Why You Shouldn’t Be Scared to Read Stephen King’s 11/22/63

Please welcome my guest, Amy Makechnie.  You can find Amy’s thoughtful and entertaining posts on reading, writing, running, and motherhood at Maisymak.  I think you’ll love her funny, yet insightful, voice.  Take it away Amy…


Stephen King  and I didn’t start off on the right foot.
I was ten years old and, for some reason, was allowed to watch The Shining on Sunday night television. I sat in rapt horror the entire two hours and then had nightmares about “redrum” for the next ten years.
This is classic King; there is no doubt he will scare the pants off you.
At age 15, I picked up King’s first book, Carrie.  It was so disturbing I threw it across the room and made a vow that never again would King enter my reading world.
This vow lasted 20 years until On Writing made an appearance.  Hesitantly, I began to read, and then absolutely devoured.
Then King surprised me by writing the novel 11/22/63, the date of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.  A divergent from his other works, 11/22/63 still became a New York Times Bestseller, like every other book he’s written.
How does he do it?
There is a quote from 11/22/63 that Jake Epping, the main character, narrates:

“In my life as a teacher, I used to hammer away at the idea of simplicity…there’s only one question and one answer.  What happened?  The reader asks.  This is what happened, the writer responds.  This…and this…and this, too.  Keep it simple.  It’s the only sure way home.  So I’ll try, although you must always keep in mind that in Derry, reality is a thin skim of ice over a deep lake of dark water.” 

    King can tell a story.  Line upon line he builds, until one detail is many, many details that all come together to deliver an almost spellbinding page-turner…you must find out what happens! 
    Though a whopping 842 pages long, 11/22/63 not only focuses on the assassination, but also many subplots, some more gruesome than others (King apparently just couldn’t help himself).
    The novel begins with Jake Epping, an English teacher in Maine, finding a portal in a diner.  He goes back in time to 1958, falls dangerously in love, and meets a troubled loner by the name of Lee Oswald.
    Based on thousands of facts that King personally read or tracked down with his assistant, Russell Dorr, 11/22/63 is fiction, but historically accurate.  And for me, that’s what made it such a fascinating read.  For instance, King might not know what specific conversations Oswald had with his neighbor, but we do know he bought a rifle and brought it to that second story window. We do know he had a fight with his wife the day before the shooting.  We do know that people really said, ‘gee whiz’ in 1960.

    11/22/63 hammers at these questions…If you could change the past,   Would you?  And, even if you could change it, should you?

    We come to see, that for every small and seemingly minute action we make, there is a much larger and potentially unwanted, future consequence.
    King writes, “The past is obdurate.  It doesn’t like to change.”  (That’s a good word for the Word Nerds!)
    The descriptions are masterful:  “An empty barn on the outskirts of town, the hayloft door swinging slowly open and closed on rusty hinges, first disclosing darkness, then hiding it, then disclosing it again.”
    Does Jake try to stop the assassination?  Should he?  Certainly in our reality, the president died, but in our fictional world?  You’ll have to read and find out!

    As for my truce with Stephen King, I may not be able to read the majority of his books without serious “imagination issues,” but let there be no doubt of my admiration for this extremely talented and hardworking craftsman.

    Amy Nelson Makechnie is the mother of four children and doesn’t deny that she occasionally shuts herself in her room to devour books.  She’s a contributing freelance writer for Deseret News, KSL, and has exactly six paragraphs appearing in an upcoming book on motherhood by powerofmoms.com.  She is in the final editing stage of an adult fiction novel and the author of the blog Maisymak.  She loves visitors!

    Julia
    Julia Tomiak
    I believe in the power of words to improve our lives, and I help people find interesting words to read. Member of SCBWI.

    12 Comments

    1. Back in years, Kujo Name I gave to first horse! He was my baby.. then named cat gun- slinger and he was….always loved Stephen King!!!!

    2. I can’t read the majority of King’s books either. They frighten me. My first book I read of his was “On Writing.” I always knew he was a good story-teller, but reading “On Writing” described a mastermind. I read a sample of “11/22/63” on my Kindle and was sucked into an amazing world of “what ifs” (like you said, Amy) and interesting characters. I really wanted to read the rest of the book, but it was a bit expensive & my book budget is low at the moment. When I can get it cheaper &/or used, this bk is at the top of my list. Great post Amy! Thanks Julia for such a friendly guest!

      Monique

    3. Fantastic post! I fell in love with King when I was young. (Too young to be reading his works probably!)

      I’ve been hearing great things about this latest of his and I really do need to get around to reading it!

    4. So, I recently read this book and did my own review on it, right in time for King’s birthday on September 21. I linked it below in case you want to see my thoughts!!!

      I loved reading 11/22/63, as I have loved every SK I have read, but as you said, the one thing that kept me guessing the entire time was about the assassination. In our world, JFK was assassinated, so how could King possibly write this book?

      I was hooked from beginning to end. I think that it has enough history for the history buffs, but not enough to make a regular non-history reader feel left out.

      Would I change the past? Not if the consequences are severe, as in the book!

      http://loveatfirstbook.com/2012/09/21/112263-by-stephen-king-book-18/

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