Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Stephen King's The Shining


Stephen King’s The Shining

When I was in Jr. High my mother and I used to go grocery shopping and sometimes she’d buy me a paperback before we left.  On one such occasion I picked out the Shining by Stephen King because it was one of my favorite movies and I wanted to see if the book was any different.  I don’t know what happened between then and now but somewhere down the line I read about half of it and then lost it or it got thrown away or destroyed or something.  Whatever the case may be being unable to finish that book haunted me, especially every time I watched the movie.  It gets even worse considering that the Shining is probably Stephen King’s most popular single series book aside for maybe The Stand and certainly his most recognizable.
 
I’m a huge Stephen King fan(not counting collections or anthologies I’d say I’ve read a dozen of his books) and its always bothered me that I wasn’t able to finish this one.  So earlier this year, before I even started this blog, I got a sudden compulsion to finish the two King books I gave up on.  The first one being The Shining, and the second being Salem’s Lot.  Once again I got halfway through it and loaned it to a friend.  He was kind enough to return it to me after he’d finished it but somewhere down the line I lost it.

I might as well stop writing my biography and get down to the review.  So what is The Shining?  Well if you ask most people I’m sure they’ll tell you it’s about a haunted hotel.  I totally disagree.  The Shining, to me at least, is about the relationship a father has with child.  That’s what the book focuses on the most, the ghost barely make an appearance.  The Shining is less of a horror novel(despite King’s reputation both then and now) and more Stephen King’s answer to the great American novel.  Back in the late 19th and early 20th century a lot of self-important authors wrote really dry books that focused more on characters than plot.  I’m sure they thought they were geniuses but all they accomplished was annoying English students for the next hundred years.

In the beginning of the book King focuses on character development rather than events.  After Jack Torrance’s interview for the caretaker job is over we’re “treated” to a three person perspective of his drinking and anger issues.   Jack flashes back to the height of his drinking problem and how it affected his family culminating in him breaking his son’s arm.  Then Wendy does the same thing, we get the same facts but a different perspective.  And finally Danny reminisces on the rough patch his parents had during this time and how it affected him.  At this point I didn’t really care what happened so long as all this internal monologue was over.

My wishes are granted when I read one of the most dated things I’ve read in a long time.  This next part I just found interesting and I’ll admit I got a little nostalgic for.  This chapter is just downright strange and even after reading the entire book I still don’t know what to make of it.  Jack drives to a drugstore with Danny.  Wendy is not with them so they’re not making a pit stop before going to the hotel and Jack doesn’t buy anything they’d need for the trip there.  What he does buy is a magazine, a newspaper, and a candy bar for Danny.  He pays with a five dollar bill and has enough change left to make a long distance call at a PHONE BOOTH.  (sigh) Before he makes the call he reflects on his drinking problem again!  I’ve read books with less character development and enjoyed them just fine.  The vast amounts of character development in this book are just distracting and sometimes they happen without warning.  I didn’t know when this flashback started but by the end of it I totally forgot he was at a phone booth calling a friend to thank him for getting him the caretaker job.

Next the Torrances are traveling to the hotel.  They are given a tour and we meet Dick Hollorann, the kindly middle aged black head chef of The Overlook.  The book, the movie, the miniseries, out of all these incarnations Dick Hallorann continues to be my favorite character even though he only serves as exposition and cannon fodder in the movie.  Before he leaves for Florida Hallorann takes Danny aside and explains what the shining is and how he can use it to contact him if anything at the hotel goes wrong.  Assuming you’ve never read the book or seen the movies I’ll explain what the shining is.  Dick Hallorann tells Danny to shine is to see future, past, and present events as well as reading minds and communicating telepathically to others who shine.  Danny does this through the use of his imaginary friend Tony(who is not represented by his index finger.  He sees Tony as a person of indeterminate age who’s always too far to get a good look at.).

I don’t want to make too many comparisons with the movie but here is where the two differ greatly and it came as a shock to me.  Jack Torrance is hired as winter caretaker and when I was younger all I thought that meant was that he was supposed to watch the place till spring.  Turns out Jack has a lot of responsibilities(which makes that All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy thing kinda ironic) including trimming hedge animals, dumping the pressure in the boiler 3 times a day, setting mouse traps, shoveling snow, and reshingling the hotel roof.  Towards the beginning of the book you never see him not doing anything and he starts with reshingling the roof.  While doing this he uncovers a wasp’s nest and bug bombs it and gives the empty nest to his son who places it in his room.  If you guessed this spells trouble later on for the family you’re right.  After everyone has gone to sleep the wasps suddenly awaken and start stinging Danny.  Jack captures the nest using a glass bowl and puts it outside in the cold to kill the remaining wasps.  I really don’t know what all this is supposed to symbolize.  Are the wasps ghosts, or the evil forces of the hotel, or just wasps that weren’t killed by the poison?

The next day they take Danny to the doctor.  Prior to the wasp stings Tony appeared to Danny again and he went into another one of his trances.  They run some epilepsy tests and find nothing which we already knew however when talking to the parents the doctor gives a very plausible explanation for his telepathy.  The doctor explains that Danny created Tony as a coping mechanism when they were having trouble and now that the trouble is over Tony is being phased out and this is what has been causing the trances.  The doctor goes on to tell them the reason he knows things he shouldn’t is simply because he’s a very observant child.  This was my favorite part of the book.  If you’ve read as much King as I have you find there isn’t usually a middle ground.  Something either is supernatural or isn’t.  Not only did this give a reasonable scientific argument against Danny’s supernatural powers it leaves us with a shred of doubt.  When the doctor is questioning him about Tony he asks Danny to summon him which he does and the doctor asks what Tony told him and he tells him that his mother was thinking about her deceased sister whom Danny never met.  It’s one of the few parts of this book that had an honestly eerie moment and leaves the reader with a sense of ambiguity and doubt.

While Jack is down in the basement pump the pressure out of the boiler he finds a scrapbook featuring news articles on The Overlooks colorful past.  He learns about the former owners, the scandals, and the murders that took place there.  After this he becomes obsessed with the history of The Overlook.  On a trip into town Jack visits the library to research old news articles about the hotel.  To satisfy his self-destructive nature Jack calls Ullman to tell him about all the things he’s uncovered about The Overlook, chastise him for not telling him about the more nasty things, and let him know he’s thinking about writing a book about the hotel.  Ullman obviously upset tells him as caretaker he doesn’t need to divulge any information regarding the hotel’s past and threatens him letting him know he’s going to go to the board with this.

During this time Jack starts habitually wiping his mouth(a habit he picked up when he was drinking) having migraines and starts chewing Excedrin.  It reminds me a lot of the way the father in The Amityville Horror reacts to the forces in his house.  Later that night back at the hotel Jack gets a call from his friend on the board and he relates what Ullman told him.  Jack kisses his friend’s ass and promises he won’t write the book.    The next day Jack continues his caretaking job by trimming the hedge animals.  He takes a break to goof off at the playground.  Every now and then he hears a noise and looks back to see either the snow gathered on the tops of the animals has fallen off or they’ve changed position.  Every time he looks back the animals have moved and he starts to think he’s hallucinating.  I believe this is the first time anything spooky has happened.

Danny’s curiosity gets the better of him and he enters room 217.  Meanwhile both Jack and Wendy are taking a nap.  Jack is having a nightmare about his abusive alcoholic father.  He hears his father’s voice coming through the CB radio ordering him to kill his wife and child, goes into hysterics, and starts smashing it.  With the snowstorm interfering with the phone lines and the destroyed CB they don’t have any way of contacting the outside world.  Wendy hearing Jack’s screams rushes over and snaps him out of his reverie.  Once she gets Jack calmed down they start to wonder where their son is.  They start calling out his name, when he doesn’t answer they start looking for him.  When they find him he doesn’t respond to them just merely stares vacantly at them sucking his thumb.  Wendy sees the scratches on his neck and immediately blames Jack

Wendy locks herself and Danny away in their room and Jack wanders around ending up in the hotel bar.  Lately Jack has been suffering a great deal of stress and anger not to mention seeing what he believes to be hallucinations so when an apparition appears at the bar and starts serving him drinks he just accepts it.  After a while Wendy comes to her senses and realizes the only way she can get help for Danny is seek out Jack.  She reasons that he must have attacked Danny the same way he destroyed the radio.  She goes down to the bar with Danny to ask for help getting down the mountain.  While his parents are arguing about what happened to Danny he snaps out of it and runs to Jack screaming, “Oh daddy it was her!”  After hearing this Wendy exclaims she didn’t do anything while Jack enjoys having the shoe on the other foot for once.  The three of them go down to the kitchen where Wendy continues to defend herself and Jack tells her he believes.  After he calms down Danny explains what happened after he went into room 217.  Afraid they might not be alone Jack goes to investigate room 217.  Other than the smell of soap and a damp bathmat he finds nothing.  Looking back he thinks he sees a shadow behind the curtain of the claw foot tub and runs out.

I’ll admit romantic relationships confuse the hell out of me.  I’ll never understand the psychological roles and power struggles between couples even after I’ve witnessed them time and time again.  I’ve seen couples fight over the most trivial matters just for the promise of makeup sex.  After they put Danny to bed they start discussing getting him help.  Wendy wants to get out of the hotel as soon as possible, Jack feeling comfortable there gives reasons why they should stay.  Most of Jack’s arguments I tend to agree with.  Because of the snowstorms if they walk out they could be caught in a storm and die and insists that the best thing to do is stay put until help arrives or the weather clears up.  She reminds him they have a snowmobile and he explains he’s never driven one before but if he can figure it out he’ll drive them out of there as soon as the weather gets better.  During this debate Jack is sensually caressing her and I just don’t get it.  Did they just forget everything that happened that night, her accusing him of abusing their son, him denying it, her calling him names, and her being accused herself.  It reminds me of all those bullshit clichés you see in movies and tv shows.  Where a man and a woman get pissed and start yelling at each other and the next thing you know they’re making out for no reason.  Shit like that never happens in real life, there’s really no link between anger and passion.  Usually when I get in a fight with girlfriends they either storm out of the room or start throwing shit or we just break up.  This love scene just seems unrealistic and forced.

The next day Jack checks out the snowmobile to see if it works.  He finds all the necessary parts to make it work but some part of him(possibly the part that’s being controlled and driven mad by the hotel) forces him to throw the battery in the snow outside.

The next chapter opens with Danny playing in the snow and then gets chased by the hedge animals.  His parents hear his screams and come rushing to find him at the steps of the front entrance.  Danny tells them what happened and despite the fact that the same thing happened to his father he doesn’t believe him.  When Danny pleads with his father that the same thing happened to him Jack flips out and slaps him.  Wendy enraged at the abuse tries to tear Danny away from Jack and they have a tug of war with the child before he yells at them both and they come to their senses.

The next day all three members awake to loud banging and clacking noises coming from the distance.  After several protests from Wendy Jack gets up to check out the source of the noise.  In the hallway the antique elevator has gone haywire and is going up and down on its own.  Using an emergency shutdown Jack stops the elevator between floors.   Jack has an argument with his wife about the cause of the short circuit, he claims it’s just a run of the mill electrical problem, she claims it’s ghosts.  Jack looks in and exclaims there’s nothing in there then Wendy jumps in and throws out wads of confetti and a mask.  This is another one of my favorite parts in this book.  It’s creepy, effective, and catches the reader totally by surprise.  The only problem is it takes place on page 300 rather than sometime earlier on in the book.

After that Danny starts to realizes how desperate his situation is and telepathically calls Dick Hallorann in Florida.  Meanwhile Hallorann runs around picking up produce for his job as chef at a resort in Florida.  While driving he receives Danny’s message and nearly runs his cadillac off the road.  To calm his nerves and think he turns into a drive-in and orders a root beer float.  Before his order comes he grows anxious and speeds off.  Hallorann returns to the resort he works at and convinces his boss to give him the weekend off by lying about a fictional son and a gunshot wound. 


While Hallorann rushes to get to a flight to Colorado Jack goes further and further insane and Danny starts to accept the hopelessness of his predicament.  Jack’s obsession with the hotel has completely isolated him from his family and he spends most of his time in the basement and ballroom.  Wendy concerned about Jack goes down there to check on him and he goes into a rage and strangles her.  She breaks an empty wine bottle over his head and he’s knocked unconscious.  With Danny’s help she drags him to pantry.  His protests can be heard all the way to the caretaker quarters.

Meanwhile Dick Hallorann has finally made his flight is on his way to the Overlook.  His car is nearly ran off the road by a snow plow.  The plow’s driver is nice enough to lend him his gloves and tells him a friend of his who owns a filling station will loan him a snow mobile if he mentions his name.  As he is approaching the hotel he is attacked by the one of the hedge animals and he is very nearly killed until he lights it on fire.

Back at the hotel Grady visits Jack in the pantry.  He tells Jack he doubts his commitment to fixing his family while Jack insists it was a temporary setback.  He promises to fix the problem by killing Wendy and Danny and Grady lets him out.

Wendy debates internally with herself whether she should go to the kitchen and check on Jack.  When she finally does go downstairs she finds Jack waiting for her with a roque mallet.  While trying to run away from Jack she gets hit by the mallet a few times, breaking some ribs and injuring her kneecap.  Jack has her on the ground about to finish her off when rolls towards him tripping him and he falls down the stairs.  Jack quickly recovers retrieving the mallet and Wendy jumps on him stabbing him in the back with the kitchen knife she started carrying with her everywhere after Jack started going crazy.  After Jack goes down she drags herself back to the caretaker’s quarters where she finds Danny is missing and barricades herself in the bathroom.  Jack follows her and bashes through a few doors to get to her when the hotel warns him that Hallorann is coming.

After surviving a hedge animal mauling and being inadvertently set on fire Hallorann struggles ever forward toward the Overlook.  When he finally makes it through the doors he is met by Jack who promptly knocks him upside the head with the roque mallet.  Yeah looks like no matter how you slice it Hallorann’s destiny is to enter in the final act and be quickly dispatched.

There’s an issue of time displacement in the next chapter(this is common in King novels, especially towards the end).  It begins with Danny dreaming in his room before Wendy goes down and has a fight with Jack.  In his dream Tony warns Danny about what’s happening and tells him he needs to run and hide.

After knocking out Hallorann Jack pursues Danny.  When he finds Danny the two have a confrontation.  Danny tries to tell his father how the hotel is manipulating him and for a moment Jack comes back to his senses.  Jack tells Danny to run and remember how much he loves him before he becomes possessed by the hotel again.  Danny also reveals that he forgot to dump the boiler today and the hotel is about to explode.

As Hallorann, Danny, and Wendy race to safety Jack runs down to the basement to release the pressure in the boiler.  Unfortunately for Jack he doesn’t make it in time and the hotel explodes.  The book ends with an epilogue the following summer.  Wendy and Danny are visiting Hallorann at the new hotel he’s working at in Maine.  Wendy and Hallorann talk about Danny’s occasional nightmares about the Overlook, she mentions a job offer by Jack’s friend Al Shockley, and they discuss her moving to Maryland.





In all good conscience I can’t give this a good score simply because I’m a fan of Stephen King.  The Shining can be incredibly boring at times and has way too much character development.  This book wouldn’t suffer at all if it were cut down 100 pages.  For a ghost story it lacks anything spooky and is not very atmospheric.  It tends to center on the family and forgets it’s a ghost story.  The family while interesting cannot carry this story entirely on their own.  78 D.  It’s not the worst book I’ve ever read but it is boring and unimaginative.  There was enough in this book to keep my attention to finish it but it still wasn’t too fascinating of a read and it’s really not one of my favorite Stephen King books.  If you’re looking for a good Stephen King book I’d say go no further than The Bachman Books or Four Past Midnight or Different Seasons.  His short story collections are pretty damn good too.  A great place to start would be with Skeleton Crew.

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