Wednesday, April 11, 2012

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft (Scribner Classics)


Amazon.com Reviewp/pShort and snappy as it is, Stephen King's IOn Writing/I really contains two books: a fondly sardonic autobiography and a tough-love lesson for aspiring novelists. The memoir is terrific stuff, a vivid description of how a writer grew out of a misbehaving kid. You're right there with the young author as he's tormented by poison ivy, gas-passing babysitters, uptight schoolmarms, and a laundry job nastier than Jack London's. It's a ripping yarn that casts a sharp light on his fiction. This was a child who dug Yvette Vickers from IAttack of the Giant Leeches/I, not Sandra Dee. "I wanted monsters that ate whole cities, radioactive corpses that came out of the ocean and ate surfers, and girls in black bras who looked like trailer trash." But massive reading on all literary levels was a craving just as crucial, and soon King was the published author of "I Was a Teen-Age Graverobber." As a young adult raising a family in a trailer, King started a story inspired by his stint as a janitor cleaning a high-school girls locker room. He crumpled it up, but his writer wife retrieved it from the trash, and using her advice about the girl milieu and his own memories of two reviled teenage classmates who died young, he came up with ICarrie/I. King gives us lots of revelations about his life and work. The kidnapper character in IMisery/I, the mind-possessing monsters in IThe Tommyknockers/I, and the haunting of the blocked writer in IThe Shining/I symbolized his cocaine and booze addiction (overcome thanks to his wife's intervention, which he describes). "There's one novel, ICujo/I, that I barely remember writing." p King also evokes his college days and his recovery from the van crash that nearly killed him, but the focus is always on what it all means to the craft. He gives you a whole writer's "tool kit": a reading list, writing assignments, a corrected story, and nuts-and-bolts advice on dollars and cents, plot and character, the basic building block of the paragraph, and literary models. He shows what you can learn from H.P. Lovecraft's arcane vocabulary, Hemingway's leanness, Grisham's authenticity, Richard Dooling's artful obscenity, Jonathan Kellerman's sentence fragments. He explains why IHart's War/I is a great story marred by a tin ear for dialogue, and how Elmore Leonard's IBe Cool/I could be the antidote. p King isn't just a writer, he's a true teacher. I--Tim Appelo/I p/pProduct Descriptionp/p"Long live the King" hailed IEntertainment Weekly/I upon publication of Stephen King?€™s IOn Writing/I. Part memoir, part master class by one of the bestselling authors of all time, this superb volume is a revealing and practical view of the writer?€™s craft, comprising the basic tools of the trade every writer must have. King?€™s advice is grounded in his vivid memories from childhood through his emergence as a writer, from his struggling early career to his widely reported, near-fatal accident in 1999?€”and how the inextricable link between writing and living spurred his recovery. Brilliantly structured, friendly and inspiring, IOn Writing/I will empower and entertain everyone who reads it?€”fans, writers, and anyone who loves a great story well told.
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