The Sunday New York Post did an article on the biggest stage flops through the years, and voted 1988's "Carrie" as the all-time biggest Broadway bust ever. Playing only five shows, it lost 7 million dollars. The Spider Man musical reportedly costs 65 million! We'd rather see a revised, improved version of the new show than to see it get squashed (bad spider pun).
Can Carrie hold her own against Spidey?
The Sunday New York Post did an article on the biggest stage flops through the years, and voted 1988's "Carrie" as the all-time biggest Broadway bust ever. Playing only five shows, it lost 7 million dollars. The Spider Man musical reportedly costs 65 million! We'd rather see a revised, improved version of the new show than to see it get squashed (bad spider pun).
EW: King 10 Best Books I Read In 2010
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Note the title is simply the 10 Best books I read in 2010. . . not 10 NEW books I read! Some of these are not brand sankin' new titles. I didn't know King liked John Irving.
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Included on King's list are:
10. City of Thieves, David Benioff
9. The Help, Kathryn Stocket
8. Swamplandia!, Karen Russell
7. Blood’s a Rover, James Ellroy
6. Matterhorn, Karl Marlantes
5. Last Night in Twisted River, John Irving
4. Savages, Don Winslow
3. I’d Know You Anywhere, Laura Lippman
2. Freedom, Jonathan Franzen
1. . . . about this title, King writes: "To my mind, there have been two great American novels in the past 50 years. Catch-22 is one; this is the other."
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http://www.ew.com/ew/gallery/0,,20326356_20449677,00.html
POLL RESULTS: FUll Dark No Stars
5 -- 1922
10 -- Big Driver
5 -- Fair Extension
7 -- A Good Marriage (my vote goes with this one!)
Total voted: 27
Cemetery Dance Offers A Dark Christmas
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This is a great book! I don't know if CD has anymore available, but it is well worth the cover price, and will probably actually increase in value. (I actually have no idea if it will increase in value, okay! So if you're just looking to make a buck, I guess you should invest in gold.)
- The book is large, but not cumbersome.
- It is tightly bound. I know that sounds small, but it is irritating to buy books that can't be read. This has very sturdy binding.
- The cover is different, and much better I think, than the Scribner edition. The front shows a man looking in a shop window, the back shows the same image but from a darker point of view. I'm actually still trying to figure the cover out!
- The book comes with a equally nice and sturdy slipcase. Something that is very appreciated, since these are often "extras."
- The book is illustrated in both pencil and color throughout. The drawings are directly connected to the text, and truly capture the heart of each story. I particularly like the rats. Very nice!
- Newspaper clips in the text are double columned, making it feel more "newspaperish."
- Sub-chapters and breaks are printed in red, which looks very nice. The color red is used throughout, with black text. In fact, there is a red line at the bottom of each page, below which is the page number -- meaning every single page has color of some kind.
Well done, Cemetery Dance! I wish CD had been given the project of producing the complete version of The Stand. I know, there's a leather bound one out there... but who has two grand in loose change? CD gives us really nice collectors books at a price taht doesn't rob our children's college fund.
The Problem With Writing
Who Will Play Roland Deschain
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http://www.newkerala.com/news/world/fullnews-107896.html
LA Times: Tower Obsession Infects Ron Howard
Check out this LA times story by Geoff Boucher about Ron Howard and the Dark Tower. Here's a couple of quotes, but the full story is worth the read.
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“I really can’t stop thinking about it,” Howard said while shaking his head. “We’ve been meeting and talking and I’ve been reading and researching and just kind of living with it. I’ve been constantly going through stuff and I’ve just been re-listening to it [on audio books] on my iPod and we’ve been sending e-mails back and forth, ‘What about this approach? What do you think of this idea?’ We’re finding the shape of it. We’re moving quickly now, as quickly as we can, and I feel challenged in the most exciting ways.”
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Boucher quotes Howard: “Filmically, there are tones in this that I have never used before, tones of fantasy menace and elements of horror and real fear. And there’s the burden, on the characters, of this journey that is really palpable. That’s what we need to get on the screen. I think there’s something about [the Frank Darabont films] ‘Green Mile’ or a ‘Shawshank Redemption,’ the complexity and the ballast of them, those are two [of the Stephen King adaptations] where you do get the horror and suspense that’s there on the page. We’re charging ourselves with the responsibility of getting a real understanding of the material and utilizing many of the best aspects of the books and graphic novels.”
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The article is pretty long, and absolutely fantastic. Check it out here:
http://herocomplex.latimes.com/2010/12/17/the-dark-tower-ron-howards-plans-and-passion-for-stephen-king-epic/
image credit: http://trinity-typhoon.deviantart.com/art/The-Dark-Tower-114957103
Full Dark Journal 5: A Good Marriage
Link: Video of King Chat
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http://shelf-life.ew.com/2010/12/17/stephen-king-full-dark-no-stars-exclusive/
A Different Take On Maximum Overdrive
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His assessment of Max. Overdrive: "Maximum Overdrive” drew some initial attention because Stephen King was directing the flick, poor acting and some comically horrific kill scenes put a quick taint on the film’s success."
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And now for the part I really like. . . Tellock says: "My DVD recommendation for today is “Maximum Overdrive” (1986). A story of a group of people who try to survive when machines start to come alive and become homicidal as told by one of the masters of horror himself, Mr. Stephen King. It’s kind of like “Transformers” without having to put up with Megan Fox. Enjoy."
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transformers without Megan Fox. NICE!
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http://www.examiner.com/horror-movies-in-milwaukee/king-remakes-include-firestarter-and-maximum-overdrive
Full Dark Journal 4: Big Driver
There are probably spoilers ahead. If you don't like that, give the Library Police a call.
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I just finished Big Driver. It was hard going for a short little while there. Wow, I'm glad I hung in there. I like this novella a lot!
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Listening to the Stephen King chat helped relate to this story better. A woman asked King how he was able to connect so well with women. His answer was simply that it's part of the art of writing (my words). The difficulties for me had been with his female character.
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Tess' reasoning at several points still troubles me. Sorry to mention this. But I was not really convinced on her reason for not calling the police. And, her note to herself, "Don't get caught" . . . but she didn't really carry out much of a plan. She followed an emotion, but didn't execute a flawless play. Instead, she plans backward. that is, she carries out an idea, then figures out how to cover her tracks.
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While the story is dark, the ending is fantastic. King masterfully pulled the strands together. It is dark, but perhaps not as dark as some of the other novella's contained in FDNS.
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Cultural References:
It is also worth mentioning that the novella is chalk full of cultural references. Books, movies and even Diet Coke. The Jodie Foster film The Brave One really takes center stage. But those passing references always bring a King film home. The Sound of Music is also mentioned, as is Walmart, Lay-Z-Boy, Pabst Blue Ribbon, Doritos, (I know, this is really deep stuff here).
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Mirrors:
Both Big Driver and A Good Marriage make use of mirrors in a minor way. In Big Driver, Tess looks herself in the mirror after a shower and gets a glimpse of her own rage. In A Good Marriage, the bathroom mirror is again discussed. This time, from a woman's point of view, wondering why the mirror is aimed at the toilet. Who wants to see themselves, no matter how pretty they are, sitting on the potty? The mention of mirrors is interesting because both stories feature women.
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I don't know exactly who Tess is modeled after; but I keep picturing her as a Patricia Cornwell. She is a writer, who has written a series of mystery novels featuring a female protagonist. Okay, probably not. Old women like to read Tess' work, so I suspect she's more likely a type of Mary Higgins Clark.
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Chatting:
Everything talks in this book. It rattled me for a while. However, someone pointed out that this is better executed in print than audio. I have to agree. First, the novella is very focused. When going for a tight frame, dialogue of some kind is needed to break up the story and expand the characters thoughts. Things need to be worked out, and the objects and corpses give Tess something to work them out with. Actually, it's what the dead people started talking that I felt much better about this whole world of chatty objects.
2003 NPR Interview With King
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DEADLINE: Ron Howard On 'The Dark Tower'
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http://www.deadline.com/2010/12/ron-howard-on-the-dark-tower/
Firestarter Remake and more
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De Laurentiis Co. has a slew of projects in various stages of development, including a reboot of the cult classic "Barbarella," a remake of another King adaptation, "Maximum Overdrive" and a new spin on 1980s TV actioner "MacGyver."
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Besides the 1984 pic, cabler Syfy fielded a telepic in 2002 dubbed "Firestarter 2: Rekindled."
Full Dark Reader Appalled!
Talent Can be Hard Work
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Stephen King is best known for scaring the living daylights out of the reading public with his tales of horror and suspense, and with novels like "The Shining" and "Pet Sematary" to his credit, it's a well-deserved reputation.
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But the world-famous Maine resident has a lesser-know knack for letting nuggets of wisdom slip through in the nearly 40 years since his first novel "Carrie" was released back in 1973.
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My favorite piece of sage King advice goes like this, "Talent is cheaper than table salt. What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work."
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I'm not sure if Sidney Crosby has ever actually read those words, but the sentiment is obviously something the Pittsburgh Penguins superstar could get behind.
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Read more: http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/12/09/2692535/the-never-ending-ascent-of-sidney.html#ixzz17gUjoJ7u
Notes and Quotes From Live Chat
Translating King into Italian
Lawsuit: "You Stole My Story"
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Here's the heart of the legal complaint:
“Duma Key” contains original creative copyrightable elements, derived from Plaintiff’s copyrighted original literary work “Keller’s Den”, throughout the course of the literary work created by Defendant Stephen King." And, "Defendant Steven King’s 2008 novel entitled “Duma Key” is substantially similar to Plaintiff Rod Marquardt’s original literary work “Keller’s Den in the following ways, but not limited to, plot, plot devices, structure, sequence of events, setting, characters, characterizations, character function and relationships."
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The List:
After this explanation of the complaint in legalese, a chart cuts to the heart of the complaint. This is where you're left thinking, "That's it? Really?" The list is pretty long, but I'll post some of my favorites:
- "Both main characters use a psychiatrist to help them cope with tragedies." Wow.
- "Both novels cite “earthbound”
- "The first mention of a specific color while painting or drawing is yellow (Keller’s Den used Indian Yellow, page 213 – Duma Key used Venus Yellow, pages 43, 57, 58)."
- "Both novels use the word “cavalry” as being rescued from the intruder when someone else shows up."
- Get this. . . "Both novels reference an evening breeze through a back door just before someone is killed" The complaint then states, "an amazing sequence of chance."
- "An asylum is references in both novels."
- "In both novels rain cascades, pelts or beats against windows and lightening illuminates both houses during a storm and during the storm, a painting was significant."
- You'll like this, "Both main characters had liquor cabinets but seldom drank hard."
- Wait, we're not done. Get this, "Both novels reference ancient weaponry."
- "An old black and white photo of ancestors is referenced..." I guess King should have referenced an old color photo.
What's funny is when the complaint announces that passages read exactly the same. Then the passages are lined up one after the other (Kellers Den and Duma Key.) Result... they're completely different!
The complaint goes on and on and on. To believe it, you would have to beleive King read Kellers Den, then decided to rewrite the whole thing. a feat possibly more difficult than just writing your own novel!
Hey, did I ever mention that I wrote a novel in High School called "Silent Parameter." It was about a city that is cut off from the rest of the world by a strange mist? Kind of a mix between Under The Dome and The Mist, right? Only, I wrote my 400 pages in 1991. It wasn't very good (come on, I was in High School). But my point is that there will be lots of similarities in any persons work with other peoples writing. Why? Because there's so many of us!
By the way, the complaint misspells Stephen Kings name multiple times, identifying him in the text as "Steven King.".
Names:
It gets better yet! Note this, "Both novels use the following similar or identically named characters..." Now, if both novels have people named Monica Hinkson, there might be some raised eyebrows.
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Here are the names King is accused to have copied: "Jones" "Jack" "John" "Tina" "Richard" "Jimmy" "Smith" The complaint explainst hat Keller’s Den has Steve Smith while Duma Key has Sandy Smith. So King stole the name Smith. Smooth!
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Also the name: "Frank" and get this from the complaint, "Keller’s Den has Keller (throughout). Duma Key has Garrison Keilor, the poet." But Garrison Keilor is a real person! If Keilor is too close to Keller, shouldn't they be suing him and not King?
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Here's another great line, "Keller’s Den has Billy (pages 129, 130, 131, 132, 144). Duma Key has Bill (page 395)." Get it! Billy and Bill.
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So what's wanted? The complaint says, "Rod Marquardt is entitled to actual damages including all profits reaped by the Defendants as a result of their infringement pursuant to the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. §504."
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You can read the complaint yourself here: http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/12/07/StephenKing.pdf
And the Hollywood reporter article here: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/blogs/thr-esq/hollywood-docket-stephen-king-accused-57100?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thr%2Fbusiness+%28The+Hollywood+Reporter+-+Business%29
Mark Twain's New Bestseller
What's On King's Boob-Tube
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LINK: Photo's Of King Signing Full Dark No Stars
Full Dark Journal 3: Big Driver Mid-Read Confusion
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If you haven't read Big Driver, don't read this. This is not a synopsis, but I will discuss things in the book that will spoil it for you if you haven't read. If you have read the story, press on!
.You know, don't you. . . the stand was the greatest novel ever written.
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I've been listening to Big Driver. It's an interesting listen, because the reader is very naturally charming. But the story is very dark.
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I am finding this to be a difficult read. Namely because Tess constantly makes decisions that seem unreasonable. They're not what... anyone... would do in that situation. But more than that, she makes conclusions that don't make sense. and then, her irrational hunches turn out to be spot on. It's like that Mel Gibson movie -- what if sometimes the crazy peopl are right?
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Tess is a difficult character to identify with. Mainly because of her very strange decision making process. But she is also difficult because she talks to things, and hears them answer. I have not read the ending yet, but I'm starting to wonder if all this is taking place in her head. She talks to Tom (a GPS) and her cat. And both talk back!
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Another difficult thing for this story is the believability of the "bad guys." Why would a Liberian feed her rapist / serial killer son fresh victims? And why would she choose a popular author? Don't serial killers usually choose people who are easily overlooked? Prostitutes, homeless people and so on.
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I didn't understand the process by which Tess came to the conclusion that the Librarian was feeding her son victims (other than her giving Tess directions).
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Every story has to deal with the: "Why not just go to the police?" I just saw that on a TCM documentary. The idea here is that Tess will not go to the police because she doesn't want her reputation to be tarnished. So instead... she opts for a very nasty revenge.
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Am I the only one scratching my head here? I love King's writing, and plotting. . . but sometimes I'm left a little confused. How did we get here? How was that conclusion drawn?
Maine Writers Database
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reads in full as follows:
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December 3, 2010
Maine State Library
Dean Corner
Director, Reader and Information Services207-287-5604
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The Maine State Library is pleased to introduce a searchable database of over 500 Main writers who lived from the 18th century to the present. Most people know that Stephen King and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are Maine writers. Both were born in Maine and both were educated in Maine. Their works, from Under the Dome to Evangeline take place in Maine.
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What else defines a Maine writer? Who should be counted? “We spread our net as widely as possible” reports Peggy O’Kane, Coordinator of Reference and Research. “The State Library has always collected the books of authors who live in Maine or who have strong connections to the state.”
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Information on writers can be searched by browsing an A to Z list, by keyword, genre, or time period or a combination. “This is still a work in progress and people are invited to submit names of writers we’ve missed or to provide corrections to the information we’ve listed.”
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http://www.maine.gov/tools/whatsnew/index.php?topic=Portal+News&id=159900&v=article-2008
Under The Dome nominated Black Quill Award
(Novel-length work of horror, suspense, or thriller from a mainstream publisher; awarded to the author)
A Dark Matter by Peter Straub (Doubleday)
Kraken by China Miéville (Del Rey)
Sparrow Rock by Nate Kenyon (Leisure / Bad Moon Books)
The Caretaker of Lorne Field by David Zeltserman (Overlook Hardcover)
The Passage by Justin Cronin (Ballantine)
Portsmouth Book signing
King Gives American Vampire BITE
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Moore writes, "unlike the wave of pop culture vampires in recent years - grounded, lovelorn, conflicted - Sweet is shiftless, selfish, utterly without redemption and pure evil.
King wouldn't have it any other way. Sweet, he said in an interview, is the "anti-'Twilight' vampire, the anti-Edward," a "dissolute Kurt Cobain" with a mean streak a mile wide and a sweet tooth for hard candy to match."
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Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/12/02/DDBL1GFRTJ.DTL#ixzz172dNEMWF