Stephen King Fans discussion

This topic is about
Everything's Eventual
Short Stories & Collections
>
Everything's Eventual
date
newest »

message 1:
by
F.R.
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Mar 10, 2009 12:51PM

reply
|
flag
I LOVE this book! I love the Road Virus Heads North! I also really enjoyed the Man in the Black Suit. Plus I read Autopsy Room Four right before I got my wisdom teeth out and then I was totally freaked out!


I can remember reading a critical appreciation of King once (Lord knows where, and Google ain't being much help this morning) that opined he was actually a stronger short story writer than a novelist. I'm not sure I'd entirely agree with that, but the very nature of the short story means that King avoids what I often find his biggest flaw - namely his long windedness.
To be honest I only read 13 out of the 14 offerings in Everything's Eventual - I have no interest in The Dark Tower and so skipped 'The Little Sisters of Eluria' - and for a large part these stories are undeniably strong. In fact there is only one absolute stinker. The South American torture chamber setting of 'In The Deathroom' finds the author so out of his comfort zone, you wince and turn away in the hope that he'll stop embarrassing himself shortly.
If I had to pick favourites I'd choose 'The Road Virus Heads North', (which is the kind of 'there's something scary in the picture' tale I've been reading all my life but done brilliantly); 'That Feeling You Can Only Say What It Is in French' and 'Riding The Bullet' - the latter which manages to be both scary and sad.

F.R., is there any particular reason you have no interest in the DT series? In my opinion, it's a must read for any King fan! :)

I just have little interest in fantasy, and so spending thousands of pages wading through a fantasy epic - even if it's written by an author I like - does not appeal.
Of course I might be completely wrong, do you think there is a compelling reason why I should pick it up?

Thanks for explaining F.R., I'm always trying to convince people that they should love the books I love. ;D
FR If I remember correctly that short story that has to do with the DT can be read as a stand alone story. So you may want to go back and read it?


I just have little interest in fantasy, and so spending thousands of pages wading through a fantasy epic - even if it's written by an author I like - does not appeal.
Of course I mi..."
You're missing out, The Dark Tower is amazing.

Stories like The Death of Jack Hamilton, In the Deathroom, Luckey Quarter and Everythings Eventual arent so much scary as they are adventurous and/or just interesting stories.

That's the story that made me decide I had to revisit The Dark Tower series! (It reminded me a bit of Firefly... with monsters) I still didn't like Gunslinger but I'm looking forward to getting to the rest of the series now :)


Thanks for the heads up Bondama! Yeah I knew it won the O. Henry award. I'm just intrigued why it won, and now I know for sure. The story still lingers in my head for days now and it made me confront those "profound" questions regarding death, as it did with Gary, the story's protagonist. At death's door, can he now look at the Demon straight in the eye and confront it? Or will he run away once again, just like what he did in his childhood? But to where, when the claws of death is grasping him inch by inch? I just couldn't get it out of my head! Arrghh.. And I'm curious about what Gary really did when he came face to face with the Demon?
So guys, what's your take on this?


Bondama wrote: "Did you know that "The Man in the Black Suit" won the O. Henry Prize for last year? That's the most prestigious prize a writer can win for a short story. SK writes that he was totally surprised!!"
BEST SHORT STORY EVER!
BEST SHORT STORY EVER!

Thank you! :)

Thank you!





I just have little interest in fantasy, and so spending thousands of pages wading through a fantasy epic - even if it's written by an author I like - does not appeal.
Of course I might ..."
F.R., I'm not a big fantasy fan either. I actually have a friend who wrote a novel and it's a fantasy story and she wanted me to read it to give her feedback and I'm having the hardest time with it because it's fantasy, although it's written very well. I feel bad, but I totally understand what you're saying, and I'm currently on the fourth book of the DT series and I've read Sisters of Eluria and they are amazing stories. They're not so fantasy... mostly it's a western. But it's a fantasy as done by Stephen King, so all of the messed up stuff is done his way, and it's just written brilliantly. Seriously, give it a shot. Read Sisters if you want, but you don't have to. Pick up the Gunslinger and check it out, you might change your mind. I first read that in 3 hours and fell in love with the story.




Yeah, what are you talking about..?

I just have little interest in fantasy, and so spending thousands of pages wading through a fantasy epic - even if it's written by an author I like - does not appeal.
Of co..."
It's true about the DT series.
I hated fantasy...HATED it. But his version of fantasy is completely different than say Tolkien's or George R.R. Martin's. He is still himself but instead of horrifying like his usual work, it's sci-fi-ish. That might be a better description actually.
Look into it...for sure.

Crowd sourced book."
King did write those stories. I have no idea what you're inferring here."
Neither do I..

"The Man in The Black Suit" scared the hell out of me, that's for sure.

~Sammy

~Sammy"
Hi, Sammy!
"Little Sisters of Eloria," for obvious reasons.:)
The Road Virus Heads North and 1408 are among the scariest short stories I've ever read. I was literally shivering. Lunch at Gotham Cafe has always been my favorite of the 14 stories though.



I loved the Road Virus Heads North too! It was definitely one of my favorites from that book. SK is brilliant at inciting creepy and terror..

Is this what happens when you get old ?
( I did the same thing with nightmares and dreamscapes last week!)
Oh well I'll read it again anyway just to refresh my memory.