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Loading... Salem's Lot (original 1975; edition 1976)by Stephen King
Work Information‘Salem's Lot by Stephen King (1975)
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My #stephenking #readathon with @ame9022 and @wendysallison continues with ‘SALEM’S LOT. Here, SK tackles what would happen if a vampire lord took up residence in a small New England town. While I would call this a more typical SK book as opposed to CARRIE, this is still clearly early on in King’s writing career. His attempt to juggle multiple characters and narrative threads through the last third of the book is a little clumsy and confusing. Knowing what his writing is like now, it’s easy to see where he was trying to go with the plot, but he wasn’t the polished writer he is today. There are plenty of creeptastic scenes in the book, and the main characters are all fleshed out for the most part. It was definitely an ambitious book for such a young writer, and part of me wonders what it would be like for him to revisit the book now and polish it up a little, knowing what he knows now as a writer. #stephenking #horror #salemslot #vampire #vampires #horrorbooks #horrorbookstagram #bookstagram #book #bookworm #booksbooksbooks #bookreview #frommybookshelf #frommybookshelfblog Somehow, one of my all-time favorite classic horror stories just didn’t stand up to time and my adult reading habits on this re-read. The scenes I most enjoyed as a teen were as creepily nightmarish as I remembered – Overall, though, the time spent on the re-read was well worth it, even if only just for those individual scenes. Audiobook, via Audible. I don’t know why, but Ron McLarty’s voice just grates on me. I seriously can’t explain why. I read this for the 2018 Halloween Bingo. I’ve decided to use Stephen King for my Wild Card author, but I’m holding onto it for now until I decide where best to play it. Inspired in part by a high school classroom syllabus that had him simultaneously teaching Thornton Wilder’s Our Town and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Stephen King later described Salem's Lot as, “…a peculiar combination of Peyton Place and Dracula…†or, “vampires in Our Town.†And this is a true synopsis. Salem's Lot is about Jerusalem's Lot, a small town in Maine that has a bit of a vampire problem. It was King's second published novel, published in 1975 and you can both see his promise and his flaws as a writer clearly in this story. The story involves a writer named Ben Mears who returns to the town of Jerusalem's Lot (or 'Salem's Lot for short) in Maine, where he had lived from the age of five through nine, only to discover that the residents are becoming vampires. Salem's Lot is more or less, an American re-telling of Dracula with a dose of Shirley Jackson thrown in for good measure. It's not only about the monsters of the night, but the monsters that are deep within us already, that live within the dark recesses of our soul. King is just as interested in exploring the mysteries of Salem's Lot and its inhabitants as he is in turn them into vampires. And this is one of the novel's flaws. The problem with Salem's Lot is the characters - they are one-dimensional. I never cared for a single one of them. ‘Salem’s Lot takes a moment to really get started but once it does it is compulsively readable no matter how clumsy the writing sometimes is. The plot is pretty well done and is full of great action scenes and creepy moments. I just wish we were given a reason as to why Barlow, an evil vampire complete with European mannerisms and Straker, his familiar, take up residence in Salem’s Lot. I wanted to like this novel more than I did. Sadlly, I found this novel to be lacking in original creativity and inspiration. Salem's Lot is a love letter to King's influences and that's OK. It was still a fun read though for a vampire fan! This was a re-read after many years of King's second novel, one that I had found memorable enough to recall some of the plot or character elements. It features the first occurrence in King's fiction of writer-as-hero in the shape of Ben Mears, an author of mainstream/literary novels who has come back to 'Salem's Lot after an absence of many years. Ben had been looked after there as a child by his now deceased aunt, but had moved away from the town after a major fire in 1951 (the book was published in 1975). Now he is back, wanting to write about the Marsten House, which was abandoned even when he was a child, and is standing empty at the time of his return although it has been purchased by a mysterious and sinister man, Straker, and his hitherto unseen business partner, Barlow. The Marsten house, which looms over the town, draws Ben's attention constantly and creeps him out. It was the site of a murder-suicide, and Ben has a childhood memory of being dared to enter it and finding the living corpse of the murderer dangling from the ceiling in an upstairs room. It soon becomes obvious that Straker has taken up residence, although Barlow is supposedly away on a business trip to obtain antiques to stock the shop they have opened in an old laundromat. The homage to Bram Stoker's iconic novel is very obvious as is the borrowing of Shirley Jackson's theme from 'The Haunting of Hill House' of a house that is evil by nature. King makes no secret of that, and having read recently in a biography that he likes to combine two ideas in a novel, this was a clear early instance. One thing I had forgotten is that the story is framed by a section which takes place some time after the main action, so that you know from early on who survives out of the group of which Ben becomes a part. Following the initial section, the novel proper has a long build up before the depredations of the vampires begin to be obvious, and a lot of minor characters are introduced, helping to build the setting of a small insular community. The problem was that there were so many that, when some of them were name checked later on, I couldn't recall who they were. The main characters, beside Ben, include Matt the knowledgeable school teacher, Jimmy the doctor, Father Callaghan the priest with doubts and a drink problem, and the preternaturally mature Mark Petrie. I would include Ben's love interest, Susan Norton, but despite an attempt to develop her as a character - her love of books, her delayed rebellion against her controlling mother - for me she remains a cipher. The fights against the vampires are full of tension and well described action. Despite that, it was quite obvious that, Susan aside, just about all the main characters have to do something stupid so that they or other people can be killed. Matt repeatedly tells them not to split up, yet they do so repeatedly and wander off to deal with matters by themselves instead of returning to regroup and go back in force. It also seemed a ridiculous waste of time that Jimmy and Mark start locating and marking up where vampires are sleeping during the day instead of actually staking them - strangely enough, in one of the deleted scenes, included in this edition, they did precisely that and I don't know why that was dropped. One lost opportunity would have been to have included the boarding house proprietor as a main character, which would have addressed the lack of having at least one woman among the vampire fighters. Instead, she is consigned to the role which is also thrust upon a more minor female character, a young teenager that the unpleasant man who runs the dump lusts after, whereby both As well as deleted scenes from the original version, this edition included a short story, set after the novel, and a novella which takes a different angle on the subject - in a deliberately Lovecraftian style, it deals with an alternative version of the town in the 1850s. Both were good additions to the volume. Given my reservations about the female characters, and the necessity for otherwise smart characters to suddenly become stupid just to enable the plot, I am deducting a star and rating this at 4 stars overall. Belongs to Publisher SeriesCasino grøsser (70) dtv phantastica (1877) Heyne Allgemeine Reihe (8513) Pocket (1831) Is contained inContainsHas the adaptationWas inspired byHas as a student's study guideAwardsNotable Lists
Fiction.
Horror.
Suspense.
Thriller.
HTML:#1 BESTSELLER â?¢ Ben Mears has returned to Jerusalemâ??s Lot in hopes that exploring the history of the Marsten House, an old mansion long the subject of rumor and speculation, will help him cast out his personal devils and provide inspiration for his new book. But when two young boys venture into the woods, and only one returns alive, Mears begins to realize that something sinister is at work. In fact, his hometown is under siege from forces of darkness far beyond his imagination. And only he, with a small group of allies, can hope to contain the evil that is growing within the borders of this small New England town. With this, his second novel, Stephen King established himself as an indisputable master of American horror, able to transform the old conceits of the genre into something fresh and all the more frightening for taking place in a familiar, idyllic l No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Some of my favorite parts
-Ben staking Susan
-Marjorie Glick coming back to life
-The Glick boys in the woods
-Mark's Sherlock Holmes reenactment and being badass as fuck against Straker
-Hanging upside down in Marsten House
-Danny hovering in 2nd story window
-Matt Burke hears Mike Ryerson
-(not favorite at all) but fuck Sandy for abusing her baby
Note: I'm confused as to the situation behind Father Callahn ("some fates are worse than death"), and apparently King's Dark Towers series covers it in detail. ( )