Stephen King    
Stephen King Biography
 
   

Stephen King Book Reviews:

BLACK HOUSE

BAG OF BONES

BLOOD AND SMOKE

COLORADO KID

CYCLE OF THE WEREWOLF

CARRIE

CUJO

CELL

CHRISTINE

DANSE MACABRE

DARK HALF

DEAD ZONE

DESPERATION

DIFFERENT SEASONS

DOLORES CLAIBORNE

DREAM CATCHER

DRAWING OF THE THREE

EYES OF THE DRAGON

EVERYTHINGS EVENTUAL

FIRESTARTER

FROM A BUICK 8

FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT

GERALDS GAME

INSOMNIA

HEARTS IN ATLANTIS

IT

MISERY

Stephen King Book Reviews:

NEEDFUL THINGS

NIGHTMARES AND DREAMSCAPES

ON WRITING

PET CEMETERY

RAGE

REGULATORS

RIDING THE BULLET

ROADWORK

ROSE MADDER

SALEM'S LOT

SKELETON CREW

SONG OF SUSANNAH

STORM OF THE CENTURY

THE DARK TOWER

THE GREEN MILE

THE GUNSLINGER

THE LONG WALK

THE PLANT

THE RUNNING MAN

THE SHINING

THE TALISMAN

THE TOMMYKNOCKERS

THE WASTE LANDS

THINNER

TOM GORDON

WIZARD AND GLASS

WOLVES OF THE CALLA

 

The Dead Zone

 Some of King’s best works are the novels and stories that combine the terrifying with heart-wrenching drama. The Dead Zone, the captivating novel that inspired not only the Cronenberg film, but also spawned a hit USA network television series, is one such work.

The Dead Zone is the tale of Johnny Smith, who, under normal circumstances, would be a truly forgettable human being. Johnny has, after all, what many would consider the “standards” of life. A position as a teacher at a local public school. A girlfriend that he loves, but has only simply kissed and nothing more. And, of course, a loving mother.

However, as fate plays the part of the true villain in this story, Johnny’s life is suddenly sent into chaos after he is sent into a coma as the result of a near-fatal car accident. Johnny remains comatose for five years only to wake up to find his world completely turned upside down.

His girlfriend, Susan, is now married with a child. His mother has joined the ranks of the fundamentally religious and, best of all, the accident has left him with a “dead zone” within his brain. This zone causes Johnny to experience blinding headaches as well as giving Johnny what will become his own personal albatross: the ability to see the future.

As Johnny realizes the true weight of his newfound gift, he begins to hate what the accident bestowed upon him even as it would cause others to see in him some sort of a hero. While he resists the power to use it, he also realizes, or at least feels, some responsibility to the world around him as he attempts to save others while using his gift.

However, it’s when he meets Greg Stillson, a local politician, and shakes his hand that he sees evil inside the man before him and takes it upon himself to change the course of the future. Intent on killing Stillson as the “dead zone” within his head transforms into a brain tumor, Johnny speeds along the course that fate put before him on the night of his fatal crash.

The Dead Zone, like The Stand and The Shining, is one of King’s most dramatic and fully realized works to date. Taking cues from classic Greek tragedy and modern day superheroes, Johnny Smith becomes the everyman who suddenly feels the weight of the world upon his shoulders. Readers will, no doubt, both sympathize and pity Johnny as he takes the final steps toward his destiny.

   
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