I chose Jackson over Dracula basically because I think it's creepier and the writing is far better.
Harmony ,'First Date'
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Plus, Dracula is on every list of the supernatural and the macabre. It's overexposed, whereas Jackson has fallen out of favor--or at least out of the limelight--in the last two decades. Time to introduce her to a new generation.
Which story was One for the Road, Erin? I think Night Shift may have been King at his best.
My husband read 'Salem's Lot first, and for several nights he kept reading after I fell asleep, occasionally waking me up by saying, "Oh, shit!" I, of course, had to read it after that. I finished the book at about 3 a.m., and I really did get up and go to the refrigerator to make sure we had garlic in the house. Ah, Stephen King back when he was edited.I read it when I was a teenager. My father's twin was in the hospital dying. I visited him a lot. One day near the end, a lot of family was there. I went down to the solarium at the end of the wing. As I got to a particularly creepy part, the sun was setting. Soon after, we left the hospital. I'd driven over in my own car, and my folks had come, in their car. I got home first, and locked the fricking book in the trunk of my car, because it was dark, and I had to go in the house, alone.
OFTR is set in 'Salem's Lot...the people who get stuck in the car -- out-of-towners -- during a snow storm, and get turned into vampires. Three or four old timers debate on helping them, but it's too late.
read by Vincent Price and Basil Rathbone
Ear-gasm ....
After I read Salem's Lot, every closet in my apartment was open for days, just so I'd know nothing was hiding in there.
edit: I would love to know what happened to the priest.
I think some of King's later works had the priest in them, I don't know which ones.
EDIT: Apparently, he appears in The Dark Tower.
Heh. We were just talking about this over in the Angel Meet Market thread on TWoP. Apparently the priest (and I don't even remember what happened to him in the book, it was a few years ago) appears in one of the Dark Tower books. The fifth one, Wolves of the Calla.
I knew there was a reason to read Dark Tower.
Damn, the library's already closed.
I don't even remember what happened to him in the book,
He tries to hold off the vampires, then falls for the "If you really had faith, you wouldn't need that cross" thing. And the vampires don't kill him.
I love the exchange with his housekeeper: "Was he strong when last you saw him?" "Yes, ma'am."
According to darktower.net, The Dark Tower has connections to almost every one of King's books. It's ridiculous and supercool. There are some major ones, though, and it looks like I've read most of them, though some too long ago to appreciate the connections. I need to do some of the required reading first and then tackle the whole series, because it sounds like a worthwhile endeavor.