I had a thought about Stephen King’s death in this book. We have a couple of examples of what happens to characters(Jake and Callahan) when they “die” in their own worlds. They both ended up in Roland’s world, maybe King will too.
Of course I haven’t put a lot of thought into this or how it would all work. It’s just a random idea I thought I would share.
Hey, put it on the list of possibilities! He could come back as Mordred. These books are so unpredictable, there’s no telling who’ll show up. My money’s on Don Rickles appearing as the Crimson King. It’s just as probable as anything else!
So I just finished reading King’s The Eyes of the Dragon (which was a good, fun read).
Does anyone know of any connections between it and the DT series?
(Obviously, there’s Flagg.)
In particular, there’s a brief mention of someone named “Curran” who becomes a priest, who I’m sure I’ve seen mentioned somewhere else. Maybe even in a very big role. But I’m terrible with names.
Just finished the book, and I’m not at all sure King is dead. For one thing, King’s killing “himself” off after writing the fourth book - it seems like if he meant to kill that character off for good, he’d do it after the sixth book had been written. I don’t know why he couldn’t do it after the fourth and then explain it away somehow, but it just seems unlikely.
There’s also that little moment when Eddie wonders if he’ll meet King again. There’s a comment along the lines of “King would be much older then; Eddie would still be a young man.” That could just be a random thought of Eddie’s, or it could be something closer to the “Death would fall between them” comment earlier in the book. Again, it’s not impossible, but it just seems unlikely.
I, too, was worried about King writing himself into the book, but I thought it came off pretty well. He wasn’t godlike and omnipotent - he was just a confused guy who drank way too much. I thought it was a neat way of adding to the reality of the world.
Someone earlier asked about John Cullum, and where we’d heard about him before. My daughter asked me the same thing, and when I googled, all I came up with was that John Cullum did the audio recording of one of King’s books. (He was also in Northern Exposure – I forget the character’s name, the older guy who owned the bar, married to the young chick.)
Books connected to the Dark Tower series are in boldface at the start of Song of Susannah:
Salem’s Lot
The Stand
The Talisman
The Eyes of the Dragon
It
Insomnia
Rose Madder
Desperation
Bag of Bones
Black House
The Regulators
Skeleton Crew (doesn’t say which story)
Hearts in Atlantis
Everything’s Eventual (again, doesn’t say which story)
I recall a forward to one of his books, likely ‘Wolves Oj Calla’ actually, where he mentions that somebody who did the audio for one of his books was in bad shape health-wise. Perhaps this was a tribute to him.
I thought that this was referring to the way the timelines are set up; in “real world” time, Eddie & Roland are meeting King several years before Eddie is drawn by Roland. At least that’s what I remember thinking at the time I read that part of the book. I don’t recall the exact context now.
Yup, it was the afterwords on “Wolves of Calla”. John had an accident, and could no longer do voice recordings. He was freelance, as many are in that industry, and King was setting up a foundation for him and others in the same situation.
Well, there’s a short story about Roland in Everything’s Eventual, so that’s pretty obvious. I haven’t read Skeleton Crew since high school, but I would guess that “<Somebody’s> Shortcut” would make the list. That’s about as good a description of a thinny as he’s written. I’ll check it out tomorrow to see if there’s others.
Well, the title story in Everything’s Eventual could also be relevant. I mean, Dinky certainly sounds like he could end up hunting Breakers, or being a Low Man. Especially after reading Black House, which I now need to re-read.
It was Mrs. Todd’s Shortcut IIRC, and I never thought about it as a thinny before for some reason, but that fits perfectly!
Wow, now I have to reread it.
I’ve always thought that the creatures in the waste lands along Blaine’s route, the ones that “invaded” the world in “The Mist”, and the ones that came out of the car in From a Buick 8 were the same beings. I’m not sure where I got that idea.