Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

Stephen King and Hearts in Atlantis

You can be talking with serious people and watch their eyes change when they find you read Stephen King. I refuse to back down. Yep, I read Stephen King. I think he is a brilliant author, some books better than others, but when I am reading, sometimes I can feel my blood move faster through my veins as I wait for a life-threatening situation to resolve itself.

I can trust Stephen King. He taps into who we really are. I can also trust that most of the good guys will still be standing at the end, and most of the bad guys will meet a truly horrible and well-deserved death. I can trust that when bad things happen to good people, other good people will gather round, band together and the gestalt of all that willingness to help one another will prevail against the darkness.

The scariest book I ever read by Stephen King didn’t have any monsters, per se. It didn’t have the Walking Man, or any Wolves of Calla or any great evil, other than the evil that lurks in the human heart. The scariest book I have ever read by Stephen King was Hearts in Atlantis.

Hearts in Atlantis wasn’t even a novel, it was several shorter stories combined in one book. But the title story, Hearts in Atlantis, was about addiction. Not just any old addiction, either, but an addiction I had experienced.

It was my sophomore year in university. I had sailed through the trauma of freshman year with grace, great grades, I felt very confident. That summer, back home, I had taken bridge lessons, and holy smokes – I loved the game. It all made sense to me, and I loved figuring the probabilities and the possibilities, who had what card, how I could finesse that card, how I could WIN. I loved winning.

During the summer after my freshman year, I played a lot of bridge. So it was no wonder, when I got back to school, that I discovered a whole world of bridge players. Early in the morning, before my first class, I would head for the student union and pick up a coffee – and often a game.

The problem was, if I had a particularly good hand, the little devil on my shoulder would whisper “if you skip your class, you can win this hand!” and the bigger problem was – I would listen. I could afford to skip a class here and there, I did the homework. But through the year, I spent more and more time playing bridge and less and less time in the library. At the end of my sophomore year, my grade point average had fallen one full point.

That got my attention. I really wanted academic success. I spent my junior and senior years desperately working to get my grade point average back up to an acceptable level. Once the GPA falls, however, it only inches back up incrementally. It took almost straight A’s to undo the damage I had done to myself the year of bridge playing.

After graduation, I fell back into bridge playing on the duplicate level. But after a while, I noticed that while I travelled from place to place, it was the same smoke-filled room in every new city where we ended up, surrounded by a vampire-like culture that slept a lot of the day and only came alive at night. I also noticed that most of the conversations were about “the one that got away” – how such and such a hand might have been played best. Yawn. Yawn. Yawn. So one day, I just walked away, and never looked back.

Like all addictions, from time to time I hear bridge calling. From time to time I will enter a friendly game – party bridge, but it is no longer irresistable, no longer so seductive, so attractive. Thank God. Reading Stephen King brings back the terror of addiction.

February 18, 2007 - Posted by | Books, Family Issues, Fiction, Friends & Friendship, Living Conditions, Random Musings, Shopping, Social Issues, Spiritual

3 Comments »

  1. I absolutely adore Stephen King. My absolute favourites are Bag of Bones and Everything Eventual. He’s got a great style.

    When it comes to addictions, I think I have an incurable one. I can’t stop cracking my knuckles. It’s not substance addiction but close enough 😉

    kinano's avatar Comment by kinano | February 18, 2007 | Reply

  2. How weird – I was having this conversation with a colleague at work on Friday and she was almost apologising for reading Stephen King. I keep forgetting that Stephen King wrote The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption, both of which became excellent films; the latter something of a cult classic. I’ve only read one of his ‘Gerald’s Game’ but it was really good and I always meant to read more but, you know how it is, too many books and only one lifetime in which to read them. Ditto for films.

    mrschaieb's avatar Comment by mrschaieb | February 18, 2007 | Reply

  3. My all time favorite is The Stand. And I loved the TV series (HBO?) they did which was so true to the book.

    Mrs. Chaieb, I had totally forgotten he did The Shawshank Redemption, one of my all time favorite movies. And Stand By Me – have you seen/read that?

    Kinano – I think you are right – great style, and great insight into the workings of the human mind and spirit.

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | February 19, 2007 | Reply


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