Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 25-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Illustration: C
Location: A11
Quick Words:
Halloween-books-Bachman-King
Full Text:
(Bachman & King books rev'd for Halloween cover, 10/25/96)
Spine-Tinglers To Give You Halloween Nightmares
(with book covers)
BY KIM J. HARMON
"When we hurt. We give off something when we hurt, something it... it licks
up, like ice cream. And when we die, that's even better. It doesn't have to
lick then. It can just gobble the stuff down whole."
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
Tak is one of the unformed, a demon of the earth, millions of years old and
living off the suffering and the misery and the killing of those who live
above.
And it is the nightmarish creation of author Stephen King.
It is a creature like none other King has imagined - worse than the
spider-thing in It , worse than the dead things in Pet Sematary , worse than
the grayish blob in Gray Matter and the monstrous rat thing in Night Shift ,
even worse than the vampires in Salem's Lot - and it walks across the pages of
two books just released in hardcover from Penguin Books USA.
The Regulators
By Richard Bachman ;
Desperation
By Stephen King
Richard Bachman, ironically, has risen from the dead just ten years after he
was killed (chopped up into little pieces and dropped into a nice, steaming
acid bath no doubt) following the publication of Thinner . He now joins his
alter ego, King, in an almost collaborative effort of sister books that in
some ways do - and in some ways don't - mesh together.
The books are held together (and not just by the art on both covers which,
when placed side by side, creates a horrific mural of real-life America on the
very edge of Hell) by the common thread of the evil demon, Tak, which has
risen from the fetid depths of an old, abandoned mine where nearly a century
before, dozens of Chinese prisoners were left to die in a cave-in.
It is a bold move from horror's most prolific writer - a man who not only
wrote these two novels but this year also wrote a six-part serial called The
Green Mile and the screenplay for a six-hour television mini-series based on
The Shining (King reportedly hated the early 70s film version so much he
wanted a screen version done again) - but a bold move that works better than
almost anything he has done in his career until now.
The Regulators (474 pages, $24.95 ): The premise for this novel - beware -
sounds like the worst nightmare of any right-thinking American parent.
Characters from an animated television show called "Motokops 2200" explode
from the mind of an autistic boy, Seth Garin, and create some serious havoc on
Poplar Street in suburban Columbus, Ohio.
It is all the doing of the evil thing, Tak, though. Seth has become the
unwilling vessel of the demon, picking it up after the Garin family, on a ride
through Nevada, stop off to see the China Pit and Rattlesnake #2, a mine near
Desperation.
The only thing Seth can understand in life is the Motokops and any western,
but mostly his favorite western starring Rory Calhoun and the Regulators. Tak
sees these characters in Seth's mind and meshes that reality with the reality
on Poplar Street and whether or not it is for Tak's enjoyment, all Hell breaks
loose.
And it all breaks loose from 3:45 to 5:18 pm. King does a brilliant job of
capturing a moment frozen in time using his typical King imagery (like seeing
Seth Garin naked except for his spaghetti-stained Motokops Underoos) with the
leaner Bachman style or writing.
Tak unleashes the Motokops and the Regulators (who generally were the good
guys... except on Poplar Street) on the neighborhood and the people left
trapped in their homes not only fight to understand what is happening, but
fight to survive.
The battle, though, that makes The Regulators so emotionally thrilling, so
draining, is the one between Seth Garin and Tak. King (or Bachman, I should
say) shows us a frightened young boy who is not only imprisoned in his own
mind by his autism, but imprisoned by a demon, who shows unbelievable courage
and will to stop the madness.
There is a strong emotional finish, you might guess... very strong. The love
the kid had for his aunt and the sadness we feel for him is almost
overwhelming and don't be surprised if (like me) you get all choked up and
teary eyed.
Don't think this is going to be traditional horror type stuff, though. The
Regulators is weird and surreal in the way the Dark Tower novels were surreal
and the way King's story The Langoliers was weird.
But it is brilliant. The single-best novel I have read from King since Salem's
Lot .
D esperation (690 pages, $24.95): Off the long, lonesome Highway 50 in Nevada
(the loneliest highway in the world) lies the small town of Desperation, home
to just 200 souls and Tak, one of the unformed.
Just outside of Desperation is the China Pit mine, where a local mining
company is leaching minerals out of an already dried up mine. In the process,
the company uncovers a mine it calls Rattlesnake #2, where, about 100 years
before, some Chinese prisoners were left to die after a mine collapse.
Rattlesnake #2 is opened and something - Tak - comes out.
Tak slips into the body of Desperation deputy sheriff Collie Entragian, who
wigs out and kills just about everyone in town. In the middle of this process
he, for some inexplicable reason, jails several people rather than kills them.
These are the people who will attempt to either kill Tak or send it back into
the bowels of Rattlesnake #2.
Most of the characters from The Regulators are here - the Carvers, Tom
Billingsley, the Jacksons, Audrey Wyler, Steve Ames and Cynthia, and John
Marinville.
It is David Carver (a kid in this novel, an adult in The Regulators ) who
becomes Tak's nemesis - because David has been touched by God and is a conduit
through which God provides some protection against the demon.
Mi him en tow . In the language of the unformed, it means "Our God is strong,
our God is with us." While this works to command the creatures under Tak's
power, it also serves as an ideal of strength for the several people stuck in
Desperation in a blinding sandstorm trying to battle a demon who is more than
a million years old.
Good versus evil.
It worked brilliantly in The Stand and it works even better here, in
Desperation.
Why They Work, For Me
It is the isolation, the feeling of abandonment and of being closed off from
the rest of the world, which gives the thread of fear in The Regulators and
Desperation such a violent pluck that your own nerve endings are jangling like
a really deep bass chord on an electric guitar.
In The Regulators , everything happens on one street in a big suburban city in
Ohio, but Tak has made that one street the only thing there is. As if Poplar
Street was on another planet altogether.
And in Desperation , the small town in Nevada can not be any more isolated
from the rest of the universe than it already is. A cop going berserk in a
town of 200 is not out of the realm of possibility, which is scary enough, but
throw in an otherworld demon trying to remake reality and the fear gets that
much worse.
Isolation. It worked so well in Afterage by Yvonne Navarro, Brujo by William
Relling, Wolfbane by Al Sarrantonio, and in Stephen King stories like The
Mist, Langoliers and Salem's Lot.
For King fans who might have been disillusioned with recent novels like Rose
Madder , Insomnia , Gerald's Game and Dolores Claiborne , which didn't come
close to achieving what King has been able to achieve in his earlier work (
Insomnia was just plain dull), The Regulators and Desperation are nothing less
than brilliant.
NOTE: The Regulators and Desperation are available (alone or as a set, with a
nightlight) at The Book Review/Cup & Chaucer Cafe in Sand Hill Plaza, Route 25
in Newtown. Call 426-1711.
