seanan_mcguire: (zombie)
seanan_mcguire ([personal profile] seanan_mcguire) wrote2012-09-21 08:42 am

Happy birthday, Stephen King.

Growing up in the 1980s means that I can't remember when I first heard of Stephen King, because everyone had heard of Stephen King. I know I giggled with recognition and delight when I saw the shirt that Sean was wearing in The Monster Squad (1987). By that point, I had already seen the "Gramma" episode of The New Twilight Zone (1986), and Creepshow (1982; I didn't see the theatrical release, so you can stop freaking out about what kind of movies my family took the four-year-old to see). Stephen King was my background radiation. Bruce Banner got Gamma Rays. I got a baseball fanatic from the state of Maine.

(Had someone told me when I was eight that Stephen King loved baseball, I might have learned to give a damn about the game. Clearly, the universe missed a bet.)

The first really serious piece of writing I can remember doing was a twelve-page essay, when I was nine, explaining to my mother why she had to let me read Stephen King. It had footnotes and a bibliography. I slid it under her bedroom door; she bought me a copy of Christine from the used bookstore down the street. I had already read Cujo and Carrie illicitly, sneaking pages like other kids snuck looks at dirty magazines, but Christine was my first ALLOWED Stephen King. I devoured it. And then, like a horror-fiction-focused Pac-Man, I turned on the rest.

Stephen King, without ever knowing who I was, helped me through some of the hardest times in my life. I read IT all the way through a court case that seemed like it was going to destroy everything I loved, forever. I was nine. My grandmother bought me his new hardcovers every year for Christmas. I bought tattered paperbacks with nickels I had hidden in my pillowcase, where no one else could find them. I skipped meals to buy more books. I read them all, over and over, and I endured. He taught me that sometimes, dead is better, things change, and you own what you build. He taught me to read if I wanted to write, and to love the words, and to never be ashamed of loving whatever the hell it was I wanted to love.

In a weird way, Stephen King gave me permission for a great many things, and since those things are integral to who I grew up to be, I have to say that he, through his work, was just as big an influence on me as any other adult in my life.

He taught me you can get out.

Today is his birthday; he was born in 1947, and he's still writing today, which I appreciate greatly. I may never meet him, and that's probably a good thing, as I'm not sure I'd be able to speak English if I did. But I surely do appreciate the man.

Happy birthday, Stephen King.

Thank you.

[identity profile] serge-lj.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 03:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you ever see King's original miniseries "Golden Years"? That was the one bright spot of 1991 for me.

[identity profile] taraljc.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I always forget I'm a birthday twin with King. This is kinda awesome.

[identity profile] stormsdotter.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Excuse me, I'm going to squee over your icon now. I adore Hellboy!

Wendy and Richard Pini are kinda the same for me. I hope to meet them, but I have a feeling I will be Yet Another Babbling Incoherent Fangirl when I do.

(The only reason I could be moderately coherent when I met Tamara Pierce was because my coworker [livejournal.com profile] mabfan had asked me to give her his new address for Christmas card mailings)

[identity profile] dulcinbradbury.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I could have written so much of this.

[identity profile] serge-lj.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
A few weeks ago, there was a photo circulating around the net of Ron Perlman all dressed-up as HellBoy because there was this young boy whose Make-A-Wish wish was to meet Big Red. Yay for Perlman!

[identity profile] leesalogic.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
What a lovely tribute. I think he would be touched to read this.

[identity profile] chinders.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I read most of my Stephen King illicitly from the school library; my mother had flipped her shit at some point and decided that she had to read everything I was going to read to be sure it was appropriate. (Note: not double check, or glance over, but actually *read*. As a single mom in med school. So that went well.) Stephen King would a) have never got past the content filter and b) I would have been waiting years for her to have time to finish it.

There were a lot of Stephen King books hidden under the bed at my mom's house over the years. I think mostly he taught me that you could break the rules if you were willing to face the consequences, and that kids could take care of themselves, sometimes better than their parents could.

They were worthwhile lessons.
reedrover: (Summer)

[personal profile] reedrover 2012-09-21 04:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this post. I teared up reading it.

He taught me to read if I wanted to write, and to love the words, and to never be ashamed of loving whatever the hell it was I wanted to love.

And the world is a better place.

[identity profile] liddle-oldman.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:29 pm (UTC)(link)
It's also Leonard Cohen's birthday, who's my touchstone.

Though I did really like On Writing.

[identity profile] lyssabard.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:33 pm (UTC)(link)
He taught me that sometimes, dead is better, things change, and you own what you build. He taught me to read if I wanted to write, and to love the words, and to never be ashamed of loving whatever the hell it was I wanted to love.

In a weird way, Stephen King gave me permission for a great many things, and since those things are integral to who I grew up to be, I have to say that he, through his work, was just as big an influence on me as any other adult in my life.

He taught me you can get out.


Yes. Yes to all of this.

I was always the precocious girl, the smart kid, and I dove into Stephen King hard around fourth grade, when things were really starting to goto shit socially--or, more aptly, I started really being aware of the power structures and what was really going on. And I decided to just read instead of subject myself to further attempts at being a Normal Popular Girl.

My mom, bless her forever, started me on horror young, probably because she had me in her twenties and she wasn't ready to stop watching horror just because she had a six year old. So I got to watch the Exorcist and pepper her with a thousand questions on what I thought was the COOLEST THING EVAR about being Catholic. (It made Catholicism cool for me, for a time. Cause, fighting monsters/demons, yo! Then I found out I couldn't be a priest and that sucked.) When my mom brought home Carrie, it piqued my 4th grade interest because the movie was a part of my extensive favorites list. However, she worked all day as a nurse, so when she came home, she wanted to read. As I had just gotten home from school, this interfered with my plans.

I solved the problem by taking it to school the next day so I could read it and give it back to her when she got home. I was so thoughtful, I know.

My fourth grade math teacher, Mrs. Caputo, saw me reading while in line and pulled me out to kindly ask me, "Honey, does your mother know you are reading that book?"
I replied, "Oh yes! She reads them herself and I am reading it now to keep us from fighting over it!"
Mrs. Caputo, "....oh. Oh, well, when your mom is done with it, could you ask her if I could borrow it?"

Thus became the start of a great friendship with my fourth grade math teacher.
To this day, I also think that It saved me from the horrible depression of middle school. Or at least mitigated it to survivable levels. It was tied with Pet Semetary for my favorite King book. Also? My Master's thesis was on Arthurian legend and the Dark Tower series. Go me.

And now I think I need to go reread It.

[identity profile] lunalelle.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I was another secret Stephen King reader until I gradually introduced my mother to the idea. I was older than you, though, about fifteen when I read Carrie, hiding it in my backpack and reading on the bus rather than at home. I was hooked after that.

He taught me that it's okay to be afraid of all those things, but that to write about them is to love the things that make you afraid, and that helps.

He taught me about the worst side of people and the best side of people.

He taught me to write unflinchingly.

He taught me to write only what I enjoy and to love horror even more than I already did.

I think King is a writer's writer. He may not be the best writer, but he's one of the best storytellers, and his joy and pain and everything in between comes through in his writing. For all the gore and the awkward sex, Stephen King really is Uncle Stevie for a lot of people. He's just so comfortable.

Happy birthday to him.

[identity profile] pnkrokhockeymom.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I am who I am today in large part thanks to Stephen King. People usually think I am exaggerating when I say that. I am not.
sdelmonte: (Me)

[personal profile] sdelmonte 2012-09-21 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I really enjoyed that way back when. I wonder if it holds up.
sdelmonte: (Me)

[personal profile] sdelmonte 2012-09-21 04:37 pm (UTC)(link)
So what did you make of The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, King's most baseball-oriented book (aside from Blockade Billy)?
ginger: (my take on the world)

[personal profile] ginger 2012-09-21 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Hah! I just spent a nine hour drive from Indiana to North Carolina yesterday listening to Wizard and Glass in audio. (Amusingly, it was a coin toss between W&G and Feed - I can only listen to audiobooks for books that I love desperately because I am NOT an auditory processor. SK won the flip.)

[identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Stephen King is love.

[identity profile] serge-lj.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
It might not, but, back then I'd eagerly await the next chapter, wondering what Jude to Hitman and Doctor Todhunter would try. I'm still bummed they left us with a cliffhanger although that was the network's fault, not King's.

[identity profile] blythe025.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 05:28 pm (UTC)(link)
My high school years would have been a lot less fun without my gleeful reading of many, many Stephen King books. :)

[identity profile] stormsdotter.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 05:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, Pearlman is awesome. :)

[identity profile] vulpine137.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
My brother in law got me reading Stephen King sometime way early, like 10-11. I started with the Shining, and tore though there. Stephen King wrote in my opinion, the scariest horror novel ever (Pet Semetary). It's the only one that reading it, I actually would put it down, hide under covers with just my eyes showing...til I couldn't stand wondering what would happen next and start reading again. He also introduced me to other authors that I still love to this day. He may not be the best, or my favorite writer anymore, but he's why I still read horror fiction to this day.

Happy Spawning Day Mr King, and many more to come.

[identity profile] aerrin.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 06:06 pm (UTC)(link)
I started King late. Where I came from, there was also this disdain. Oh, Stephen /King/. He writes /horror/. His books made those movies about dead /pets/.

I picked him up in grad school. I didn't much care for my first king (The Dark Tower trilogy, please don't hurt me), but I liked his style well enough to pick up a few more. Mostly recent, because that's what was handy. Duma Key, Lisey's Story. I liked them enough to dig up older ones. By the time I hit The Shining, I had decided that those people full of disdain for King were complete. And utter. Morons.

I love King because he writes genuinely entertaining fiction and tight stories while also having amazing things to say about the human soul and community and a million other things that dig far deeper than anyone ever gives 'genre' credit for doing. I love him because he keeps doing it, over and over again, because he has things to say no matter what people say about him. I love him because he can take ideas I've read a thousand times and make them new and human and interesting.

The man is gifted.

[identity profile] alicetheowl.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 07:06 pm (UTC)(link)
My first Stephen King book was Pet Sematary. I was in the sixth grade, and my parents kept his books out where any of us could grab them. They figured, if we were old enough to read at that level, we were old enough to process the horror.

I remember wondering what the big fuss was, until I went to bed that night. As soon as the lights were out and I was alone, suddenly, the cat climbing on my bed must be Church, and that noise in the floor below must be Zelda. It was a whole other kind of horror, the kind that curls up in your brain to stay a while.

It taught me that fears are best out in the open, and so I wrote out stories where the things I most feared actually happened. My ninth grade English teacher, the first person to read these stories, must've thought I was severely warped, but he was very kind about my early attempts, and is probably why I kept at it. It didn't help much with making me a less fearful person, but it is an outlet.

[identity profile] dewline.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 07:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Stephen King and H.G. Wells. Sharing a birthday.

So...maybe two celebratory toasts at CAN-CON's opening ceremonies tonight here in Ottawa?

[identity profile] l-o-lostshadows.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I discovered King at 11 after seeing Carrie on TV. I am so glad my parents never policed my reading.

He taught me that horror could be in everyday stuff and that there was more to fantasy than elves and orcs.

[identity profile] trektone.livejournal.com 2012-09-21 07:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Stephen King! Yay!

I met him in 1981 at the World Fantasy Con (Claremont Hotel in Berkeley) and, face to face with him, I could barely speak. At that point in my life he was my favorite author (and he's still in the Top Ten). He was so down-to-earth and approachable! At one point, after a panel, when a bunch of us were at a respectful distance but had books at the ready, he looked around the hallway or side lobby and said something like, "I'll just sit over here and sign until my hand falls off. Someone get me a beer?" And he sat on the floor with his back against the wall and spoke with each person. One of my all-time favorite memories, author-wise.
Edited 2012-09-21 20:00 (UTC)

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