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Misery
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July 2024 Group Read #2 - Misery by Stephen King
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which I believe were made for the best. The Oscar winning film featuring Kathy Bates is simply marvelous. Hard to believe she was an unknown when called up and offered the role of Annie Wilkes.

Raising hand- me!! Oh my gosh, I am only about 12% in, but this *is* a hard one to put down. The way it just starts in the middle of everything like that......huge fan already! Putting the pieces back together over time......eeks out the true horror.....





Interestingly enough, this book started out as being a Richard Bachman novel but then Bachman was outed as SK (and it has a lot in common with the Bachman Books).
I've always considered this as part of King's "addiction" trilogy--3 books published as he was getting sober. Misery is about kicking addiction; The Tommyknockers is about being addicted; and The Dark Half is about burying your old self.


C wrote: "I have never seen the movie but kept picturing James Caan and Kathy Bates as I was reading it last month."
Me too.

My rating = 5 Stars.
I"ll be following your comments here, always interesting.
Here's my review . . . . .
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

That's how it was for me when I read it, too! (I did end up watching the movie at some point since then and enjoyed it a lot, too)


Good point, which I had forgotten. Kathy Bates really made that movie come alive. Very talented.
I read Misery in 2021 and was very engaged the entire time, as it's a fast-paced and very tense read. I have criticisms in much King's work, especially his earlier work, of how women are depicted and how he used fatness and psychosis to depict "evil" women, which is how I felt about Annie Wilkes, although I love Kathy Bates' depiction of her in the film adaptation.
The book works best in the very tense standoffs between Annie and Paul, and I also felt that Misery has some of the best descriptions of pain that I have ever read. I live with multiple types of chronic pain, and the way Paul's character felt and suffered through excruciating pain felt very real and important to his journey.
The book works best in the very tense standoffs between Annie and Paul, and I also felt that Misery has some of the best descriptions of pain that I have ever read. I live with multiple types of chronic pain, and the way Paul's character felt and suffered through excruciating pain felt very real and important to his journey.


Interestingly enough, this book started out as being a Richard Bachman novel but t..."
Thanks for that insight about the "addiction trilogy". I was not previously aware of that. What a way to write yourself out of a problem!

I love the parallels everyone is talking about with how addiction can make you feel the similar isolation, pain, and despair that Paul is experiencing in this story. Being held captive and seeing no way out of your agony.
Another remarkable aspect of this story is the masterful depiction of a a character with a horrible mental disease. The peaks and valleys; the dissociative and depressive episodes, awareness and lack of awareness of being dangerous to yourself and others. I could go on, but if you've read the book, you know the range of actions and emotions I'm talking about. Again, psychological impairment can also be a stand-in to represent addiction and how it alters someone's personality.
So, the masterpiece titled Misery gives us two strikingly different embodiments that can be interpreted as representing a human being in the throes of addiction. Now go read Empire of Pain. 😠
Please remember to use page/chapter numbers and spoiler tags as necessary when discussing.
Happy reading!