Stephen King

 

Stephen King in association with amazon.com

  Menu

Stephen King
Home

Stephen King
Biography

Richard Bachman

Best of
Stephen King

Stephen King
Books

Stephen King
e-Books

Stephen King
Movies

Stephen King
Audio Books

Stephen King
Book Sequels

Stephen King
Movie Sequels

Books About
Stephen King

Stephen King
Image Gallery

Collecting
Stephen King

Stephen King
Forum



Stephen KingAdd to Favorites



 

Danse Macabre
by Stephen King
Publisher: Berkley Publishing Group
Published: Aug 1997 (Paperback 437 pages)

 

 

Read a Chapter

Dedication

First Line

About the Book

 
Order the book

Paperback

Dedication

It's easy enough -- perhaps too easy -- to memorialize the dead. This book is for six great writers who are still alive.
ROBERT BLOCH
JORGE LUIS BORGES
RAY BRADBURY
FRANK BELKNAP LONG
DONALD WANDREI
MANLY WADE WELLMAN
Enter, Stranger, at your Riske: Here there be Tygers.

First Line

For me, the terror -- the real terror, as opposed to whatever demons and boogeys which might have been living in my own mind -- began on an afternoon in October of 1957

About the Book

In the fall of 1978 (between The Stand and The Dead Zone), Stephen King taught a course at the University of Maine on "Themes in Supernatural Literature." As he writes in the foreword to this book, he was nervous at the prospect of "spending a lot of time in front of a lot of people talking about a subject in which I had previously only felt my way instinctively, like a blind man." The course apparently went well, and as with most teaching experiences, it was as instructive, if not more so, to the teacher as it was to the students. Thanks to a suggestion from his former editor at Doubleday, King decided to write Danse Macabre as a personal record of the thoughts about horror that he developed and refined as a result of that course.

The outcome is an utterly charming book that reads as if King were sitting right there with you, shooting the breeze. He starts on October 4, 1957, when he was ten years old, watching a Saturday matinee of Earth vs. the Flying Saucers. Just as the saucers were mounting their attack on "Our Nation's Capital," the movie was suddenly turned off. The manager of the theater walked out onto the stage and announced, "The Russians have put a space satellite into orbit around the earth. They call it ... Spootnik."

That's how the whole book goes: one simple, yet surprisingly pertinent, anecdote or observation after another. King covers the gamut of horror as he'd experienced it at that point in 1978 (a period of about thirty years): folk tales, literature, radio, good movies, junk movies, and the "glass teat". It's colorful, funny, and nostalgic--and also strikingly intelligent.

 





Top