Tis true.
He also wrote some books that paralleled what he was going through when he got hit by a guy in a van awhile back. The injuries, rehab, tue whole thing. I remember reading an interview where he talked extensively about how even though the pain was excruciating sometimes, writing, papers strewn all ober the floor the old fashioned way, was what helped him stay sane while letting go of his anger over the situation.
.
I'm hoping the new Carrie will put some stuff back in from the book. I don't know why, but the part in the book where some of the townspeople were trying to get the the school and the street they were on had live wires all over it kind of creeped me out. The woman testifying as to how everyone kept stepping on the wires and getting fried, and then she was the only one on the street still alive, and she had to take giant steps over the wires.
I've always loved the fact that King is so descriptive in his stories....or as he calls it "diarrhea of the word processor".
"I was 12 going on 13 the first time I saw a dead human being" --Stand by Me
I like that pic.
Stay in Drugs. Eat your School. Don't do Vegetables.
Nah, those are his kids. They love him.
Stay in Drugs. Eat your School. Don't do Vegetables.
Foods he loves, foods he hates
http://www.bonappetit.com/blogsandfo...interview.html
I feel the same way he does--oysters and slimy things--snails--uh, nope, gag. I will admit to eating oyster stew when I was young, but they were cooked. I hate the thoughts of eating something that is alive. And I have heard that when you squirt lemon juice on them they squirm.
However, I do love me some cheese cake, the New York style. Yum!
He was on Reddit the other day, answering questions from the minions. Someone asked him what his favorite book was that he wrote. He said it was Lisey's story. I'd never heard of it.
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
I am an avid reader. I have never read a Stephen King book.
Just never have. I don't know. What is a good one to start with. I have watched some of the movies.
It and The Stand are good starters (long books) I also liked Duma Key a lot, just a good read with supernatural twists. Under The Dome was lackluster. 11/22/63 was good also, and more recent.
I loved the Bachman Books. The Long Walk, Running Man, and Rage were some of my favs.
I liked Thinner and The Dark Tower series, though I didn't read but the first 4 or 5. Cujo and Fire Starter. I didn't really are for Christine, Rose Madder, and Delores Clayborn, and some others. Salem's Lot scared the living daylights out of me. I could not put it down and finally finished it around 4:30am and had to be at work at somewhere around 7am, but I was too afraid to sleep.
Personally my favorite was Rage, and though I love It and The Stand I think that they might be a bit long for a first timer. Apt Pupil was good.
I hope they don't fuck up the remake of IT ... actually how can they? First, the ending sucked ass more than any horror tv movie could possibly suck & second, IT was a tv movie... I think as far as editing goes, this remake, a regular motion picture production, will have more bad language, nudity, blood, gore ...etc. At least I hope so. You can't "fuck up" a tv movie
PS anyone read his novel (based on true events of his life), The Body? Stand by Me is based from that novel.....if so, did the movie portray the novel accurately? Was there more in the book?
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
I did, it was a part of the Bachman Books set I had. The movie just didn't quite do it for me. There were things that were screwed up and somehow, believe it or not I think they missed a lot with the kids. As for IT, seriously they thought it was based on the book? Sometimes it seemed completely different, so much edited out you didn't even get to know enough about the monster!
This thread inspired me to revisit King's works via Wikipedia, which states that a film adaptation (not remake) of "Carrie" is coming out this fall! Chloe Moretz (the girl from "Kickass") will play Carrie. I'm not sure how to feel about this yet, since I love the original movie - it's one of my all-time favorites (with "The Shining" and "The Exorcist"), and its 70's-ness is fantastic (house crumbling at the end; music cheesy & freaky). Guess it'll be an entirely new take on the book & I'll try hard not to draw comparisons.
"We've had threads about guys fucking picnic tables, animals and dead bodies. Third boob ain't going to stop a damn thing." - cleanskull
Didn't they already make a Carrie remake? ETA: it was a sequel.
"We've had threads about guys fucking picnic tables, animals and dead bodies. Third boob ain't going to stop a damn thing." - cleanskull
The Stand (unabridged) and Duma Key are my faves. The first I ever read was Bachman's Thinner. Bag of Bones is very good as well. I have gotten half way through Under the Dome and Needful Things before calling it quits. If I quit reading a book, it is b/c I hit something that I just cannot get past. In 'UtD' it was the girl (can't think of a name) looking at her son, Little Walter, and saying Mommy loves you--then attempting or succeeding in suicide. With 'NT' the scence that has Nettie cracking the Polish woman's head open with a meat cleaver did it. I cannot move beyond those things to the rest of the book. Oh, I try and sometimes read on a few pages. Though I always 'abandon ship' after them. I may pick them back up when I grow a spine.
Although I did not read IT, theres no way to fck up a TV movie. If anything it will have more explicit material & more gore
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Forgot about Black House (collab between Stephen King and Peter Straub) Excellent book, I am rereading it from the library but again it's a hardback, over 600 pages. Wish the library had more e-sources like the Patti Smith one I downloaded to the computer.
Encore is running a SK movie each night in Sept. It's a must watch for me, lead-up to Halloween.
Also read Joyand. Short but good.
Waiting for the library to cough up Mr. Mercedes now.
There's a new book coming Nov. 2014, called Revival.
11/22/63 is a great book. I found the book Lisey's stories at the Goodwill and am having a hard time getting through it. I hate when he goes into this style. I'm very close to just re-donating it. I liked Joyland if anyone wants a quick read. Pet Semetary will always be one of my favorites along with Misery. But Green Mile is some of his best work.
But this Lisey story is why I stopped reading him. If anyone else has read it and can say it got better I will trudge onward.
Ok, now I'm just going to put it in the Goodwill pile.
Misery is my all-time favorite.
"Tequila may not be the answer, but it's worth a shot."
"I just go here!"
"I am not psychic. I AM psychotic. BIG difference."
For years, my fave was The Shining, until I heard Joyland on Cd, now that is my favorite. Unfave = Lisey's Story. I love Stephen King, however, I skip over the parts where he describes sex, ew, he didn't always do that, did he?
I actually think King is underrated by the literary "establishment". I teach English at the college level, and I am always thrilled when there is a King story in the textbook.
Sincerely yours,
Upset
Yeppers.
Happy birthday. He's getting up there.
Let's see I love The Body, ( Made into Stand By Me) Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, (Made into The Shawshank Redemption) The Stand, and It, Eyes of the Dragon, and the Colorado Kid. (Made into the t.v. series Haven), Diary of Ellen Rimbauer (Made into Rose Red).
Last edited by pkstracy; 09-23-2014 at 09:21 AM.
There was a marathon all day today on Encore I watched "Sometimes they come back", Shawshank, and I recorded Christine just to have it.
I would have Christine on Blu-ray however the only way to get this masterpiece of film on blu-ray is amazon at a whopping 150-160 bucks.
One of my favorite episodes of Quantum Leap where Sam leaps and befriends a young Stephen King and accidentally gives him the ideas for most of his books.
I'm so glad this is a Happy Birthday post... I got worried when I saw his name. I love The Stand, when I started reading it, I only put it down to sleep! And, the mini-series 'Kingdom Hospital' based on his accident. So good. Happy Birthday Mr. King!
Recently watched Maximum Overdrive, one of King's early films and self described as his "moron movie". Can't say I disagree with him but a not bad light movie anyway. King makes a cameo early on. The premise is a comet passes close by earth and we are in its tail for a couple of days and during which all machines, including trucks, develop a mind of their own.