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- REVIEWS, Page 81BOOKSThe Weird and The Yucky
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- By JOHN SKOW
-
- TITLE: DOLORES CLAIBORNE
- AUTHOR: Stephen King
- PUBLISHER: Viking; 305 pages; $23.50
-
- THE BOTTOM LINE: The world's oldest teenage author cranks
- out another one.
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- Stephen King here tries a novel without his customary
- latex spider webs and prop-department zombies, and nearly makes
- it work. What drives Dolores Claiborne is a powerful
- characterization of the title figure, a cranky old Maine
- islander who takes no guff from life or death. In a rasping,
- unrepentant tale to police, she admits to murdering her rotten
- husband 30 years ago. Narrative logic is murky here, but her
- confession is supposed to show that, on the other hand, she has
- not murdered her employer, a rich, loony off-islander.
-
- King's mimicry is startlingly good, but as always, his
- artistic sensibility is that of a clever 14-year-old. His
- interest is caught by yucky death scenes and weird delusions,
- and he doesn't really care that these aren't the real horrors
- that adults deal with. "Wouldn't it be neat if, see, she gets
- her husband to fall down an old well," the reader imagines King
- thinking, "and he yells up at her to help him. She just smiles
- and kind of falls asleep, and the next thing she knows he's
- climbed up the inside of the well, and he grabs her by the foot,
- and she can feel his slimy, bloody hand . . ."
-
- If you're old enough for your very own library card, this
- isn't frightening; it's just silly. But King's fans, subteens
- of all ages, won't mind at all.
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