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Yap yap yap, goes SFG.
For months, Lisey has been hounded for access to Scott's papers by "the collectors and the academics who maintained their positions in large part by examining the literary equivalent of navel-lint in each other's abstruse journals; ambitious, overeducated goofs who had lost touch with what books and reading were actually about and could be content to go on spinning straw into footnoted fool's gold for decades on end." (Take that, Dr. Bloom!)
What makes you think I finished it? What a waste of twenty eight dollars
The Toronto Star had a pretty even review.
I think poor Stevie may have a really good piece of Literature in him. Just a hunch really. But would it be well received? The majority of his fan base would be mortified if he submitted something...I dunno, akin to Edward Jones and what Literature pundit is going to be the first to write that Stevie has written a piece of Literature deserving of a Pulitzer? Just thinking out loud.
Just to correct you, he won the 2003 Distinguished Contribution to American Letters from the National Book Award Foundation. Bit of a difference.SFG75 said:Well, he did win the 2003 National Book Award.
Stephen King said:For far too long the so-called popular writers of this country and the so-called literary writers have stared at each other with animosity and a willful lack of understanding. This is the way it has always been. Witness my childish resentment of anyone who ever got a Guggenheim.
But giving an award like this to a guy like me suggests that in the future things don't have to be the way they've always been. Bridges can be built between the so-called popular fiction and the so-called literary fiction. The first gainers in such a widening of interest would be the readers, of course, which is us because writers are almost always readers and listeners first. You have been very good and patient listeners and I'm going to let you go soon but I'd like to say one more thing before I do.
Tokenism is not allowed. You can't sit back, give a self satisfied sigh and say, "Ah, that takes care of the troublesome pop lit question. In another twenty years or perhaps thirty, we'll give this award to another writer who sells enough books to make the best seller lists." It's not good enough. Nor do I have any patience with or use for those who make a point of pride in saying they've never read anything by John Grisham, Tom Clancy, Mary Higgins Clark or any other popular writer.
I couldn't help but notice that one of the characters in this book was named Lisa Lemke. Wonder if she's part of the Lemke family from Thinner...?
There's much made of the derivation of the word, being from boo, book, and clue. As far as I can tell it's derived from bollocks. It doesn't make sense, no matter how much King has tried to explain it, and it makes every character that uses it appear childish. It's more than a stretch: I think King has snapped.The "blood bool" thing is quite odd, something that is a stretch I believe, in regards to human behavior.