Rereading "It"

Status
Not open for further replies.

MacAllister

'Twas but a dream of thee
Staff member
Boss Mare
Administrator
Super Moderator
Moderator
Kind Benefactor
VPX
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
22,010
Reaction score
10,707
Location
Out on a limb
Website
macallisterstone.com
Damn this is an excellent book. I'm reading it as a writer for the first time, instead of as a reader. I'm frankly blown away by the things King pulls off--and how lovingly it's all set up--and how he never flinches from showing you the nasty things, in fact he rubs your face in it...
 

awatkins

Not harboring illegal parrot
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
6,284
Reaction score
1,375
Location
Parrot Cage, Alabama
Website
www.geocities.com
Oh, I LOVE that book. That's one of my regularly scheduled to-be-read-again books.

I just love his work--the conversational, friendly style with just the right amount of gore and terror in all the right, sometimes unexpected, places. Draws you in, makes you see and feel what's going on, gets you inside the minds of the characters. Ahh, if only I could master that!
 

Sarita

carpe noctem
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 18, 2005
Messages
9,036
Reaction score
4,070
Location
Pennsylvania
I'd like to reread It, or at least finish It at some point when I stop peeing my pants from It.:ROFL: The first time I tried to read It, I was 16. I got so scared that I put it in the trash outside the house, thinking if I didn't get it away from me, it could get me. I tried again a couple days later and made it about 3/4 of the way through. I've never been able to bring myself to finish the damn book even though I've read and enjoyed almost every other book of his.
 

MacAllister

'Twas but a dream of thee
Staff member
Boss Mare
Administrator
Super Moderator
Moderator
Kind Benefactor
VPX
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
22,010
Reaction score
10,707
Location
Out on a limb
Website
macallisterstone.com
What's cool, Sara, is taking the sentences apart to see how he builds that scare, makes it breathe, then turns it loose to romp through our imaginations...
 
Last edited:

BlueTexas

Back from self-exile land.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,159
Reaction score
220
Location
Aledo, TX
awatkins said:
Mac, we should invite Three to go to the library with us. And bring balloons. Muwah.

The year after I read that book, I started a new school. My busstop was at the corner of Pennywise Lane, I had to step over a sewer grate to board, and this was in Derry, NH. Phobias, anyone?
 

Perks

delicate #!&@*#! flower
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 12, 2005
Messages
18,984
Reaction score
6,937
Location
At some altitude
Website
www.jamie-mason.com
You know, I have to disagree a bit on this one. It is one of the most terrifying, nailbiting horror novels ever - right up until the last forty pages or so. I was so furious at the tacked-on bull*** ending that I threw the book across the room. I know Uncle Jim threatens that a lot, but I actually hurled the book out the bedroom door. King, god-love-him, does this sometimes. I don't know if he gets the thirty-ninth call from his editor saying, "Steve, we need it now!" or what, but sometimes his endings seem to have nothing to do with the previous eight hundred pages. It offended me in this manner more than any other novel I've ever read.

So, I won't be rereading it - unless paid handsomely to do it. I don't suppose there's any chance of that. It's a shame really, the first three hundred seventy-two chapters were pure genius...
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,311
Perks said:
You know, I have to disagree a bit on this one. It is one of the most terrifying, nailbiting horror novels ever - right up until the last forty pages or so. I was so furious at the tacked-on bull*** ending that I threw the book across the room. I know Uncle Jim threatens that a lot, but I actually hurled the book out the bedroom door. King, god-love-him, does this sometimes. I don't know if he gets the thirty-ninth call from his editor saying, "Steve, we need it now!" or what, but sometimes his endings seem to have nothing to do with the previous eight hundred pages. It offended me in this manner more than any other novel I've ever read.

So, I won't be rereading it - unless paid handsomely to do it. I don't suppose there's any chance of that. It's a shame really, the first three hundred seventy-two chapters were pure genius...

Matter of taste, I guess. I thought the end of It was the best part. Pure genius.
 

Euan H.

Unspeakable
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
530
Reaction score
106
Location
London
Website
euanharvey.com
Perks said:
You know, I have to disagree a bit on this one. It is one of the most terrifying, nailbiting horror novels ever - right up until the last forty pages or so. I was so furious at the tacked-on bull*** ending that I threw the book across the room.
I'm with you on this. I thought it was one of the best horror books I'd read--up to the end. I wasn't as upset as you sound, but I definitely found it dissapointing. But...I think King got stuck. I mean, how can you end a book like that? It's like in horror movies when as soon as you see what the monster is, the fear goes.

But the beginning...damn. Little boy, rain, paper boat, and then bam! I wish I could write like that.
 

louisgodwin

Back from the dead
Poetry Book Collaborator
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Sep 11, 2005
Messages
1,610
Reaction score
548
Let me see, I think it's been about 12 years or so since I read It. That book is my favorite singular work of King's. (I'm a Dark Tower fan.) I read it just a short time after the t.v. miniseries originally aired, and I thought I would probably see the faces of those actors in my mind when I read the book, but King has a way of making you see only what he wants you to see. I do remember feeling vaguely disappointed about the ending, but it was so damn long ago, I can't really remember why. I think I was ticked off that one of the characters died.
 

Josh

Registered
Joined
Sep 22, 2005
Messages
19
Reaction score
3
IT is my favorite King book as well. I read it when I was 13 or 14 and it had some great scares.

I reread IT just a few years ago. I never realized how profoundly sad the book is when I read it as a child. King says a lot in this book, about childhood and loss. On one level its a great scare, but that's just the surface story.

I think it impacted me more on the second reading. When I set the book down the first time, I thought it was a great horror book. When I set the book down the second time, I thought it was a great book.
 

PattiTheWicked

Unleashing Hell.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 15, 2005
Messages
3,999
Reaction score
1,249
Website
www.pattiwigington.com
The first time I read IT, i was about sixteen, home alone, on a dark and stormy night. I only wish I was making this up. There I am, sitting there reading about Pennywise the clown creeping about through Derry's drain pipes, and all of a sudden the kitchen sink -- twelve feet away from me -- BACKS UP AND GURGLES AT ME. I screamed, ran outside and sat in my car with the doors locked until my parents got home.

I try to reread it every few years and scare the poo out of myself.

I just finished rereading The Stand, another one of those Gotta Read It Again novels. Oh, how I love it. Randall Flagg is one bad mo'fo.
 

Perks

delicate #!&@*#! flower
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 12, 2005
Messages
18,984
Reaction score
6,937
Location
At some altitude
Website
www.jamie-mason.com
PattiTheWicked said:
The first time I read IT, i was about sixteen, home alone, on a dark and stormy night. I only wish I was making this up. There I am, sitting there reading about Pennywise the clown creeping about through Derry's drain pipes, and all of a sudden the kitchen sink -- twelve feet away from me -- BACKS UP AND GURGLES AT ME. I screamed, ran outside and sat in my car with the doors locked until my parents got home.

I try to reread it every few years and scare the poo out of myself.

I just finished rereading The Stand, another one of those Gotta Read It Again novels. Oh, how I love it. Randall Flagg is one bad mo'fo.


Totally and completely agree on The Stand. I have to read it every couple of years.. all 1186 pages of it as only the uncut version will do.
 

Writer2011

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 13, 2005
Messages
5,209
Reaction score
331
Location
North Carolina
I thought IT was an excellent story until the very end. I don't understand why Stephen King puts in those crappy endings either. Just like Bag of Bones, it was a very thrilling story until the very end. Overall though, I truly like his stories...his writing style is a bit strange for me but hey, you either love him or hate him
 

kristie911

Happy to be here
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jul 17, 2005
Messages
4,449
Reaction score
2,460
Location
my own little world
PattiTheWicked said:
The first time I read IT, i was about sixteen, home alone, on a dark and stormy night. I only wish I was making this up. There I am, sitting there reading about Pennywise the clown creeping about through Derry's drain pipes, and all of a sudden the kitchen sink -- twelve feet away from me -- BACKS UP AND GURGLES AT ME. I screamed, ran outside and sat in my car with the doors locked until my parents got home.

I try to reread it every few years and scare the poo out of myself.

I just finished rereading The Stand, another one of those Gotta Read It Again novels. Oh, how I love it. Randall Flagg is one bad mo'fo.

I loved IT...never fails to creep me out. But The Stand is by far my favorite King novel. (and I've read everything he's written) I've read it at least 8 times. I had to buy another copy because my first one fell apart. What great writing!
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,311
aspiringwriter said:
I thought IT was an excellent story until the very end. I don't understand why Stephen King puts in those crappy endings either. Just like Bag of Bones, it was a very thrilling story until the very end. Overall though, I truly like his stories...his writing style is a bit strange for me but hey, you either love him or hate him

That's another novel where I loved the ending. I think Bag of Bones is King's best novel, and deserved all the awards it won. For me, King puts in great endings, not crappy ones.
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,311
PattiTheWicked said:
The first time I read IT, i was about sixteen, home alone, on a dark and stormy night. I only wish I was making this up. There I am, sitting there reading about Pennywise the clown creeping about through Derry's drain pipes, and all of a sudden the kitchen sink -- twelve feet away from me -- BACKS UP AND GURGLES AT ME. I screamed, ran outside and sat in my car with the doors locked until my parents got home.

I try to reread it every few years and scare the poo out of myself.

I just finished rereading The Stand, another one of those Gotta Read It Again novels. Oh, how I love it. Randall Flagg is one bad mo'fo.

Randall Flagg is about as scary as it gets. He appears in many of King's novels, even the Dark Tower novels, though sometimes under a different name. But his initials are still usually RK.

Randall Flagg alone is enough to grant King his fame.
 

PattiTheWicked

Unleashing Hell.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 15, 2005
Messages
3,999
Reaction score
1,249
Website
www.pattiwigington.com
Jamesaritchie said:
Randall Flagg is about as scary as it gets. He appears in many of King's novels, even the Dark Tower novels, though sometimes under a different name. But his initials are still usually RK.

Randall Flagg alone is enough to grant King his fame.

I'll probably get rocks thrown at me for admitting this, but I still haven't gotten around to reading the Dark Tower series.

I do remember reading Hearts in Atlantis and noticing a character who had the RF initials, and was some kind of militant leader. Bet it's the same dude.

Flagg is spooooooooky.

And I can't even watch anything with Jamey Sheridan in it, because all I can think about is him walkin' down the highway in those boots....
 

Perks

delicate #!&@*#! flower
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 12, 2005
Messages
18,984
Reaction score
6,937
Location
At some altitude
Website
www.jamie-mason.com
PattiTheWicked said:
And I can't even watch anything with Jamey Sheridan in it, because all I can think about is him walkin' down the highway in those boots....

That's so funny! I can't watch him either after The Stand. I was sort of horrified that they attempted a film version of that book, but was pleasantly surprised. I also always think of that movie when I see Miguel Ferrer.
 

Perks

delicate #!&@*#! flower
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 12, 2005
Messages
18,984
Reaction score
6,937
Location
At some altitude
Website
www.jamie-mason.com
Did any of you It afficianados see the film version? Was it any good? It seems like that would be a very hard movie to make AND it had John Ritter in it, which always raises a red flag for me. (But to be fair, he could be quite good when he wasn't being ridiculous.)
 

kristie911

Happy to be here
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jul 17, 2005
Messages
4,449
Reaction score
2,460
Location
my own little world
PattiTheWicked said:
And I can't even watch anything with Jamey Sheridan in it, because all I can think about is him walkin' down the highway in those boots....

OMG...I feel the same way! He was on ER for awhile and it creeped me out everytime I saw him. I kept waiting for him to turn into a demon!
 

Writer2011

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 13, 2005
Messages
5,209
Reaction score
331
Location
North Carolina
Just a side note...Stephen Kings opus DESPERATION is coming on ABC either in November or May of 2006.... It's already been filmed and i've seen a few pictures from it... Looks GOOD!!!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.