
SHOW NOTES
1. Intro - Celebrate suffering!
2. Stephen King bio
3. Was it timing?
4. Predecessors
4. “Encroachment”
5. Our brothers and sisters in pain
A new episode - only a few weeks since the previous new episode! What gives?
Another three parter, that’s what! This time we take a look at Stephen King, focusing in particular on the question which seems to haunt the pages of his novels, supernatural or otherwise.
The question is simply this: How bad can it get?
In our attempt to sneak past the dragon and reach the Father of Souls, surely the reality of suffering is the greatest stumbling block for many, many people. The horrors of the previous century alone were truly apocalyptic, worthy of an End Times scenario. How could anything be worse than Nazi Germany and its “final solution”? And yet, as society mulls over such advances as “therapeutic cloning” new horrors loom just over the horizon. Never heard of it? Well, let’s just say that therapeutic cloning is not therapeutic for the clone. In fact, he or she is grown, God knows where or how, so that his or her organs may be harvested systematically as ready-made transplants for those lucky people, the non-clones. So here you have genocide-of-the-future which involves creating the people targeted for mass murder.
At any rate, the stumbling block is obvious: how could you possibly trust a Father of Souls who permits such horrors? Why go to him at all?
Certainly, Stephen King is asking this question. Certainly, anyone who has seen the film The Mist has this question in mind as he clicks Stop on the remote. The film goes further down the road to nihilism than King did in the original novella, but it’s a logical progression based on all that came before — especially given the role religion plays in both film and novella. But I won’t spoil it for you. Except to say not since the original Night of the Living Dead has life been portrayed in such a stark, horrific light — the film is utterly tone deaf to the hope many of us have in God. But then The Mist is also somewhat tone deaf when it comes to humor. Perhaps there is a connection.
At any rate, we don’t get so heavy-handed in this first episode of our Stephen King retrospective. Instead, we sprint through his biography and touch a bit on the origins of King’s particular brand of spookiness and horror. Dig in!
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