the death of one of his friends, who had been struck and killed by a train. King has no memory of the incident, but that day, after he went out to play with his friend, he came home seemingly in shock and unable to speak.

The King family then learned of his friend's death. Some have speculated that the roots of the dark and disturbing images in King's horror novels may lie within his repressed memory of witnessing the gruesome death of his childhood friend. King has rejected this theory.

King's interest in writing was awakened when he was a boy. While exploring the attic with his brother, he found a collection of paperback books that had belonged to his father.

The books included an anthology of stories published by Weird Tales magazine and a collection of short stories by horror master H.P. Lovecraft, whom King has credited as a major influence.

By the time he started high school, King had become enamored with EC's popular line of horror comics, including Tales From The Crypt, which King later would pay tribute to in his original screenplay for the horror film Creepshow (1982).

As a high school student, King began writing stories and articles for Dave's Rag, a newspaper his brother published and printed with a mimeograph machine. He also sold copies of his stories to his classmates.

King's first commercially published story, I Was A Teenage Grave Robber, was published in 1965, in a serialized format, by a fanzine called Comics Review. A revised version of the story would be published in 1966 by another fanzine, Stories Of Suspense, as In A Half-World Of Terror.

In 1966, Stephen King attended the University of Maine, where he studied English. He wrote a column for the student newspaper called Steve King's Garbage Truck and took part in a writing workshop.

To pay his tuition, King took odd jobs, including one at an industrial laundry that would inspire him to write his classic short story, The Mangler. His first published story as a professional writer, The Glass Floor, was published in 1967 by Startling Mystery Stories.

After he graduated college in 1970, Stephen King obtained a teaching certificate, but was unable to find work as a teacher, so he continued doing odd jobs and supplemented his income by selling short stories to men's magazines such as Cavalier and Swank.

(At the time, it was common for men's magazines, from high-paying markets like Playboy and Penthouse to smaller ones like Cavalier and Swank, to publish short stories as well as articles and pictorials.)

Many of these early stories would appear in King's 1978 short story collection, Night Shift. In 1971, King married his college sweetheart, writer Tabitha Spruce, who would bear him three children - Naomi, Joe, and Owen.

Joe Hillstrom King would become a best selling and award winning novelist, writing under the pseudonym Joe Hill - the name of the famous labor leader for whom he was named. Owen King would become a writer as well, and Naomi would become an ordained minister for the Unitarian Universalist Church.


While teaching at the Hampden Academy, Stephen King began working on his first novel while battling a drinking problem that would last a decade. But after accruing numerous rejection slips for other writings, he began to doubt his writing talent.

King was so discouraged that he threw an early draft of his novel in the trash, convinced that it would never sell. His wife rescued the manuscript and encouraged him to finish it. So he did.

To King's surprise, Carrie was published in 1974. It told the story of Carrie White, a lonely, awkward, and unattractive teenage girl who is tormented by both her cruel classmates and her fanatically religious mother.

Carrie discovers that she possesses telekinetic powers - the ability to move objects with her mind. When her classmates play a cruel joke and humiliate her at the prom, Carrie uses her powers to unleash horrific vengeance. Then she takes equally horrific revenge on her mother - and the entire town.

King received a $2,500 advance on the first edition hardcover publication of Carrie, which wasn't much, even back then. Later, when King's agent called to tell him that the paperback rights to Carrie had been sold for $400,000 he couldn't believe it.

Stunned and in shock, King later said that "The only thing I could think to do was go out and buy my wife a hair dryer." King moved his family to Southern Maine so he could be near his ailing mother, who was dying of uterine cancer.

He began writing his second novel, Salem's Lot. Still in the grip of a severe drinking problem, King was drunk the day before he gave the eulogy at his mother's funeral. Still, he managed to write a second novel that proved to be even better than his first.

Salem's Lot was published in 1975. Inspired by one of King's all time favorite novels, the Bram Stoker classic Dracula (1897), it told the story of a small and quaint New England town infested with vampires.

Salem's Lot would be adapted as an acclaimed TV miniseries in 1979 and remade in 2004. In 1976, the first feature film adaptation of Stephen King's works was released. Carrie, directed by Brian De Palma, starred Sissy Spacek as the telekinetic teen.

Piper Laurie was cast as her demented mother, and, in early roles, William Katt appeared as Carrie's prom date and John Travolta as the boyfriend of Carrie's archenemy. Amy Irving played Sue Snell, the remorseful classmate who befriends Carrie.

The acclaim and success of the Carrie movie would make King's early career. A sequel, The Rage: Carrie 2, would be released in 1999. It had nothing to do with King's novel.

The sequel in name only told the story of another troubled teenage girl with telekinetic powers who had been sired by Carrie White's philandering father. King's novel would be adapted as a Broadway musical in 1988 and a TV movie in 2002.

Another feature film adaptation of Carrie was released in 2013. Starring Chloe Grace Moretz as Carrie and Julianne Moore as Carrie's demented mother, this version, though modernized, was more faithful to King's novel than the De Palma version. It received good reviews.

In 1977, Stephen King would publish his third novel. This novel, and the 1980 feature film adaptation of it (which he hated) would make King a household name and establish him as the master of horror.

The Shining was set in Colorado and inspired by the King family's visit to the Stanley Hotel, a resort hotel located near Estes Park, Colorado. The Shining tells the story of Jack Torrance, an aspiring writer and recovering alcoholic who takes a job as winter caretaker of the world famous Overlook Hotel in Colorado.

Torrance was a prep school teacher, but his alcoholism cost him his job and nearly ended his marriage. In the same year, while in drunken rages, he accidentally broke his son's arm and deliberately assaulted an obnoxious student.

Jack sees his caretaker's job as a means of providing for his family and rebuilding his life. Now sober, he plans to write during his downtime. Excited to begin his new life, Jack packs up his wife Wendy and their five-year-old son Danny and moves them to the Overlook.

The fact that the hotel's previous winter caretaker went insane and murdered his family before killing himself doesn't dissuade Jack from the taking the job. Little Danny, however, is terrified. He possesses formidable psychic powers and senses that something bad is going to happen at the Overlook.

When they arrive at the hotel, Danny meets head chef Dick Hallorann. Dick possesses the same psychic powers as Danny, which he calls "shining." He tells Danny that the horrifying images he sees can't hurt him, but warns him to stay out of room 217. (Room 217 was the room that the Kings stayed in at the Stanley Hotel.)

Jack Torrance uncovers disturbing information about the Overlook's past. Many murders and suicides took place in the hotel, which seems to have been haunted from the day it was built - on an Indian burial ground.

Nevertheless, Jack intends to stay and do his job. As Danny struggles to deal with his horrific psychic visions, an evil presence begins to erode Jack's sanity until it possesses him completely.

In 1980, the legendary British filmmaker Stanley Kubrick directed a feature film adaptation of The Shining. The movie starred Jack Nicholson as Jack Torrance, Shelley Duvall as Wendy, Danny Lloyd as Danny, and Scatman Crothers as Dick Hallorann.

The combination of Kubrick's tight direction, the claustrophobic cinematography, the foreboding soundtrack, and Jack Nicholson's bravura performance made it a cult classic horror film that remains hugely popular to this day.

However, Stephen King hated the movie, as Kubrick's screenplay took great liberties with the novel and features a completely different ending. Though the film runs nearly two and a half hours long, the story of Jack Torrance's eroding sanity feels rushed.

In 1997, The Shining was adapted as an ABC TV miniseries. It featured a teleplay written by Stephen King himself, and solid performances by Steven Weber and Rebecca De Mornay as Jack and Wendy Torrance, Courtland Mead as Danny, and the great Melvin Van Peebles as Dick Hallorann.

The miniseries had a great technical hook; it was actually filmed on location at the Stanley Hotel in Colorado - the very hotel where King and his family stayed, which inspired him to write the novel.

While competently directed by Mick Garris, King's teleplay is sunk by its low budget, blah cinematography, and the stifling censorship restrictions of the commercial TV medium. Although faithful to the novel, the miniseries lacks the atmosphere and intensity of Kubrick's movie, which is far more frightening.

Not content to rest on his laurels, Stephen King continued to write prolifically, authoring dozens of horror novels, most of which were adapted for the screen. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, King published a series of novels under the pseudonym Richard Bachman.

He did this as an experiment to answer a question that had been nagging him: was his success an accident of fate? The Bachman novels included Rage (1977), The Long Walk (1979), Roadwork (1981), and The Running Man (1982), which were early, unpublished novels that had been written before Carrie and later revised.

After the last Bachman novel, Thinner, was published in 1984, Steve Brown, a bookstore clerk from Washington D.C., noticed many similarities between Bachman's writing style and Stephen King's.

Determined to uncover the truth, Brown looked up the publisher's records in the Library of Congress and confirmed that Richard Bachman was in fact Stephen King. After his pseudonym was exposed, King issued a press release announcing the death of Richard Bachman from "cancer of the pseudonym."

He would later resurrect Bachman in 1996, publishing The Regulators under Bachman's name. The novel was a companion piece to King's novel, Desperation, which was released at the same time.

In 2006, King published Blaze, a rewrite of an unpublished Bachman novel that had been written in 1973. He had found the original manuscript in a trunk and tweaked it.

After King's pseudonym was outed, the first four Richard Bachman novels were republished in one large volume, The Bachman Books. They were also republished separately.

When three school shooting incidents (in 1989, 1996, and 1997) occurred, where the shooters were later found to have copies of Rage in their lockers, Stephen King pulled his first Bachman novel out of circulation.

Rage, which had been first published in 1977, told the story of Charlie Decker, a mentally disturbed high school student who finally snaps. After returning to school following a suspension for assaulting a teacher with a wrench, Charlie brings a gun to class.

He kills two teachers and holds his classmates hostage, forcing them to play a version of "truth or dare" where they must expose their deepest secrets, feelings, and fears. The hostage situation turns into a kind of group therapy session.

The session proves beneficial for all but one of the hostages, a pathetic bully who is psychologically destroyed when his deepest secrets are revealed. As the police surround the school, they find that they're dealing with an intelligent, cunning, and dangerous psychotic. And they're about to make a bad situation even worse.

King pulled Rage out of print because he feared that it might inspire more troubled teens to try and recreate his main character's rampage. In a 1983 interview for Playboy magazine, he said the following regarding other violent incidents that were linked to his novels:

But, on the other hand, [the victims] would all be dead even if I'd never written a word. The murderers would still have murdered. So I think we should resist the tendency to kill the messenger for the message. Evil is basically stupid and unimaginative and doesn't need creative inspiration from me or anyone else. But despite knowing all that rationally, I have to admit that it's unsettling to feel that I could be linked in any way, however tenuous, to somebody else's murder.

In 2007, after troubled Virginia Tech student Cho Seung-Hui went on a shooting rampage, it was revealed that Cho's professors, as well as the university's administrators and mental health staff, were aware of Cho's disturbing writings, but did nothing about them.

In an article about the shooting, written for Entertainment Weekly magazine, King said that "Certainly in this sensitized day and age, my own college writing - including a short story called Cain Rose Up and the novel Rage - would have raised red flags, and I'm certain someone would have tabbed me as mentally ill because of them..."

Although he is affectionately known as the "master of horror," King has occasionally ventured into other genres. In 1982, he published an anthology of novellas called Different Seasons which featured a coming of age story called The Body, later adapted as a popular movie called Stand By Me.

It also featured a moving prison drama, Rita Hayworth And Shawshank Redemption, which was filmed as the acclaimed movie, The Shawshank Redemption.

Another novella, Apt Pupil, a psychological thriller, would also be filmed, but the movie omits the novella's shocking ending. King's most popular non-horror venture would prove to be his magnum opus.

The Dark Tower series of novels, which began with The Gunslinger (1982), was an epic dark fantasy set in an alternate reality, on a parallel world similar to Earth, that is slowly dying.

The Gunslinger opens with gunfighter and knight errant Roland of Gilead chasing "the man in black," an evil sorcerer, across a desert. The land is a nightmarish, surreal wasteland reminiscent of the 19th century American Old West.

Through the series of novels, Roland pursues his quarry while on a quest to reach the Dark Tower. The Dark Tower series is Stephen King at his best, displaying his formidable skill as a storyteller.

Meticulously detailed and masterfully plotted, the Dark Tower novels are immensely popular with King fans, many of whom claim the series as their favorites of King's novels.


Last year, a feature film adaptation of The Dark Tower was released and received extremely negative reviews, scoring only 16% on the Tomatometer. Directed by Nikolaj Arcel, the film suffers from a horrible script (penned by four writers) and bizarre casting.


The dreadful film combines elements from different Dark Tower epic novels into one watered down, 95-minute, PG-13 rated mess infamous for the fact that the main character Roland Deschain, a young white man, is played by a middle aged black actor.

In 1986, King published another of his most popular and most ambitious horror novels, the nearly 1,200 page epic, It. Set in the small New England town of Derry, Maine, the novel opens in 1957, with the horrific murder of a little boy committed by an evil being that lives under the town.

An ancient, shape-shifting evil being almost as old as the universe, the creature has lived under Derry for the past few million years. It prefers to assume the form of a circus clown called Pennywise in order to hunt, kill, and eat its favorite prey - children.

Bill, the older brother of the murdered boy, strikes up friendships with four other boys (Ben, Richie, Stan, and Eddie) and a girl named Beverly. Calling themselves the Losers Club, the outcast preteens are joined by another member, Mike - a black boy whom they rescued from a sadistic, racist bully named Henry.

The Losers each encounter Pennywise the Dancing Clown, which takes the form of what they fear the most. They discover that when the creature isn't killing and eating children, it's clouding the minds of the adults in town and inspiring them to be apathetic to evil - if not downright evil themselves.

Realizing that they each have power that when combined can defeat Pennywise, the kids perform a magic ritual to summon that power and confront the evil face to face. After a horrific battle, the Losers think they've destroyed the creature, but it only went into hibernation. When Pennywise returns 27 years later to feed on children again, the Losers reunite to destroy the evil being once and for all...

It was adapted as a TV miniseries in 1990. Featuring a memorable performance by Tim Curry as Pennywise and a cast including Richard Thomas, John Ritter, Harry Anderson, Dennis Christopher, Tim Reid, and Annette O'Toole, the miniseries received acclaim despite being handicapped by a low budget and network TV censorship.

On September 8th, 2017, an It feature film was finally released after years of production delays. Starring Bill Skarsgard as a terrifying Pennywise and a cast of talented child actors as the Losers, the film, directed by Andy Muschietti, received mostly good reviews (despite a bad script) and became a hit, grossing over $110 million (more than three times its budget) during its opening weekend.

The movie is actually an adaptation of only half the novel, (a poor adaptation, in my opinion, as many important details are either omitted or needlessly changed) focusing exclusively on the Losers as kids and changing the time from 1957 to 1989. A sequel, scheduled to be produced, will feature the Losers as adults, reuniting to face Pennywise once again.

On June 19th, 1999, Stephen King's incredible and prolific literary career - and his life - nearly came to a sudden end. While out for his daily walk in Center Lovell, Maine, King was struck from behind by a minivan. The force of impact hurled his body some 14 feet off the road.

When a Deputy Sheriff arrived on the scene, King was barely conscious, but able to give out his emergency contact information - though he had suffered a collapsed right lung, multiple fractures of his right leg, a lacerated scalp, and a broken hip.

After enduring five operations in five days, and beginning the agonies of physical therapy, King started to write again. He needed to write, if only to distract himself from the pain. He resumed work on a nonfiction book, On Writing.

Also during his recovery, he wrote Dreamcatcher, (2001) which would prove to be one of his most viscerally graphic horror novels. At first, he was in too much pain and discomfort to write with a computer, so he wrote longhand, with a fountain pen and paper.

Bryan Smith, the driver who had struck Stephen King, claimed to have been distracted by his dog, but he had nearly a dozen drunk driving offenses on his record. King was outraged when the local prosecutor allowed Smith to cop a plea.

In exchange for his guilty plea, Smith's driver's license was suspended for a year and he received a six-month jail sentence - which was also suspended. In an eerie coincidence, on September 21st, 2000 - Stephen King's 53rd birthday - Bryan Smith was found dead in his trailer at the age of 42.

Although the official cause of death was listed as an accidental overdose of the prescription painkiller fentanyl, rumors began to fly that either King had Smith killed or one of the horror master's fans took revenge and made Smith's murder look like an accident.

After Smith died, King's lawyer and two others bought his minivan for $1,500 to prevent it from being auctioned off on eBay. King smashed up the minivan with a baseball bat, then had it crushed in a junkyard.

In 2002, frustrated by his injuries, which made sitting for long periods of time uncomfortable, King announced that he was retiring from writing. His retirement would prove to be short-lived, as he continued to recover.

Though he no longer writes at the same pace that made him so prolific in the past, he still produces great novels - and a few not so great ones. In 2009, he published Under The Dome, a 1,088 page horror epic - his longest novel since It.

(King's 1978 classic, The Stand, originally published in an edited 823-page version, would be republished in 1990 in its original uncut version at 1,168 pages.)


Under The Dome, an antifascist allegory, was about a New England town that finds itself trapped inside a force-field like invisible dome, which brings out the best and the worst in the townspeople. Despite its mostly negative reviews, the novel was adapted as a TV series.

King has acknowledged a huge flaw in the plot - the people never thought to tunnel out from underneath the dome - and denied accusations that he stole the plot from The Simpsons Movie, a feature film based on the popular TV series that bombed at the box office.

In September of 2013, King published Doctor Sleep, a first rate sequel to The Shining that finds Danny Torrance now middle aged and living in New Hampshire. After beating a severe drinking problem, he finds that his psychic powers have returned in full force.

Danny forms a telepathic bond with Abra Stone, a young girl with similar psychic powers, and determines to protect her from the True Knot, a nomadic tribe of vampire-like immortals that tools around the country in RVs, sucking the life forces out of psychic children.

King's most recent novel, The Outsider, was published earlier this year in May. It starts off as a straightforward crime story set in the town of Flint, Oklahoma, which is shocked when one of its children, an 11-year-old boy, is brutally raped, murdered, and mutilated.


Police detective Ralph Anderson, known for being a relentless yet by the book cop, is on the case, and he eventually arrests the killer - Terry Maitland, a loving family man, popular teacher, and Little League baseball coach. Maitland swears innocence, but Anderson has eyewitnesses and DNA evidence.

Convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that he has his killer, Anderson is shocked when his airtight case begins to fall apart, as other reliable witnesses place Maitland out of town on the day he allegedly killed his young victim.

Refusing to submit to the townspeople's lust for blood and vigilante justice, Anderson determines to put the right man on death row for the crime. His investigation leads him all the way to Marysville, Texas - and a shape-shifting monster called The Outsider...


While literary critics haven't always been kind to the now 71-year-old Stephen King, he has proven himself as one of our greatest modern novelists, and he remains a huge and powerful influence for aspiring writers everywhere.



Quote Of The Day


"You can approach the act of writing with nervousness, excitement, hopefulness, or even despair--the sense that you can never completely put on the page what's in your mind and heart. You can come to the act with your fists clenched and your eyes narrowed, ready to kick ass and take down names. You can come to it because you want a girl to marry you or because you want to change the world. Come to it any way but lightly. Let me say it again: you must not come lightly to the blank page." - Stephen King


Vanguard Video


Today's video features An Evening With Stephen King, a very rare 90-minute live appearance by Stephen King taped in 1983 at Billerica Public Library in Billerica, Massachusetts. Enjoy!


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