Though for some reason I have this notion that King comes out with all his books in October.
Verily, it is possible. I was just grabbing it from google, and I may have remembered the month wrong.
I get that a lot.
I think it's the having kids thing. As I don't, I tend to still assume people who do are older than me, which will come as a shock to my little brother and my niece's mother.
I think it's the having kids thing.
Probably. In my social circle, I have friends who are 10 and 15 years older with kids the same age as mine, and it tends to make me feel much older than I am.
Grey Matter
Which one was this?
My favorite King short story is The Mist. Creeeeeee-py.
Grey Matter was the old guys in the town one over from The Lot, sitting around the stove at the store in the wintertime. High school boy came by every day to buy beer for his old man, who had been laid up with some work-related injury. The kid started spending a lot of time away from home. Nobody ever saw the dad, he just sat wrapped in a blanket in front of the teevee day in, day out, every now and then shuffling out the kitchen to get another beer from the fridge.
One day he got a batch of bad beer....
Well, and if whoever was responsible for Cujo hadn't changed the ending.
Verily. Another funny Stephen King rant is about how when Hollywood buys your book, they just want to tell you what's wrong with it, how to re-do it, and how about replacing the little old lady character with Lou Gossett, Jr., because he's available, and really marketable right now.
So: never judge a book by its movie.
How did Cujo actually end?
Signed, "Flinched Her Way Through the Movie, Because Rabid Dogs Are Scary"
Dana, in the book,
the boy dies.
Heh. I loved to read King when I was 10, 11, 12 years old. Whenever I try to go back and re-read Pet Sematary and that stuff, I can't do it. Reminds me too much of home.
A couple of months ago I stumbled across Kim Newman's "Anno Dracula" books. (ouch! such a klutz) Scanning the Net for more background on some of the obscure characters in those books, I fell into the territory of serious Wold Newton fandom. Now I seem to spend most of my work day looking at hypothetical timelines linking every fictional character under the sun ... BTW, did you know Buffy's dad, Hank Summers, is the biological brother of Jaime Summers, the Bionic Woman? No, really ... it says so right there in the "Crossover Chronology"...