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608 pages, Hardcover
First published September 6, 2022
“Stories. An endless number of stories that pour into the funnel and come out in our world, barely changed.”
“In some ways those were good months. I felt useful, needed. I liked myself better than I had in a long time. Only the end was terrible.”
“Sure,’ Bertie said. ‘Monster dog. Like Cujo in that movie. Riii-ight.”
“You never know where the trapdoors are in your life, do you?”
“It’s the stories of our childhood that make the deepest impressions and last the longest.”
I’d heard of curses—the storybooks are full of them—but this was the first time I’d seen one in action.--------------------------------------
You never know where the trapdoors are in your life, do you?Once Upon a Time, Stephen King decided to write a fairy tale. So, bring in some Brothers Grimm, Disney, Mother Goose, add in some H.P. Lovecraft, for good measure, and plenty more, stir for a good long while in the cauldron that is SKs brain, and “Poof!” There it appears. Being Stephen King, the book is over 600 pages, so not exactly Mother Goose length.
I love all the stuff that Robert E. Howard, Conan the Barbarian and some of the characters in the Edgar Rice Burroughs books, who would find these strange deserted cities, monsters and things. I thought it’s kinda like fairy tales. And I started to kinda get interested in that, and I thought maybe I could combine those two things, Maybe I could take the whole fairy tale riff. - from the Losers Club interviewCharlie Reade is a pretty good kid. But he hit into a bit of bad luck. He was seven when Mom made the mistake of walking across a local bridge on an icy night. Soon after, dad started drinking in earnest, managed to survive in his job for three years, but was ultimately let go. After months of ever worse drinking by his dad, Charlie did something that was alien to him.
…these books, particularly the Edgar Rice Burroughs books, like John Carter of Mars…they’re supposed to have this hero who’s like, muscular, you know, he played football in college and at the same time he’s got a brain, he’s handsome and got a cleft chin and all that good stuff and I thought I’d like to write a character like that. I’d like to write a character, who’s big, tough, tall, strong, who’s smart, but I want to give him a dose of reality. If he’s a kid, a younger man, who as a younger kid put dogshit on a bad teacher’s windshield, and glued somebody’s ignition shut. In other words I wanted him to have an anti-Disney kind of thing in there. - from the Losers Club interviewKing succeeds in giving Charlie some dark sides, but he also gives him a large dose of shame to balance it out.
I tried to put in every goddam fairy tale I could think, including Ariel, the mermaid from the Disney film. - from the Losers Club interviewThe Wizard of Oz is a particular favorite, as there are multiple references, including an emerald city, fields of poppies, and a bit on the importance of shoes.
As a kid, I liked all the stories by Robert E. Howard, and I liked Edgar Rice Burroughs. One of the greatest things is The Land That Time Forgot. The story starts with a narrator who finds a manuscript on the beach. The narrator says, to you, the reader, read five pages and I will be forgotten. To me, that’s what fiction’s all about. Particularly fiction where a lot of stuff happens and where you’re kind of on an adventure, and you say to yourself, What I would like to do is for my readers to forget all their problems for a while, and just relax and get totally immersed in the story and get carried away to a different world. - from the Losers Club interviewThe novel has been optioned by Paul Greengrass to make a feature film, but it certainly seems better suited to a mini-series. I guess we will see.
I’m sure I can tell this story. I’m also sure no one will believe it. That’s fine with me. Telling it will be enough. My problem—and I’m sure many writers have it, not just newbies like me—is deciding where to start.Stephen King has said that Fairy Tale was prompted by a question he asked himself early in the pandemic: “What could you write that would make you happy?” And the answer to that question turned out to be a story about a young man who loves an old dog so much that he’s willing to travel through a portal to another, perilous world for a chance at saving the dog’s life.
…
I thought of that book cover, the one showing a funnel filling up with stars. Not stars, I thought. Stories. An endless number of stories that pour into the funnel and come out in our world, barely changed.
…
I thought, I don’t want to be a Disney prince. To hell with that. If I have to be a prince, I want to be a dark one.
Jesus F*cking Christ this was a long book.
Stephen King has written one of my favorite books of all times: IT. There is nothing like that book and those characters out there. I think he truly delivers magic when it comes to coming of age stories and he adds so much soul to mundane characters.
This book feels like Stephen, but also doesn't at the same time. It's not quite a horror book, and it's not quite a fantasy book, it's somewhere in between.
It was really easy to connect to Charlie during the first half. He is a young man with an alcoholic father. Charlie begged God to help his father sober up, and he did. And because of that Charlie became the most reliable person in the world, because he truly believed that if he broke his part of his deal with God, his dad would go back to the alcohol.
He did great in school, at sports and helped his dad with work. Until one day, when walking back home from school, he hears his old neighbor's dog barking like crazy and once he checks it out, he finds the poor old man on the ground with a broken leg.
The first half of this entire book had The Old Man and the Sea vibes. The grumpy old man falls in love with Charlie, and so does the dog. Charlie creates the most emotional routine with them, non-romantic love hits SO DIFFERENT.
He takes the dog on daily walks, feeds him, and also helps Howard with his meds and keeps him company.
It's the perfect recipe to make you bawl your eyes out. And I did cry about five times for the first half of this book.
I don't want to drop you any spoilers here, because this book is SO LONG, and it really does carry 3 different stories all at once. 3 different worlds. Stephen was inspired by the old school Grimm tales and this turns into one, it was beautifully crafted, his writing is so so so great and honestly so satisfying to read, but unfortunately, the last 300 pages of this were unbelievably boring and slow.
Basically, all you need to know about this book is: this is the story of a young man who fell in love with a dog, the dog is old and about to die, and he is willing to do WHATEVER it takes to make this dog stick around forever. That's where magic comes in, in this urban fantasy Stephen King tale. If you're ok with the slow pace of the book, you might actually love this one, because honestly? I'd also travel to an unknown world, talk to messed up creatures, make deals with the devil and face any kind of dangerous magic to make sure my dog lives forever.