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Duma Key by Stephen King
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Duma Key (edition 2008)

by Stephen King

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
4,673172919 (3.9)1 / 329
Member:PhileasHannay
Title:Duma Key
Authors:Stephen King
Info:London: Hodder & Stroughton, 2008.
Collections:Your library, Acquired in 2012
Rating:
Tags:2008, 21st century, fantasy, unread

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Duma Key by Stephen King

2008 (57) 2009 (17) animals (20) art (59) artists (17) audiobook (33) ebook (20) fantasy (52) fiction (386) first edition (18) Florida (122) Florida Keys (23) ghosts (46) hardcover (32) horror (510) imaginative fiction (20) juvenile (20) King (42) mystery (34) novel (41) painting (34) paranormal (19) read (60) read in 2008 (37) Stephen King (104) supernatural (99) suspense (68) thriller (68) to-read (39) unread (27)
  1. 30
    The Passage by Justin Cronin (suppenkasperli)
    suppenkasperli: if you love this book, you WILL love the passage
  2. 30
    Bag of Bones by Stephen King (sturlington)
    sturlington: Similar stories, but I liked Bag of Bones better.
  3. 11
    The Pariah by Graham Masterton (Engrossed)
    Engrossed: Granitehead, Massachusetts is the setting for this occult chiller. In the bay, just a little off-shore lies the wreck of the David Dark. Three hundred years of ice-cold currents have preserved its timbers and pacified the demon sealed within its hold. But the people of Granitehead are about to receive a culture shock because the power of the demon enables the dead to walk the earth, in search of the Pariah... An Aztec demon lord of the dead, buried aboard a ship off the coast etc, etc, ect. Masterton was writing above his weight with this one. It is a great Horror Novel and bears more than a striking resemblance to duma key. I have to say though, both books are great reads so you can't loose.… (more)
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English (163)  Finnish (2)  French (2)  Italian (1)  Dutch (1)  Spanish (1)  German (1)  All languages (171)
Showing 1-5 of 163 (next | show all)
Edgar Freemantle is a building contractor in the Twin Cities in Minnesota. Then he is involved in a terrible workplace accident that leaves him with a brain injury and an amputated right arm. His therapist suggests that Edgar should get away from everything and get a fresh start. He tells Edgar to do something that makes him happy because he "[needs] hedges against the night." Edgar moves to Duma Key on the Gulf coast of Florida and takes up sketching. His only neighbors are an old lady and an eccentric ex-lawyer. Edgar takes up sketching and with amazing rapidity becomes a painter. The therapy is good for him, but strange things are happening on Duma Key. Do Edgar's paintings hold a clue to Duma Key's past and present?

Really, this was 3 and a half stars. I tore through it, just like I tear through every Stephen King book I read. I liked the characters, especially Wireman, but it felt weird to read a Stephen King novel set in Florida. I'm no expert, but it seems like--if they're set in this world at all--his novels are always in Maine, or at least New England. Also, I sort of felt like this had been done before. The plot wasn't the same, but the same sorts of ideas show up in Charles de Lint's Memory and Dream (which I prefer to this one, by the way).

I really hate to write this, but I'll be glad when Stephen King gets his accident written out of his system. I know, I know! That's easy for me to say. That's a life-changing, maybe even a life-shattering, event and I'm pretty much wishing that the guy would just "Get over it, already!" I feel heartless. But there it is. I do wish it would stop showing up in his books.

As for the scare factor--eh. I spooked myself pretty good a few times, but that was more because I stopped reading at a bad place than because it was truly scary. Stephen King's short stories scare me half to death, I think because he doesn't allow himself the luxury of explaining things. My imagination takes hold and I scare myself. In this novel, he explained everything and I never worked up a good scare. ( )
  JG_IntrovertedReader | Apr 3, 2013 |
After a slow start, this book picks up tremendously. A harrowing mystery and (as always) great characters. ( )
  srboone | Apr 3, 2013 |
I've read a lot of King. I read a lot of King, and this is among his best. I know some people feel that after his accident he lost his touch for the creeping horror that made him famous, but I assure you that is not the case. This book proves that King not only still has it, he's still improving.

I listened to this on audio, and I'm sure that lent something to the suspense, but I'm very glad that I did. (I downloaded from Audible, and each part was preceded by music that is creepy on its own. I'm not sure if the audio CD's are the same way.) Listening to this made me pace myself, and made sure that the build-up was properly built up. I have a tendency to speed-read when I get excited, when I know I hold something great in my hands and want to experience it as quickly as possible. I couldn't do this with the audio, and so the anticipation piled up until I had to finish, regardless of the fact that it's now 4:19a and I have to work tomorrow.

John Slattery's reading was just about perfect. He had this great tone, a feeling for the story, and a subtle way of lending personality to the characters that makes them come alive. King obviously gives him a lot to work with and build on, but I don't know if another reader would have done the book justice the way Slattery did. I could tell exactly who was speaking at all times, even before he got around to telling me who it was, yet he didn't make the characters HIS characters, if that makes sense. He just gave them life. His reading of Perse (this is how I'm assuming it's spelled, as I haven't seen it in print) gave me goosebumps, and I think will haunt me for a long time.

This book contained more than a few of the things that creep me out the most. But I couldn't stop listening. I loved the aspects of Elizabeth's childhood history. That part of the story fascinated me. I also felt that the book brought back pieces of other books that King has written, making it a part of the larger universe that links his stories together.

-Perse's red robe, and the mentions of red throughout the story brought the Crimson King to mind. Could she be the Crimson King's consort, maybe?

-Perse speaking to Ilsa from the drains and toilet obviously brings IT to mind.

-Edgar's ability to create (and uncreate) through his art. King does this with every story he writes, but I kept thinking specifically of Peter Rickman from Kingdom Hospital and Patrick Danville from The Dark Tower series and Insomnia.

-Edgar's accident and injuries acting almost as a muse/catalyst for his artistic ability, as Peter Rickman's did, as King's own did, if you consider the shift his stories took after his accident. How the ability seemed to flow through him, but was not invented BY him. (Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but these are the things I was thinking of...)

-Wireman not only mentioning that he's a gunslinger, but actually being a gunslinger, if only temporarily. I have no doubt that had he made his way into that section of the SK Universe, he'd have found 5 missing members of his Ka-tet.

Anyway, I found much to love in this book, and I have a feeling it will become a favorite. I would highly recommend it. ( )
  TheBecks | Apr 1, 2013 |
I have had a week of non-stop packing and moving from one house to another. Not only does this make me feel like I have the lower back of an 80 year old woman, but it also leaves me absolutely zero time to read. No reading = grumpy me. Thankfully, Stephen King came to my rescue. I have a print copy Duma Key but had really wanted to try it on audio, since narrator John Slattery won an Audie Award for his performance. It was well deserved. And what can I say about King? I'll always have a soft spot for him. I've heard less than stellar things about his post accident career, but maybe I've just managed to avoid the bad ones? I read Under the Dome when if first came out, and loved it too. Regardless, I was sucked into the story from the get-go and was sad to see hear it end. ( )
  cait815 | Apr 1, 2013 |
I’ve always been a coward when it comes to reading Stephen King. Seeing his name on a book cover automatically makes me turn around and run away. It’s nothing personal against King. It’s just that I tend to shun anything with horror…from movies to haunted houses to books. King being “The King of Horror” automatically puts him on that list. The thing is I have a few GR friends that are King aficionados who kept insisting that King wasn’t scary at all and that he’s great and blah, blah, blah. So finally when a group of them decided to read the Dark Towers series I decided to put my Big Girl Panties on and try it out. Turns out King wasn’t so bad and I liked his writing. I made it part way into The Waste Lands before putting it to the side though. Unfortunately, life got in the way and I wasn’t in the right mind set to continue.

Anyway, a year or so later I started getting better about the whole horror thing and decided to branch out a bit. That’s when I came across this book waiting for me at a library sale. I shelved it in my bookcase till I had the time and fortitude to tackle the behemoth. That time finally came and although I was excited I was a bit apprehensive. What if it was too scary? What if I started getting nightmares? Who was going to protect me? *gnaws fingernails* My GR friends assured me that it was all psychological; King is not scary, yada, yada. Putting my Big Girl Panties once again I ended up plowing through this sucker. I loved absolutely every minute of it! I even listened to the audio, which I highly recommend. It’s rare for me to listen to an audio and then go back and read what I just listened too, but that is exactly what I did. I didn’t want to miss a single word King wrote. I wanted to live in the experience again and again. I felt like I was in an Herbal Essence commercial every time I opened this book “Yes! Yes! YEEEEESSSSSSS!” *smokes cigarette*

So yeah, I highly recommend either reading this one or listening to the audio or better yet doing both. While there were some moments that stopped my heart for a second it was not scary. Parts of it were creepy. I knew I was being lured in by King, but I totally didn’t mind because the journey there was so damn good.

I’ll leave you with a quote that touched me to the very core because I swear I had a moment in my life where I felt this way, but didn’t have the words for it:
"I told myself there was time. Of course, that's what we always tell ourselves, isn't it? We can't imagine time running out, and God punishes us for what we can't imagine." ( )
  Jaguar897 | Mar 31, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 163 (next | show all)
Sometimes, you hardly know where to begin. And so it is with "Duma Key," latest in a gloriously long line of tales from the uber-popular Stephen King.
 
There are bad accidents, and there are horrible accidents, and horror novelist Stephen King knows about the worst kind.
added by stephmo | editUSA Today, Carol Memmott (Jan 22, 2008)
 
Stephen King’s “Duma Key” ventures to an all-but-uninhabited Florida island where the shells groan at high tide, tennis balls appear unexpectedly, foliage grows ominously quickly, and at least one heron flies upside-down. Given this combination of author and setting, it’s inevitable that something terribly undead will show up before the book is over.
added by stephmo | editNew York Times, Janet Maslin (Jan 21, 2008)
 
When Stephen King wrote Misery in 1987, making the hero a writer was an unusual departure for him. Recently, however, centring his novels on creative types has become a habit. In Cell, the protagonist is a comic-book artist. Lisey’s Story involves a dead author whose widow struggles to protect his legacy. And Duma Key’s narrator, Edgar Freemantle, is a painter whose work gives him paranormal powers – to know everything about people hundreds of miles away, to predict events, even to heal or kill someone.
added by stephmo | editLondon Times, John Dugdale (Jan 20, 2008)
 
If you've read most of Stephen King's past works, you'll get a kick out of the opening line of "Duma Key," his new effort hitting bookstores this week.

King signals to his Constant Readers, as he calls us, that whatever flaws his protagonist might have — and they are plentiful in this tale — he would wind up trying to do the right thing. Our hero's name is Edgar Freemantle, and it's no small accident he shares his surname with the savior-like figure in King's epic novel, "The Stand."
 

» Add other authors (32 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Stephen Kingprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Rekiaro, IlkkaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
Memory...is an international rumor.
--George Santayana
Life is more than love and pleasure,
I came here to dig for treasure.
If you want to play you gotta pay
You know it's always been that way,
We all came to dig for treasure.
--Shark Puppy
Dedication
For Barbara Ann and Jimmy
First words
How to Draw a Picture (I)
Start with a blank surface.
Quotations
Love conveys its own psychic powers, doesn't it? (Edgar Freemantle)
Parenthood is the greatest of the Hum a few bars and I’ll fake it skills. (Edgar Freemantle)
I can do this. (Edgar Freemantle)
Oouuu, you nasty man!
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
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Wikipedia in English (1)

Book description
Haiku summary
Haunted memories

channeled through oil pastels

kept on the Gulf.

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0743569741, Audio CD)

Amazon Significant Seven, January 2008: It would be impossible to convey the wonder and the horror of Stephen King's latest novel in just a few words. Suffice it to say that Duma Key, the story of Edgar Freemantle and his recovery from the terrible nightmare-inducing accident that stole his arm and ended his marriage, is Stephen King's most brilliant novel to date (outside of the Dark Tower novels, in which case each is arguably his best work). Duma Key is as rich and rewarding as Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption (yes, that Shawshank Redemption), and as truly scary as anything King has written (and that's saying a lot). Readers who have "always wanted to try Stephen King" but never known where to start should try a few pages of Duma Key--the frankness with which Edgar reveals his desperate, sputtering rages and thoughts of suicide is King at the top of his game. And that's just the first thirty pages... --Daphne Durham

Duma Key: Where It All Began
A Note from Chuck Verrill, the Longtime Editor of Stephen King
In the spring of 2006 Stephen King told me he was working on a Florida story that was beginning to grow on him. "I'm thinking of calling it Duma Key," he offered. I liked the sound of that--the title was like a drumbeat of dread. "You know how Lisey's Story is a story about marriage?" he said. "Sure," I answered. The novel hadn't yet been published, but I knew its story well: Lisey and Scott Landon--what a marriage that was. Then he dropped the other shoe: "I think Duma Key might be my story of divorce."

Pretty soon I received a slim package from a familiar address in Maine. Inside was a short story titled "Memory"--a story of divorce, all right, but set in Minnesota. By the end of the summer, when Tin House published "Memory," Stephen had completed a draft of Duma Key, and it became clear to me how "Memory" and its narrator, Edgar Freemantle, had moved from Minnesota to Florida, and how a story of divorce had turned into something more complex, more strange, and much more terrifying.

If you read the following two texts side by side--"Memory" as it was published by Tin House and the opening chapter of Duma Key in final form--you'll see a writer at work, and how stories can both contract and expand. Whether Duma Key is an expansion of "Memory" or "Memory" a contraction of Duma Key, I can't really say. Can you?

--Chuck Verrill

"Memory"
Memories are contrary things; if you quit chasing them and turn your back, they often return on their own. That's what Kamen says. I tell him I never chased the memory of my accident. Some things, I say, are better forgotten.

Maybe, but that doesn’t matter, either. That's what Kamen says.

My name is Edgar Freemantle. I used to be a big deal in building and construction. This was in Minnesota, in my other life. I was a genuine American-boy success in that life, worked my way up like a motherf---er, and for me, everything worked out. When Minneapolis–St. Paul boomed, The Freemantle Company boomed. When things tightened up, I never tried to force things. But I played my hunches, and most of them played out well. By the time I was fifty, Pam and I were worth about forty million dollars. And what we had together still worked. I looked at other women from time to time but never strayed. At the end of our particular Golden Age, one of our girls was at Brown and the other was teaching in a foreign exchange program. Just before things went wrong, my wife and I were planning to go and visit her.

I had an accident at a job site. That's what happened. I was in my pickup truck. The right side of my skull was crushed. My ribs were broken. My right hip was shattered. And although I retained sixty percent of the sight in my right eye (more, on a good day), I lost almost all of my right arm.

I was supposed to lose my life, but I didn’t. Then I was supposed to become one of the Vegetable Simpsons, a Coma Homer, but that didn't happen, either. I was one confused American when I came around, but the worst of that passed. By the time it did, my wife had passed, too. She's remarried to a fellow who owns bowling alleys. My older daughter likes him. My younger daughter thinks he’s a yank-off. My wife says she’ll come around.

Maybe , maybe no. That's what Kamen says.

When I say I was confused, I mean that at first I didn’t know who people were, or what had happened, or why I was in such awful pain. I can't remember the quality and pitch of that pain now. I know it was excruciating, but it's all pretty academic. Like a picture of a mountain in National Geographic magazine. It wasn’t academic at the time. At the time it was more like climbing a mountain.

Continue Reading "Memory"

Duma Key
How to Draw a Picture
Start with a blank surface. It doesn't have to be paper or canvas, but I feel it should be white. We call it white because we need a word, but its true name is nothing. Black is the absence of light, but white is the absence of memory, the color of can't remember.

How do we remember to remember? That's a question I've asked myself often since my time on Duma Key, often in the small hours of the morning, looking up into the absence of light, remembering absent friends. Sometimes in those little hours I think about the horizon. You have to establish the horizon. You have to mark the white. A simple enough act, you might say, but any act that re-makes the world is heroic. Or so I’ve come to believe.

Imagine a little girl, hardly more than a baby. She fell from a carriage almost ninety years ago, struck her head on a stone, and forgot everything. Not just her name; everything! And then one day she recalled just enough to pick up a pencil and make that first hesitant mark across the white. A horizon-line, sure. But also a slot for blackness to pour through.

Still, imagine that small hand lifting the pencil... hesitating... and then marking the white. Imagine the courage of that first effort to re-establish the world by picturing it. I will always love that little girl, in spite of all she has cost me. I must. I have no choice. Pictures are magic, as you know.

My Other Life
My name is Edgar Freemantle. I used to be a big deal in the building and contracting business. This was in Minnesota, in my other life. I learned that my-other-life thing from Wireman. I want to tell you about Wireman, but first let's get through the Minnesota part.

Gotta say it: I was a genuine American-boy success there. Worked my way up in the company where I started, and when I couldn’t work my way any higher there, I went out and started my own. The boss of the company I left laughed at me, said I'd be broke in a year. I think that's what most bosses say when some hot young pocket-rocket goes off on his own.

For me, everything worked out. When Minneapolis–St. Paul boomed, The Freemantle Company boomed. When things tightened up, I never tried to play big. But I did play my hunches, and most played out well. By the time I was fifty, Pam and I were worth forty million dollars. And we were still tight. We had two girls, and at the end of our particular Golden Age, Ilse was at Brown and Melinda was teaching in France, as part of a foreign exchange program. At the time things went wrong, my wife and I were planning to go and visit her.

Continue Reading Duma Key



(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:30:03 -0500)

(see all 2 descriptions)

Six months after a plane crushes his pickup truck and his body, self-made millionaire Edgar Freemantle launches a new life. His wife asked for a divorce after he stabbed her with a plastic knife, and he divides his wealth equally among himself, his wife and two children, and leaves Minnesota for Duma Key. There on a stunningly beautiful, eerily remote stretch of the Florida coast, Edgar begins to paint with a talent that seems to come from someplace outside of him.… (more)

(summary from another edition)

» see all 8 descriptions

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