Showing posts with label Classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classic. Show all posts

Gwendy's Magic Feather Summary

Richard Chizmar, Stephen King, American, Classic, Coming Of Age, Fiction, Horror, Magic, Supernatural, Thriller

Gwendy's Magic Feather

Published: 19, November 2019
Author: Richard Chizmar (Foreword by Stephen King)
Genre: American, Classic, Coming Of Age, Fiction, Horror, Magic, Supernatural, Thriller
Book 2 of 3: Gwendy's Button Box Trilogy

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

When the button box shows unexpectedly at Gwendy Peterson's office in Washington, D.C., she is angry and terrified. 

It's been nearly 25 years since the box, with its dual powers of good and evil, first entered her life. Gwendy is a grownup coping with real-world issues. 

Two teenage girls have vanished without a trace in her hometown of Castle Rock. Her spouse is stationed on the Indonesian island of Timor, a place ripped apart by political strife. 

Gwendy is a congresswoman coping with a president that she and her constituents fear may launch a war with North Korea. 

The emergence of the box resurrects Gwendy's old anxiety that her success in life would be due to the box's enchantment rather than her own hard work.

Gwendy feels tempted to exploit the box's abilities to fix her issues. She is aware that if she presses the red button, the box will fulfill her every want. 

Gwendy may press the button to eliminate the insurgents in Timor, allowing her husband to return home. She may also use the box's power to assassinate the president and end the country's involvement in a conflict. 

Because Gwendy understands that each of these seemingly simple remedies has ramifications, she resists the urge to utilize the power of the box.

Meanwhile, Gwendy is assisting the Castle County Sheriff in the search for two girls who have gone missing in Castle Rock

Deborah Parker, a third girl, goes missing just after Christmas, while Gwendy is still at Castle Rock for the holidays. 

During the town's New Year's Eve party, Gwendy experiences an unusual experience. Gwendy falls on the ice on her way to her car but is saved by Lucas Browne, a young guy she met during the hunt for the missing girls. 

When Lucas touches Gwendy's hand, she sees him standing over the missing girl, which leads her to believe he is the kidnapper. 

Gwendy informs the sheriff that Lucas is the kidnapper based on her experience. Deborah is rescued when the Browne's home is searched. The bodies of the two other missing females have been discovered on the premises.

Gwendy sees Richard Farris, the guy who gave her the box when she was a youngster, at the airport on her way back to Washington for an early Congressional session. 

She asks him whether the vision she saw that resulted in Lucas' arrest originated from the box. 

Richard reveals that he doesn't comprehend all of the box's abilities, which makes Gwendy nervous. 

He informs her that she proved herself by resisting the desire to use the box to fix her difficulties. 

Most importantly, Richard tells her that her achievement is a result of her hard work and not because of the box.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Back To Castle, Gwendys Button, Gwendys Magic, Highly Recommend, Looking Forward, Magic Feather, Third Book, Well Written


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Sleeping Beauties Summary

Stephen King, Owen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Historical, Horror, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Post Apocalyptic, Psychic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Sleeping Beauties

Published: 26, September 2017
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Historical, Horror, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Post Apocalyptic, Psychic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

A strange lady beats two guys who run a meth lab out of their mobile home to death, and then sets fire to the lab before allowing herself to be apprehended by the local sheriff. 

Lila Norcross, in the impoverished town of Dooling, part of the fictional Tri-Counties region of Appalachia. 

Simultaneously, reports emerge of a mysterious illness sweeping the globe, causing women to fall into a deep sleep while cocooned in a strange material. 

The sickness, called "Aurora," also makes the sleeping ladies homicidal, assaulting and killing any adult who tries to release the cocoons.

Clint, Lila's husband and the chief psychiatrist at the Dooling Correctional Institute for Women, notices Aurora in his patients around the same time that the woman, dubbed "Eve Black," is incarcerated there. 

As the disease spreads throughout the town, local women become desperate to stay awake, which results in looting and riots. 

Lila succumbs to the illness and is replaced by Terry Coombs, her alcoholic chief deputy, who appoints Frank Geary, a former animal control officer with a short fuse, as his second-in-command. 

Warden Janice Coates, Clint's superior, fires one of her guards, Don Peters, for sexual harassment; he drugs her with Xanax, leaving Clint to protect the few remaining female inmates.

Clint interviews Eve and discovers that she is an "emissary" sent by an alien creature who believes that women are capable of creating a society devoid of war, abuse, and other ills that she claims are mostly caused by males. 

Clint is "the Man," according to her, and his mission is to guard Eve for "a week or two" while she pledges to heal the ladies of Aurora

Meanwhile, Frank and Terry deputize numerous new recruits, including Peters and Eric Blass, a juvenile delinquent, and gradually restore order to Dooling. 

Rumors about Eve's ability to sleep and wake without incident spread across the village, prompting Frank to begin enlisting Terry's help in luring her out of prison in order to save the sleeping ladies. 

Clint's son Jared and his companion Mary successfully conceal Lila and three other women in an empty house, fearful that Frank will exploit their bodies as hostages.

Meanwhile, the ladies are trapped in a post-apocalyptic Dooling that they refer to as "Our Place" in another reality. 

Even as several unexpectedly leave, Lila and Janice assume leadership, and the women begin to re-establish themselves (due to their bodies having been destroyed by men in the real world). 

Instead of finding additional survivors, a crew assigned to hunt for them comes and finds a majestic Tree, which turns out to be the doorway between Our Place and Dooling. 

Frank's wife, Elaine Nutting, tries to burn the Tree down because she doesn't want to return to the real world, but Eve intervenes by sending an inmate, Jeanette Sorley, to stop her; Jeanette has a little boy whom she urgently wants to see again, so she agrees to intervene. 

When Jeanette discovers Elaine lighting the Tree gateway, she wrestles the lighter and a revolver away from her. 

Jeanette then tosses the lighter into the trash and grabs the revolver to stow it in her belt. Leaves rustle behind her before she can do so. Jeanette turns around with the rifle in her hand, and Lila accidentally fires and kills her.

Clint and his merry band take firearms from the police station, causing Frank and Terry to form a posse to storm the prison and kidnap Eve

During the attack, two criminals whom Lila had apprehended based on an inmate's confession use a stolen bazooka to blow up the station and a section of the jail, killing fifteen women before Vanessa Lampley, a former guard, shoots them down. 

Terry kills himself out of sadness and cowardice, Peters and Blass are slain, and the majority of Frank's men abandon him, but he makes it to Eve's cell. 

Even though Eve herself assures Frank that murdering her is the best way to rescue his family, Clint, Jared, Janice's daughter Michaela, a prisoner called Angel Fitzroy, and an old volunteer named Willy Burke try to urge him to spare her life. 

Clint uses guilt to push Eve to use her power to save Willy when his heart suddenly stops, realizing that Eve is attempting to establish that males are fundamentally violent and should be allowed to die out. 

When Frank and the others notice this, they allow Eve to return to Our Place, where she gives the ladies the option of returning to Dooling or staying put. At the end of the day, all of the ladies vote to return.

Life gradually returns to normal as sleeping ladies throughout the world awaken from their slumber. 

However, Lila and Clint's already unstable marriage falls apart, and the couple decides to divorce, with Clint returning to his previous position at a nearby jail and Lila retiring as sheriff. 

Lila travels out to where the Tree used to stand, haunted by Jeanette's death and seeking forgiveness and asks Eve for a sign of her presence. Then, on her palm, a solitary brown moth (one of Eve's forms) falls.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Evie Black, Fall Asleep, Father And Son, Joe Hill, King Novel, Looking Forward, Many Characters, Page Turner, Son Owen


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Revival Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Psychic, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Revival

Published: 11, November 2014
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Psychic, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jamie Morton is ecstatic when Charles Jacobs, a new Methodist pastor, arrives in town. Almost everyone in the little Maine community falls in love with Jacobs, his lovely wife, and their young boy. 

Jacobs leads weekly Ministry Youth Fellowship meetings for the children of the community, where he discusses his interest in electricity and innovations with them, his wife performs music for them, and they play with his little son Morrie (although Jamie is clearly favored over all the other children by Jacobs). 

When Jamie's elder brother, Conrad, better known as "Con," is injured in a skiing accident, rendering him unable to talk and creating family hardship owing to the high expense of care, Jacobs urges Jamie to bring him over as he may be able to assist him. 

When Jamie and his elder sister Claire accomplish this, Jacobs wraps a low-voltage belt around Con's neck, and to everyone's surprise, Con is able to talk almost immediately.

Mrs. Jacobs and her kid are killed in a horrific car accident, and everything changes all too quickly. 

Bereaved, the reverend denounces God and religion during a sermon and is expelled from the town. 

Jamie, distraught that Jacobs would be leaving town, goes to visit him before he departs, thanking him for all he accomplished for Con, but Jacobs maintains it was all a placebo effect.

Jamie grows up to be a musician and begins to use heroin. His band abandoned him at a hotel when he was on tour after he missed many of their shows due to his addiction. 

He goes to the hotel desk to pay for another night, but his credit card is already maxed out. That night, he travels to a state fair in quest of drugs but instead discovers Charles Jacobs playing "Portraits in Lightning" in front of a big audience. 

Jacobs gets Cathy Morse, a young lady, to volunteer for the performance, in which she sits in a chair blindfolded while he photographs her, and after a blue burst of light flashes all across the theater, an image of her emerges on a plate. 

He then offers to do the same for anyone else for a fee. Jacobs recognizes Jamie in the crowd right away, and Jamie quickly falls out and wakes up in Jacobs' camper van, where he offers to "cure" Jamie's ailment with a modest application of electricity when he is healthy enough. 

Jamie experienced bizarre side effects after treatment, including sleepwalking and jabbing himself in the arm with sharp objects while in a dreamlike state as if attempting to inject heroin. 

Jacobs is subsequently assaulted by Cathy Morse's father when he claims Jacob's image inspired her to attempt to steal a set of diamond earrings from a jeweler, which resulted in her incarceration. 

Before Jacobs leaves town again, he sends Jamie to Hugh Yates, who hires him at a music recording studio.

Many years later, Yates summons Jamie to his office and they discuss their experiences with Jacobs' treatments and the consequences of them (Yates had been cured of MĂ©nière's disease many years before and had suffered blackouts and visions he calls "prismatics" where he could see colors shifting back and forth and felt like he could see into another world shortly after being treated). 

Yates shows Jamie a banner from a website where Jacobs is holding revival tours using electricity (despite appearing to be a faith healer, utilizing God's power to cure people), and they go to one of his performances, but Yates immediately departs. 

When Jamie asks him what occurred, he claims that for the first time in a long time, he had a "prismatic" experience while Jacobs was curing people, in which he saw the people as huge ants.

Jamie begins to investigate the many people Jacobs has treated. Many of them, it turns out, have had similar negative effects, and some have even murdered themselves and others as a result (including Cathy Morse who recently took her own life). 

He eventually learns that Jacobs has been reading esoteric works such as De Vermis Mysteriis

Jamie hunts down Jacobs and visits his home to confront him about his treatments and to inform him about the side effects that the individuals he is helping have been suffering. 

But to his surprise, Jacobs has been keeping track of them all along and claims that only a small number of people have significant aftereffects and that he is no longer healing people. 

Jacobs offers to make Jamie his assistant and pay him much more than Yates does, but Jamie declines and goes.

Several years later, Jamie receives a letter from Jacobs, which includes a letter written by his childhood girlfriend Astrid to Jacobs, stating she has a terminal illness. 

Jacobs promises to treat her, but only if Jamie agrees to be his personal assistant for one more experiment. Jamie agrees hesitantly, and Astrid is cured.

Jamie assists Jacobs in preparing for his final experiment: Jacobs has found what he refers to as "hidden electricity," an all-powerful energy source that he has used to produce his miraculous cures throughout the years. 

He now plans to channel a large rush of this energy through a lightning rod into a terminally ill woman called Mary Fay, whom he has transferred to his lab. 

Jacobs aims to resurrect Mary Fay after her death, not in the traditional sense, but in the sense that she will be clinically dead but able to interact with Jacobs and inform him about the afterlife and what happened to his wife and child after they died.

The experiment is successful, but not in the way that Jacobs intended. The resurrected Mary Fay does become a portal to the afterlife, but, much to Jacobs and Jamie's chagrin; there is no Heaven and no reward for faith. 

Instead, the afterlife is revealed to be "The Null," a horrible world of disorder where departed souls are tormented by Ant creatures who serve crazy, Lovecraftian deities, the most powerful of which is known as "Mother." 

As "she" possesses a claw formed of human faces, it is inferred that victims are fed to Mother

Mother takes over Mary Fay's body, changing her into a monstrous creature, and tries to murder Jacobs. 

Jamie shoots Mother with Jacobs' revolver and she flees the scene, leaving Mary's body behind. 

A terrified Jacobs has a deadly stroke, and Jamie arranges his corpse to appear as though he shot Mary. Jamie runs away from the situation and relocates to Hawaii.

Several of the people Jacobs treats later go insane and murder themselves and others, including Hugh Yates and Astrid, who murders both her lover and herself. 

Jamie, one of Jacobs' few survivors, is forced to rely extensively on pharmaceuticals. He tells a psychiatrist about his vision of The Null, but he is dismissed. 

He admits and finds solace in the idea that the visions were "false." but the novel ends with Jamie going to visit his brother Con, who has spent the last two years in a psychiatric hospital after attacking his partner (which Jamie blames on Jacobs's treatment of Con's injury decades before), but as he goes to leave, he sees a door calling his name and ignores it, but realizes that one day he would die and be confined in The Null under Mother's tyranny.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Character Development, Charles Jacobs, Dark Tower, Great Read, Highly Recommend, Jamie Morton, King Novel, Long Time, Page Turner, Salems Lot, Secret Electricity, Well Written


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Any kind of support, even a simple 'like, thumbs up or a small comment' is enough and helps me grow, create and freely do more stuff and work on projects for the benefit of many.
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Under the Dome Summary

Stephen King, Action, American, Classic, Contemporary, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Under the Dome

Published: 10, November 2009
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, American, Classic, Contemporary, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

On October 21, 2017, at 11:45 a.m., the little Maine village of Chester's Mill is abruptly and gruesomely cut off from the rest of the world by an invisible, semi-permeable barrier of unknown origin. 

The barrier's instant emergence causes a number of injuries and fatalities and also keeps former Army Captain Dale "Barbie" Barbara, who is attempting to escape Chester's Mill due to a local disagreement, inside the town.

When Police Chief Howard "Duke" Perkins goes too near to The Dome, his pacemaker explodes, killing him instantaneously. 

This effectively eliminates the final substantial challenge to James "Big Jim" Rennie, a used car dealer and the town's Second Selectman. 

Big Jim wields considerable authority in Chester's Mill and seizes the chance to utilize the barrier as part of a power play to grasp control of the town.

Big Jim chooses one of his buddies, the inept Peter Randolph, as the new head of police. He also begins filling the ranks of the Chester's Mill Police Department with suspects, including his son, Junior Rennie, and his associates. 

Junior suffers from frequent migraines caused by an as-yet-undiscovered brain tumor, which has also begun to affect his mental state; unbeknownst to Big Jim, Junior was in the process of beating and strangling a girl (Angie McCain) to death when the barrier appeared, and by the time Big Jim places him on the police force, Junior has killed another girl (Dodee Sanders).

Col. James O. Cox (who is stationed outside The Dome) telephones Julia Shumway, the editor of the local newspaper, and asks her to deliver a message to Barbie to contact him. 

Cox then requests that Barbie act as the government's agent in bringing down The Dome, as it has become known. 

Cox assigns him the duty of identifying The Dome's power source, which is thought to be someplace in town, drawing parallels to Barbie's Army specialty in locating enemy weapons plants. 

Cox may also predict the political repercussions of such a circumstance in a small community. 

Barbie is restored in the United States military and brevetted to the rank of Colonel as a result of a Presidential order. 

Barbie is also given a decree that gives him jurisdiction over the township. However, given the nature of small-town politics, this move is not well accepted by Big Jim and his gang of rogue police officers. 

Around this time, Duke's widow, Brenda Perkins, uncovers a file on her husband's computer that details Big Jim's money-laundering methods.

As Big Jim insinuates and orchestrates disquiet and dread among the townsfolk in order to consolidate his authority, Barbie, Julia, and a few other townspeople try to keep things from spinning out of hand. 

Barbie is framed and jailed for four murders after crossing Big Jim's path multiple times. He is suspected of murdering Reverend Lester Coggins, who laundered money for Big Jim's large-scale methamphetamine organization, as well as Duke's wife Brenda PerkinsAngie and Dodee

While Barbie is in jail, other inhabitants use a Geiger counter to locate the source of The Dome to an abandoned farm; the gadget they uncover in the center of the property's orchard is strongly suggested to be alien in origin. 

Big Jim's limitations get more stringent, and the police force becomes more brutal, energizing the town and finally causing several locals to break Barbie out of jail, murdering Junior seconds before he can murder Barbie.

The disorganized opposition retreats to the abandoned farm, where many individuals touch the weird object and see visions. 

They not only conclude that the device was installed by extraterrestrial "leatherheads" (so named because of their appearance), However, they are primarily teenagers who have built up The Dome as a form of entertainment, a kind of ant farm intended to catch sentient individuals and allow their captors to observe everything that occurs to them.

On an organized "Visitors Day," when people outside The Dome can meet with people inside, Big Jim sends Randolph and a detachment of police to retake control of his former methamphetamine operation from Phil "Chef" Bushey, who is preventing Big Jim from covering up the operation and hoarding the over 400 tanks of propane stored there (Chef wants it all, explaining, "I need it to cook"). 

Big Jim underestimates Chef's aptitude for self-defense and meth-induced paranoia; he and the now-ostracized head selectman Andy Sanders (whom Chef has introduced to meth usage) defend themselves and the meth lab with assault guns. 

Many people are murdered in the subsequent shootout, and Chef, who is fatally wounded, detonates a plastic explosive device he has planted in the meth lab. 

The resulting explosion, when mixed with the propane and meth-making ingredients, creates a poisonous firestorm large enough to incinerate the majority of the town.

On national broadcast, nearly a thousand of the town's population are promptly burnt, leaving just over 300 people alive, who progressively die off as the poisonous air hampers their breathing. 

The twenty-seven refugees in the abandoned farm, an orphaned farm child hiding in a potato cellar, and Big Jim and his informal aide-de-camp, Carter Thibodeau, in the town's fallout shelter, are among the survivors. 

Big Jim and Thibodeau eventually turn on each other due to the limited oxygen supply (and Big Jim's fear that Thibodeau will testify against him if they survive); Big Jim stabs and disembowels Thibodeau, only to die several hours later when hallucinations of the dead drive him outside into the toxic environment. 

Despite the Army's efforts to push clean air through The Dome's walls, the survivors in the barn begin to slowly asphyxiate.

Barbie and Julia approach the control gadget, pleading with their kidnappers to let them free. 

Julia contacts a solitary female leatherhead who is no longer accompanied by her pals and thus is not subject to peer pressure. 

Julia persuades the leatherhead to take pity on them by continuously expressing that they are actual sentient creatures with real "small lives," and by sharing a traumatic childhood event with the teenage extraterrestrial. 

The Dome slowly rises and then vanishes, enabling the toxic air to evaporate and eventually liberating what is left of Chester's Mill.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords
Big Jim, Character Development, Chester Mill, Human Nature, Jim Rennie, King At His Best, Lord Of The Flies, Many Characters, Mike Vogel, Much Better, Natalie Martinez, Page Turner, Rachelle Lefevre, Small Town


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Lisey's Story Summary

Stephen King, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Lisey's Story

Published: 24, October 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Lisey's Story tells the story of Lisey Landon, the widow of Scott Landon, a well-known and highly successful author. 

The novel recounts two stories: Lisey's present-day tale and the story of her late husband's life, as recounted by Lisey throughout the novel.

It's been two years since acclaimed novelist Scott Landon died, and his wife Lisey is still clearing up her husband's writing space. 

Many scholars have approached her in the last two years, expecting to unearth some piece of literature she may have overlooked, such as an unpublished manuscript. 

Lisey has sent each of them away in turn, stating that she is still working through the clean-up, but her lack of progress is more indicative of procrastination. 

Amanda, her mentally ill sister, spends a day with her, leafing through stacks of books and periodicals, marking any images in which Lisey appears or is referenced. 

Lisey starts reliving her past; beginning with the moment she stopped Scott from being fatally shot by an insane fan. 

She frequently pauses herself in the middle of reminiscing to avoid unearthing scary memories. 

Amanda suffers from catatonia after learning that her ex-husband has remarried and is relocating back to town. 

Lisey hears her sister speaking in Scott's voice before admitting Amanda to a facility, telling her that he has arranged a "bool" search with a prize at the end. 

One day, she receives a distressing phone call from a guy purporting to be Zack McCool, threatening that if Lisey does not pass over Scott's paperwork to a professor she had recently kicked out, he, Zack, will be obliged to punish her. 

His next move will be to place a menacing note and a dead cat in her mailbox. At this point, Lisey informs the authorities, who can only provide her with a patrol car stationed near her home until an emergency occurs elsewhere. 

Zack is unafraid, and he ultimately sneaks onto her property and mutilates her with a can opener.

Throughout the novel, Lisey is forced to confront some facts about her spouse that she had previously repressed and forgotten. 

She remembers Scott's past—how he came from a family with a history of horrible mental illness that manifested as either an uncontrollable homicidal mania or a deep catatonia, how he had a special gift, the ability to transport himself to another world, which he called "Boo'ya Moon," with its own unique dangers, how Scott Landon's brother Paul was killed by their father when, at thirteen, Paul succumbed to the family.

Lisey is able to draw Amanda out of her catatonia, transport Zack to the other side, and lead him to his gory end at the claws of a violent world-crossing beast that patrols the forest of Boo'ya Moon using her own repressed power to cross across.

The prize at the conclusion of the quest is a journal documenting Scott's final days with his family, concluding with Scott Landon's confession that he was compelled to kill his own father in order to spare him from the madness that had finally taken over.

Lisey is able to pack and give up Scott's belongings over the next week since she now feels he has moved on. 

Now Lisey struggles to stay anchored in this world, frequently slipping back to Boo'ya Moon in her dream and sometimes while awake. 

The novel concludes with her bidding farewell to Scott in the now-empty study.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Gunky, Bag Of Bones, Booya Moon, Clive Owen, Dark Tower, Highly Recommend, Julianne Moore, King Novel, Lisey And Scott, Liseys Story, Mare Winningham, Rose Madder, Scott Landon, Sister Amanda, Tower Series


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Any kind of support, even a simple 'like, thumbs up or a small comment' is enough and helps me grow, create and freely do more stuff and work on projects for the benefit of many.
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Rose Madder Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fairy Tale, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Ghost, Horror, Mythology, Psychic, Psychological, Thriller

Rose Madder

Published: June 1995
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fairy Tale, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Ghost, Horror, Mythology, Psychic, Psychological, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Norman Daniels, Rosie Daniels' husband, abuses her while she is four months pregnant in 1985, leading her to miscarry. 

Rosie contemplates leaving Norman, but she dismisses the notion because Norman is a police officer who is very good at locating people. 

He also has a violent temper and was recently accused of attacking and raping Wendy Yarrow, a black lady. He has become much more volatile as a result of the ensuing litigation and internal affairs inquiry.

Rosie is making the bed, nine years later. She notices a spot of blood on the sheet from her nose the night before when Norman struck her in the face for spilling an iced drink on him. 

Rosie knows she has been silently suffering Norman's abuse for fourteen years, and that if she continues to put up with it, he will ultimately murder her. 

Rosie boards a bus with their bank card in her hand. When Norman discovers Rosie has vanished, he vows to track her down and murder her.

Rosie comes in a Midwestern metropolis, befuddled and terrified. She encounters a man named Peter Slowik at the bus terminal, who directs her to a nearby women's shelter. 

She rapidly makes friends and, with the assistance of shelter director Anna Stevenson, obtains an apartment and work as a hotel maid. 

When Rosie attempts to sell her engagement ring and discovers it's virtually useless, she falls in love with a picture of a woman dressed in a rose madder gown. 

She exchanges her ring for the picture, which is unsigned. Bill Steiner, the charming gentleman who runs the pawnshop, approaches her and invites her out on a date. 

Rosie is terrified of starting a new relationship, yet she falls in love with Bill despite her fears.

Rosie notices that the artwork appears to shift from time to time. She is eventually able to pass through it. On the other side, she meets Dorcas, a lady who resembles Wendy Yarrow

She also notices the lady in the painting, whom she dubs "Rose Madder" because of her clothes and obvious insanity. 

Rose Madder asks Rosie to save her infant from a subterranean labyrinth inhabited by Erinyes, a blind, one-eyed bull who navigates by scent.

Dorcas walks Rosie to the temple grounds' edge. Dorcas is unable to enter the labyrinth since she is suffering from the same mystery ailment as her mistress, and Erinyes can smell her. 

Rosie is forced to strip nude and shred her nightgown into many sections before being separated from Dorcas. One has been bathed in Dorcas' blood and is tethered to a rock. 

Rosie enters the temple and saves the kid, escapes Erinyes, and returns the newborn to Rose Madder, who vows to compensate her. Rose returns to her normal life, putting the bizarre occurrence out of her mind.

Norman arrives in town, assaults several of Rosie's shelter friends, and then goes to Rosie's apartment. 

He assassinates a police officer assigned to protect her, acts like one of them in the patrol car, and encounters Rosie and Bill on their way back from the police station. 

He assaults them; almost choking Bill, but Rosie is able to fend him off because she believes she is wearing the golden arm circlet Rose Madder gave her. 

After hurting Norman, Rosie drags Bill to the apartment, where she notices the circlet on her table and realizes she has been battling Norman alone the entire time.

Rosie dupes Norman into following her and Bill into the painting, then brings him to Rose Madder, who murders him. 

Rosie returns to her reality with Rose Madder's orders to "remember the tree" and a magic elixir that induces memory loss. 

She contemplates taking it but ultimately decides to maintain her memories. She rationalizes that, while unpleasant, they are still a part of her and help shape who she is. Her experiences could even make her stronger in the long run, and she doesn't want to give that up. 

She then chooses to use the potion on her lover without his knowledge. She hesitates for a minute, concerned that it would poison him by excess because she has no clue how strong it is, but then thinks it's worth the risk because his negative memories will harm their relationship or possibly drive him to leave her. 

She drops a drop into his cup and the events of the past fade from his recollection. She then has a sexual encounter with him. The two later marry and have a daughter, and Rosie continues to drug Bill whenever he appears to regain his recollections of the magical world in the picture. 

The bottle eventually runs out, but the benefits appear to be permanent at that time, so Rosie no longer worries about it.

For a long after that, everything is OK for Rosie, but when she burns the picture in an attempt to break links with the past, she discovers that the violent rages that characterized both Norman and Rose Madder have begun to flare up within her. 

She recalls Rose Madder allowing her to take some seeds home with her, and as penance for the painting, she plants the seeds, along with Norman's police ring, in a secluded forest near her beloved lake. 

The seed develops into a gorgeous but lethal tree. She returns to the tree on a regular basis as it develops, allowing her to let go of her fury and go on with her life.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Abusive Husband, Dark Tower, Domestic Violence, Drop Of Blood, Edge Of Your Seat, Geralds Game, Husband Norman, New Life, Pawn Shop, Tower Series


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Gerald's Game Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Political, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

Gerald's Game

Published: May 1992
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Political, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jessie Angela Mahout Burlingame and her successful and confrontational lawyer husband Gerald go from Portland to their isolated lake cottage near Kashwakamak Lake in western Maine for an unplanned love holiday. 

Handcuffing Jessie to bed for lovemaking, a recent addition to their marriage that both parties find exhilarating is the title game. 

However, after being shackled to bedposts, Jessie becomes hesitant and wants to be released, only to be disregarded by Gerald, who dismisses her complaints as part of their game. 

Jessie strikes out; kicking Gerald in the chest, after realizing her husband is acting ignorant in order to rape her. 

He had a deadly heart attack as a result of the shock. He passes away, leaving Jessie tied to her bed.

Jessie is initially shocked by her husband's death and fears being found semi-naked and handcuffed, but she soon realizes the situation is far direr: she and Gerald are unlikely to be noticed for several days, no one will think to look for them at the lake house, and all of the usual lake residents have left for the season. Jessie's life is in jeopardy if she does not manage to flee.

While Jessie furiously examines and dismisses plans, she hears whispers from The Goodwife or Goody Burlingame, a Traditionalist version of herself, who hinders her escape efforts by saying that everything would be great and that she should wait to be rescued; Punkin, a depiction of Jessie when she was ten years old. 

Jessie abandoned Ruth Neary, a college roommate, after a conversation that came perilously near to revealing Jessie's background, and Nora, Jessie's former psychotherapist, after Nora questioned Jessie's connection with her father. 

Following the guidance of these voices, Jessie understands that "Goody's" counsel to wait for rescue is based on a subconscious notion that she deserves to be imprisoned in this circumstance, even if it means death. 

When Jessie investigates the source of this self-destructive idea, she recalls a long-repressed memory of her father sexually abusing her when she was ten years old during a solar eclipse. 

Jessie's father duped her into believing she was guilty, leaving her with feelings of shame and remorse for the rest of her life. 

In the aftermath of the assault, Jessie recalls an unexplainable episode in which she had a brief telepathic connection with an unknown woman. 

Jessie's recollections prompt her to reflect on how unpleasant and controlling her marriage to Gerald was, causing her to believe she sacrificed her independence and fearlessness for the security of becoming Gerald's trophy wife.

When Jessie awakens from an imaginative battle with all of these people in a dark bedroom, she sees a tall, gaunt ghost that she initially misidentifies as the spirit of her long-dead father and calls "Space Cowboy" after a lyric from a Steve Miller song, "The Joker." 

The depiction depicts her holding a wicker basket filled with jewels and human bones. Unsure if the figure is a hallucination, Jessie rejects it, remarking loudly that it is just made of moonlight, which causes it to vanish. 

Her inner voices, on the other hand, believe the figure is genuine and will return to kill Jessie if she does not flee before the next night.

Jessie has a drink of water from a glass on the bedside table the next morning. Refreshed and encouraged by her own resourcefulness in obtaining the water, she renews her attempts to flee, first by attempting to break the headboard, then by attempting to slip off the bed and push it to the bureau where the keys are kept. 

Jessie smashes the water glass and slices her wrist with a sharp shard to lubricate her flesh enough to get her right hand free from the cuff. 

Inspired by her father's warning to her not to cut herself on the smoked glass panes they used as eclipse viewers during the eclipse. 

She is then able to get out of bed, reach for the keys, and release her other hand, only to pass out from blood loss. 

When she wakes up, it's nearly dark, and the Space Cowboy, who is now definitely real, has returned. 

Jessie tosses her wedding ring at his box of jewelry and bones, convinced that this is exactly what he desired all along. 

She approaches her car, still dizzy and weak from blood loss, and drives away, only to discover the Space Cowboy concealed in the back seat. Jessie is involved in a car accident and is knocked out.

Jessie is still recovering from her tragedy months later. An attorney at Gerald's legal office supports her in covering up the incident in order to shield herself and the law company from controversy, but Jessie believes this is another kind of burying her pain, just as she did years before with her childhood abuse. 

To set herself free, Jessie writes to the actual Ruth, whom she hasn't talked to in decades, outlining what happened at the lake home and following events. 

The "Space Cowboy" was Raymond Andrew Joubert, a serial murderer, and necrophile who had been living in and plundering lake cottages in the region. 

At Joubert's court appearance, Jessie approached him, and Joubert mocked her "made of moonlight" assertion, acknowledging that the encounter had occurred and prompting Jessie to spit in his face. 

Being able to address the guy who had formerly scared her helped her to confront the other manipulative men in her life, including her father and Gerald, freeing her of fear and helping her to cope with her past more honestly. 

She apologizes for abandoning Ruth, admitting that Ruth faced her with a truth she was unable to accept at the time, and hopes they may rekindle their relationship. 

Jessie is able to sleep without nightmares for the first time since her trauma at the lake home after writing the letter.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Chained To The Bed, Glass Of Water, Handcuffed To The Bed, Heart Attack, Jessie Burlingame, Main Character, Short Story, Space Cowboy, Voices In Her Head


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Cell Summary

Stephen King, Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Cell

Published: 24, January 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Clayton Riddell, a struggling Maine artist, has just landed a graphic novel deal in Boston when "The Pulse," a signal broadcast over the global cell phone network, transforms all cell phone users into mindless zombie-like killers. 

Clay is standing in Boston Common when the Pulse goes off, sparking havoc all around him. As the "phoners" attack each other and anybody in sight, civilization falls.

Clay is forced together with middle-aged Thomas McCourt and youngster Alice Maxwell during the mayhem; the three runs to Tom's suburban house while Boston burns. 

The next day, they discover that the "phoners" have begun scavenging for food and joining together. 

Clay remains adamant about returning to Maine and reuniting with his son, Johnny. Tom and Alice accompany him since they have no other options. 

They travel north by night over destroyed New England, encountering other survivors and gaining frightening information about the operations of the phoners, who continue to attack non-phoners on sight.

They arrive at the Gaiten Academy, a prep school with one remaining teacher, Charles Ardai, and one surviving student, Jordan, after crossing into New Hampshire. 

The couple shows the newcomers where the local phoners congregate at night: they crowd into the Academy's soccer field and "turn off" till dawn. 

The phoners have clearly formed a hive mind and are acquiring psychic skills. The five survivors resolve to kill the flock, which they achieve with the help of two propane tanks.

Clay attempts to persuade everyone to go, but the others hesitate to forsake the elderly Ardai

That night, all of the survivors have the same terrifying dream: they are in a stadium, surrounded by phoners when a disheveled man wearing a Harvard University hooded sweatshirt approaches and kills them. 

When the heroes awaken, they recount their terrifying dream experiences and refer to him as "the Raggedy Man." 

A new flock has encircled their home, and the "normies" are confronted by the flock's symbolic spokesman: the man in the Harvard sweatshirt. 

In retaliation, the flock murders other normals and tells the heroes to travel north to a location in Maine known as "Kashwak." 

The flock psychically drives Ardai to commit suicide in order to silence their biggest complaint. 

Clay and his friends bury him and head north, as Clay is still desperate to get home.

On the way, they discover that as "flock-killers," they have been psychically designated as untouchables, to be avoided by other normies. 

Alice is slain by a loutish couple of normies after a trifling argument on the road. The party buries her and travels to Clay's hometown of Kent Pond, where they find notes from Johnny revealing that Clay's estranged wife Sharon was transformed into a phoner, but their son lived for several days until being pushed by the phoners to travel to the ostensible cell phone-free Kashwak. 

Clay has another nightmare in which he discovers that the normie refugees were all exposed to the Pulse once they arrived. 

He is still determined to find his kid, but after encountering another group of flock-killers, Tom and Jordan decide to forego the phoners' planned ceremonial killings. 

Before splitting off, the party finds that Alice's killers were psychically driven to do a heinous suicide act in exchange for touching an untouchable.

Clay sets out on his own, but the others soon reappear, driving a small school bus; the phoners have used their ever-increasing psychic powers to force them to rejoin him. 

Ray Huizenga, a construction worker, is one of the flock-killers who secretly provides Clay a cell phone and a phone number, advising him to use them when the time is appropriate; Ray then kills himself. 

The group arrives at Kashwak, the site of a half-assembled county fair, where an increasing number of phoners are behaving erratically and breaking away from the flock. 

Jordan believes that the Pulse was produced by a computer program and that, while it is still transmitting into the battery-powered cell phone network, it has become contaminated by a computer worm, infecting newer phone users with a mutated Pulse. 

Nonetheless, an army of phoners is waiting for them, and Clay recognizes Sharon among them. 

The phoners confine the group to the fair's exhibition hall for the night; tomorrow is the ceremonial execution, which will be psychically broadcast to all phoners and remaining normies worldwide.

Clay notices Ray's unsaid plan as he awaits their morning execution: Ray had packed the back of the bus with explosives, connected a phone-triggered detonator to them, and then executed himself to prevent the phoners from telepathically detecting the explosives. 

Jordan drives the vehicle into the midst of the inert phoners after the group breaks a window for him to squeeze through. 

Clay is able to detonate the bomb and wipe out the Raggedy Man and his flock thanks to a jury-rigged cell phone patch set up by pre-Pulse fair workers.

The majority of the party travels to Canada, where the coming winter will annihilate the region's defenseless and leaderless phoners. 

Clay travels south in search of his son. He comes across Johnny, who has a "corrupted" Pulse; he has walked away from Kashwak and appears to know his father. 

However, Johnny is an unstable shell of his former self, so Clay decides to give Johnny another Pulse blast, hoping that the progressively garbled signal will balance itself out and reset his son's brain. 

Clay dials and places the mobile phone to Johnny's ear towards the end of the book.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Brian Witten, Cell Phone, Character Development, Clayton Riddell, Dark Tower, George Romero, Isabelle Fuhrman, Richard Saperstein, John Cusack, Living Dead, Main Characters, Michael Benaroya, Page Turner, Raggedy Man, Salems Lot, Samuel L. Jackson, Shara Kay, Tod Williams, Tower Series, Viacom


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Needful Things Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Rural, Small Town, Supernatural, Thriller

Needful Things

Published: October 1991
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Rural, Small Town, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

In the little town of Castle Rock, Maine, a new shop called "Needful Things" opens, piquing the residents' interest. 

Leland Gaunt, the proprietor, is a nice older man from Akron, Ohio, who always appears to have something in the store that is ideally suited to each client that walks through his door. 

Considering the items – which includes a rare Sandy Koufax baseball card, a carnival glass lampshade, and a shard of petrified wood said to be from Noah's Ark - the prices are fairly modest, but he wants each buyer to perform a small trick on someone else in town. 

When striking a bargain with Gaunt, each consumer enters a trance and becomes extremely convenient to control, later forgetting anything unusual about the experience. 

Gaunt has comprehensive awareness of the individual townspeople's long-standing secret histories and disputes, and the pranks are his way of causing them to intensify.

Soon after opening his business, Gaunt characterizes local Sheriff Alan Pangborn and Polly Chalmers, Alan's lover and the owner of a nearby sewing shop, as "difficult clients" who are likely to question and meddle with him. 

Gaunt avoids Alan and instead provides Polly with an alleged old charm that both cures her arthritic pain and gives Gaunt power over her. 

Tensions in Castle Rock quickly rise after Polly's servant Nettie Cobb and her adversary Wilma Jerzyck kill each other with knives in a conflict prompted by local youngster Brian Rusk vandalizing Wilma's home and drunk Hugh Priest killing Nettie's dog. 

Many more rivalries emerge, fueled by the persons involved's personal agendas and secrets. 

Gaunt ultimately employs petty criminal John "Ace" Merrill as his assistant, presenting him with high-quality cocaine and implying the existence of buried wealth that may help him pay off a couple of drug traffickers. 

Ace's first mission is to acquire boxes of handguns, ammo, and blasting caps from a Boston garage; Gaunt quickly starts selling the weapons to his clients as a means of protecting their purchases.

Gaunt has deceived innocent people for millennia, tricking them into buying useless trash that mysteriously looks to be anything they cherish or desire most. 

They grow so concerned about their belongings being stolen that they readily buy the weapons he invariably offers and bargains away their souls until the entire town is engulfed in chaos and carnage. 

Ace begins to mistrust his new boss's magical heritage, but Gaunt uses intimidation and threats of vengeance against Alan and the community to keep him in line. 

Soon after, other incidents of violence occur at the same time, such as when gym teacher Lester Pratt fights Deputy John LaPointe, his fiancĂ©e's ex-boyfriend, and is ultimately killed in self-defense. 

Hugh Priest and Henry Beaufort, the proprietor of a tavern, murder each other in a gunfight. 

Brian commits suicide as a result of his guilt over his role in Wilma and Nettie's deaths, and town selectman Danforth "Buster" Keeton, who has been secretly embezzling thousands of dollars from public funds to fund his gambling addiction, attacks Deputy Norris Ridgewick before fleeing to his home and murdering his wife Myrtle with a hammer. 

Ace eventually recruits Buster to help him in his efforts for Gaunt.

With the violence in Castle Rock intensifying, Ace and Buster use the caps Ace brought back to lay dynamite all across town. 

Alan sets out to murder Ace after being convinced by Gaunt that he is to blame for the vehicle tragedy that killed his wife and kid. 

Polly recognizes the wickedness in the charm she purchased and destroys it. Norris contemplates suicide after discovering that his prank on Priest resulted in the tragic gunfight, but instead decides to go to the police station for assistance. 

As the explosives detonate, Norris injures Buster and Ace puts him out of his agony. Ace kidnaps Polly and insists that Alan hand up a stash of hidden cash that he purportedly stole. Norris murders Ace, leaving Alan to confront Gaunt.

Alan pulls Gaunt back and steals his valise, which holds the souls of his clients, using sleight of hand and magical novelties that come to life. 

Gaunt exits the scene, his automobile transforming into a horse-drawn cart, leaving the survivors to contemplate an uncertain future. 

The story concludes in the same way it began, with a first-person direct address announcing that a new and mysterious shop named "Answered Prayers" is set to open in a small Iowa town — an alarming indication that Gaunt is ready to restart his business cycle.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alan Pangborn, Amanda Plummer, Bonnie Bedelia, Castle Rock, Dark Half, Dead Zone, Ed Harris, Great Read, Human Nature, J.T. Walsh, Jack Cummins, King At His Best, Leland Gaunt, Max Von Sydow, New Store, Peter Yates, Salems Lot, Small Town, Town Of Castle


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