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- ôIf you have an imagination, let it run free.ö
- - Steven King, 1963
-
- The King of Terror
- Stephen Edwin King is one of todayÆs most popular and best selling writers.
- King combines the elements of psychological thrillers, science fiction, the paranormal,
- and detective themes into his stories. In addition to these themes, King sticks to
- using great and vivid detail that is set in a realistic everyday place. Stephen King
- who is mainly known for his novels, has broadened his horizons to different types of
- writings such as movie scripts, nonfiction, autobiographies, childrenÆs books, and short
- stories. While Stephen King might be best known for his novels The Stand and It, some
- of his best work that has been published are his short stories such as ôThe Bodyö and
- ôQuitters Incö. KingÆs works are so powerful because he uses his experience and
- observations from his everyday life and places them into his unique stories.
- Stephen Edwin King was born in Portland, Maine, on September 21, 1947, at the
- Maine General Hospital. Stephen, his mother Nellie, and his adopted brother David were
- left to fend for themselves when StephenÆs father Donald, a Merchant Marine captain,
- left one day, to go the store to buy a pack of cigarettes, and never returned. His
- fathers leaving had a big indirect impact on KingÆs life. In the autobiographical work
- Danse Macabre, Stephen King recalls how his family life was altered: ôAfter my father
- took off, my mother, struggled, and then landed on her feet.ö My brother and I didnÆt
- see a great deal of her over the next nine years. She worked a succession of continuous
- low paying jobs.ö StephenÆs first outlooks on life were influenced by his older brother
- and what he figured out on his own. While young Stephen and his family moved around the
- North Eastern and Central United States. When he was seven years old, they moved to
- Stratford, Connecticut. Here is where King got his first exposure to horror. One
- evening he listened to the radio adaptation of Ray BradburyÆs story ôMars Is Heaven!ö
- That night King recalls he ôslept in the doorway, where the real and rational light of
- the bathroom bulb could shine on my faceö (Beaham 16). Stephen KingÆs exposure to
- oral storytelling on the radio had a large impact on his later writings. King tells his
- stories in visual terms so that the reader would be able to ôseeö what was happening in
- their own mind, somewhat in the same fashion the way it was done on the radio (Beaham
- 17). KingÆs fascination with horror early on continued and was pushed along only a
- couple weeks after BradburyÆs story. One day little Stephen was looking through his
- motherÆs books and came across one named ôThe Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.ö
- After his mother finished reading the book to him, Stephen was hooked. He immediately
- asked her to read it again. King recalls ôthat summer when I was seven, [my mother]
- must have read it to me half a dozen timesö(Beaham 17). Ironically that same year,
- while Stephen was still seven years old, he went to go see his first horror movie, The
- Creature from the Black Lagoon. This is important because Stephen says, ô Since [the
- movie], I still see things cinematically. I write down everything I see. What I see,
- it seems like a movie to meö(Beaham 17). During this year the biggest event that
- probably had the biggest impact on Stephen KingÆs writing style was the discovery of the
- author H. P. Lovecraft. King would later write of Lovecraft, ôHe struck with the most
- force, and I still think, for all his shortcomings, he is the best writer of horror
- fiction that America has yet producedö(Beaham 22). In many of LovecraftÆs writings he
- always used his present surroundings as the back drop of his stories. King has followed
- in his footsteps with the fictional town of Castle Rock, Maine. Castle Rock is a
- combination of several towns that King moved to and from with his family in his
- childhood. The main town that it resembles is that of Durham, Maine. It was after the
- exposure to H. P. LovecraftÆs stories that King first began to write.
- While growing up and moving around the way his family did, Stephen had never
- been able to feel comfortable and settle down in one place and make friends they way
- other kids his age did (Underwood 77). Around the age of twelve the King family
- finally settled in the town of Durham, Maine. For Stephen King, Durham was the place
- where his imagination began to shine. It was at this time that Stephen first began to
- make friends. Along with his friends, Stephen would go the movies a lot. Stephen would
- use the movies as a inspiration. Although he enjoyed going out and having fun,
- whenever he would come home, Stephen would immediately write down his experiences and
- observations. Frequently King would place his friends and family into childhood fantasy
- tales. And one would always know how Stephen felt about them because of how long they
- lived in the story. It was not until college that Stephen King received any kind of
- real recognition for his writings. In the Fall of 1967, King finished his first novel,
- The Long Walk, and turned it into his sophomore American Literature professor for
- review. After a couple of weeks and a couple rounds around the department, the English
- professors were stunned. They realized that they had a real writer on their hands.
- >From then until he graduated with a bachelors degree in English from University of Maine
- at Orono in the Spring of 1970, King concentrated on rounding off the edges of his
- writing technique.
- One short story that best shows the type and technique of Stephen KingÆs writing
- is ôThe Body.ö ôThe Bodyö, which has been adapted into to a Hollywood movie, was first
- published in the collection of short stories called Different Seasons. The story is a
- tale of four twelve year old friends who at the end of one summer go out on a journey in
- into the woods to see a dead body. While on their journey they learn about life,
- friendship, and are propelled from innocent to experienced. On the surface of the story
- it appears to be simple journey with its occasional mishaps, but the true magnificence
- is that this story has a strong autobiographical coincidence. The main character,
- Gordie Lachance, is a boy growing up on his own through the memory of his dead older
- brother. Growing up, Gordie, an avid story teller, dreamed of becoming a writer.
- Before his brothers accidental death, all his parents would ever care about was his
- brother. Since his death, GordieÆs parents have presumably shut themselves away from
- Gordie. This, to a certain degree is true of King. Because of his father leaving when
- Stephen was two, and his mother taking on around the clock jobs, he never really had any
- parental guidance.
- The story itself is written with Gordie narrating in the present time look back
- at the journey. At the time of his flashback, Gordie is a best selling author who has
- returned to his home town of Castle Rock to revisit his past. This is ironic because at
- the time Stephen wrote the story he himself had just moved from Bolder, Colorado, back
- ôhomeö to the town of Bangor. KingÆs childhood home town of Durham is used in several
- different stories under the fictional town name of Castle Rock. It is also noticeable
- how in the story when Gordie ôlooksö back to him and his brother, his brother is the
- only person who cares for him. He noticeably goes out of his way to look out for
- Gordie, and is always encouraging his and asking him about his writing, while all his
- parents seem to do is ignore Gordie. This also can be related to KingÆs past because
- while growing up his brother while only two years older then him, always seemed to be
- there for Stephen and look out for him. Probably the deepest imagery of the story is at
- the end of the novel. Gordie is shown back at home and putting the finishing touches on
- his latest work. While finishing up, Gordie is interrupted by his son who is shown in
- a sense to be a good-natured and caring boy. Gordie experiences a deep love for his
- family at the time. This setup is presumably placed in the story as an escape for King.
- In his autobiography Danse Macabre, King tells of his fear of providing for and caring
- for a family (Reino 112). This shows King pushing away the fear, in a sense saying
- that he is all right. That he has now embraced the idea.
- One of KingÆs best work is also one that does not fit in any category of his
- usual writings. For an author who usually writes horror, ôRita Hayworth and Shawshank
- Redemptionö, is a story that is a refreshing sidestep. The story tells of how Andy
- Dufresne, who is falsely tried, convicted, and sentenced to back to back life sentences
- for the double murder of his wife and her lover, deals with being trapped within a
- dreadful situation that are out of his hands. Throughout the nineteen years that he is
- in Shawshank prison, Andy has to endure everything from a gang called the ôSistersö, who
- go around raping and beating their prey to being forced to create and run a money
- laundering scheme for the prison Warden. If this story was written without the authors
- name on it, there is none of Stephen KingÆs characteristic style, except for maybe in
- one place in the story. The one possible place that even hints that it is from the mind
- of King is at the end of the story where Red is off to keep his promise to Andy. Andy
- asks Red, that when he get out of jail to travel to a southern Maine town called Buxton
- and look for something he buried in a ôhay field under a large oak field.ö The suspense
- of what was buried and the description of the field in Buxton is what is typical of
- Stephen King. While the story is very uncharacteristic of King it does deep down relate
- to himself. The theme of hope and of how Andy overcomes the situation is one that is
- tied closely to King. It runs a direct parallel with life as a child and how his life
- has turned out. Just as Andy was thrown into predicament and later escapes and lives
- his life on his own terms, Stephen, early on was forced to move from town to town with
- mother and brother. In the end Stephen escapes and now lives on his own terms.
- Stephen KingÆs works are so powerful because he uses his experiences and
- observations from his life and places them into his unique works. What seems to make
- Stephen KingÆs stories almost magical is that the settings of his stories are placed
- into common every day places. Additionally, StephenÆs writings are true to life in
- peoples mindÆs because he draws upon common fears. Just as KingÆs writing style and
- genre had been influenced by movies throughout his life, he is now influencing the
- same industry with his own vision and imagination. KingÆs writings are so widely
- appealing that over 42 of his works have been based upon or turned into Hollywood
- movies which have included stars like Jack Nicholson (The Shining), John Travolta
- (Carrie), and Morgan Freeman (The Shawshank Redemption).
- Works Cited
- Beaham , George . Stephen King Companion , The . Kansas City : Universal Press
- Syndicate Company , 1995 .
- Beaham , George . Stephen King Story, The : A Literary Profile . Kansas City :
- Universal Press Syndicate Company , 1992 .
- King , Stephen . ôBody , Theö in Different Seasons . New York : Viking Penguin
- Inc ., 1982 .
- King , Stephen . ôRita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemptionö in Different Seasons
- . New York : Viking Penguin Inc ., 1982 .
- Reino , Joseph . Stephen King : The First Decade , Carrie to Pet Sematary .
- Boston : Twayne Publishers , 1988 .
- Underwood , Tom . Conversations on Terror with Stephen King . New York : Warner
- Books , 1988 .