The Reading Life: Thinking about Stephen King
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This is part of the occasional series âThe Reading Lifeâ by book critic David L. Ulin.
On the afternoon of New Yearâs Eve, I spent half an hour or so discussing Stephen King with my colleague David Lazarus on Patt Morrisonâs KPCC-FM radio show. The news peg, such as it was, involved the decision by the New York Times to include Kingâs new novel, â11/22/63,â on its list of the 10 best books of 2011. But the bigger question had to do with Kingâs merit as a writer, which, almost 40 years after he began to publish, remains a source of conversation, if no longer quite debate.
For the record, I didnât think much of â11/22/63â; I found it meandering and unfocused -- not to mention far too long. And yet, I also believe that, like many a genre writer, King has gotten a bad rap for much of his career, written off because he appeals to a popular audience, when in fact his work exposes, with real acuity, a lot about who we are.
Think about it: Beyond the mechanics, of plot, of horror, what King offers are domestic interactions, slices of family and civic life. He uncovers our anxieties, our worries, our obsessions -- the inner darkness we all know. Thatâs why, for me, some of his most moving works are the most naturalistic: âThe Body,â âMiseryâ or the recent novella âA Good Marriage,â which anchors his 2010 collection âFull Dark, No Stars.â There, King traces a particularly human bleakness, the bleakness of an empty soul.
This is the key to his writing, that when heâs on, no one is better at prying open the ordinary reality of evil, the way our nightmares emerge from our daily experience, from our fears and our frustrations, our envy and our rage. Itâs true even when heâs writing about the supernatural; as he observed when I profiled him for The Times in 1998, âEvery monster, every horrific situation, every supernatural situation can be taken in a metaphoric way, if you have an interest in normal human life. Or even abnormal human life.â
Such a comment suggests both Kingâs empathy and his engagement, as well as his ambition to push beyond the conventions of form. His 1996 novel âDesperationâ (one of my favorites) is nothing less than a lament for the pitiless nature of God -- âDo you know how cruel your God can be? ... How fantastically cruel?â one character asks another in the closing pages. âSometimes he makes us liveâ -- while 1977âs âThe Shiningâ (his first great novel, I would argue) was initially imagined as âa Shakespearean tragedy, a kind of inside-out âKing Lear,â where Lear is this young guy who has a son instead of daughters,â with a first draft broken down into acts and scenes. Lazarus and I discussed the genesis of âThe Shining,â as evidence of Kingâs intentionality -- or, perhaps more accurately, his range. And in the days since, Iâve continued to think about this, even pulling my old paperback copy of the novel off the bookshelves, with the idea of re-reading it through that Shakespearean lens.
But I havenât, and Iâm not going to, because hereâs the other thing about âThe Shiningâ: Itâs just too scary for me to read again. And thatâs the thing about King too, right there in a nutshell, that tension between the brains and the blood. âWhat kind of story is it?â he has asked of his own work. âAnd what kind of writer are you?â These are some of the questions that come up in reading him, although, in the end, they just compel me all the more.
What makes writing literature, after all, but the extent to which it expresses our complicated humanity? And what is the essence of humanity if not conflict, the ongoing struggle between the sublime and the base? Thatâs what King keeps trying to examine, and itâs both why we read him and why we sometimes have to turn away.
In part, itâs the Grand Guignol aspect of âThe Shiningâ that I donât want to revisit, all that blood and terror. But even more, itâs the novelâs tale of dissolution, the notion of watching a soul get laid to waste. This is not a failure of the book, but a mark of its success, and the essence of how King, at his best, affects us: by revealing the deepest -- and yes, the darkest -- aspects of ourselves.
-- David L. Ulin
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