This was my second time through Different Seasons, although I had a few vague recollections from my
prior reading of it. I remembered that I
liked ‘Shawshank,’ I disliked ‘Apt Pupil,’ and I thought ‘The Body’ was okay
(now the movie version, that was some good stuff. Wil Wheaton FTW). Also I remembered that I thought ‘The
Breathing Method’ was kind of over-extended and silly. And I will be damned if this doesn’t sum up
almost exactly how I felt when I reread the stories.
‘Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption’
Let me start by saying that I think this story ranks in the
top 5 all time by King. Of
everything. It is fast, it has
character, it has a good twist, and it wraps up nicely. Now probably I have been biased because the
movie is also pretty good, but I recall from my first read through that I liked
this story as well. I want to quote
Roger Ebert in his review of the film: ‘The horror here is not of the
supernatural kind, but of the sort that flows from the realization than 10, 20,
30 years of a man's life have unreeled in the same unchanging daily prison
routine.’ Isn’t that great?
And it is an apt summary. There
is really no horror per se in this story, simply an intriguing tale of events
at a Maine prison. Plus I liked that SK
didn’t drop too many hints about the ending (I mean, you can piece it together
as you go, but it isn’t nearly as bad as some of his foreshadowing. See Christine).
What I didn’t know about these novellas is that they were
all written far earlier in King’s life. From
the afterword, he describes that he writes a major novel, then writes a novella
for the heck of it. That writing
compulsion is nutty. This novella was
written following The Dead Zone, which
makes all of the sense in the world to me.
The Dead Zone is also about
the passage of time and what happens in the interim. In that book, Johnny lost five years of his
life when he was in a coma, and SK did a great job of detailing how his life
changed irrevocably during this time. In
‘Shawshank,’ it is a much longer period of time, but Andy experiences a similar
loss of time while he is jailed. Really
great. The whole novella makes me happy.
‘Apt Pupil’
This one, I don’t like.
SK wrote it after The Shining,
which I imagine had to be a tough book for him, what with the drinking and the potentially
abusing your own son and how the book is about a writer and all. But I still don’t like this book. It is about a young psychopath (and yes, from
the very beginning he is identified as such, go read chapter 1 and notice his
lack of empathy and his need to put on the ‘right emotions’ for others) who
meets an old Nazi. Horrible events
ensue. I think that the only part I
liked in this one was the part when Dussander overdosed on Seconal, which
seemed like a really Valley of the Dolls
way of dying to me.
I don’t really get the point of this novel. It doesn’t offer enlightenment about the
condition of either of them. The murders
that take place are very graphic, perhaps unnecessarily so. I guess it could be understood as a character
sketch between two psychopaths, but I’m not sure that SK is really exploring
them. Certainly there are ties between
this and other novels, most notably Christine,
but I remain uneasy about this content—perhaps more uneasy than I have with any
of the books that I have read by him to date.
‘The Body’
As someone who has never been a 12-year old male, I think
that parts of this story will simply never make sense to me. It is a very boy-centric story. However, I liked it. I liked the storyteller angle and the coming
of age part. It’s hard not to read a lot
of King’s biography in this book, particularly since he purportedly saw one of
his friends get hit by a train when he was young (as recounted in Danse Macabre). The highly graphic description of the dead
boy seems to come from a very specific experience for SK—mind you, he is also a
good writer, so maybe this is just me projecting.
What I did not notice the last time I read this book is how
closely aspects of it resemble It (if
you’re curious, he wrote this one after ‘Salem’s
Lot). There is the gang of ‘losers,’
for instance. And there are mean boys
who want to beat them up. At one point,
SK mentions cannibals with their teeth sharpened, which conjured up It in my mind instantaneously, so I am
assuming that there are similarities between the two. But the most jarring moment was the following
near the end, when Chris and Gordie were talking about whether the others would
tell about their experience.
Gordie: They’re scared, Chris. Teddy especially, that they won’t take him in the Army. But Vern’s scared, too. They’ll lose some sleep over it, and there’s gonna be times this fall when it’s right on the tips of their tongues to tell somebody, but I don’t think they will. And then…you know what? It sounds fucking crazy but…I think they’ll almost forget it every happened. (424 in the 2004 Signet edition)
BOOM. That is totally
what happens in It. Between attacks, everyone gradually forgets
what happened, even the Losers, despite their intense experience the first time
around.
‘The Breathing Method’
Yeah, this one is kind of silly. SK weaves an elaborate tale of not-muchness around
a story of supernatural weirdness. This
one was after Firestarter, which also
felt kind of derivative. Would have
worked better as a short story, I feel.
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