Duma Key: A Novel

Duma Key: A Novel
by Stephen King

Duma Key: A Novel
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Book Summary Information

Author: Stephen King
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2008-01-22
ISBN: 1416552510
Number of pages: 611
Publisher: Scribner
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Book Reviews of Duma Key: A Novel

Book Review: No Retirement for Stephen King and that is Good News
Summary: 5 Stars

Stephen King has found a new line of inspiration which is in many ways the old lines but revisited, mixed, merged, transmuted. The lake and the burying of the evil one at the bottom of it has already been used in a short story about a malefic monkey. The use of silver to kill the monsters was used in the "Silver Bullet" or "The Cycle of the Werewolf" in which a crippled boy in a wheelchair with the help of an alcoholic uncle kills the werewolf that is residing inside the local preacher. But here we have silver harpoons or silver candle sticks to kill living dead creatures. We could find many other elements that are just transposed and translated into a new context. The island, the evil forces coming from afar, the ocean and a storm, all that is at the heart of "The Storm of the Century". The stealing of children by evil forces is also common. But this story is new in some elements that transcend the similarities with the past. The evil force is a woman, some Greek goddess, Persephone, daughter of Zeus and Demeter, carried away to the underworld by Pluto and spending six months with her "man" and six months with her "mother'. But Stephen King does not use these connections and the fact that Demeter is the famous triple goddess of the Celts, or Isis of the Egyptians, and many other Germanic Beths. That evil force governs dead people from an eponymous ship that is a direct hint at some Flying Dutchman or some Ancient Mariner. But the sex of that evil person is a real change. In Stephen King's books the evil one is systematically a man, the Dark Man, the man dressed in black, the Crimson King, etc. We can note the color red of this Persephone that refers to the Dark Tower's Crimson King but also to many other common elements. The red of the famous REDRUM of "The Shining", but also blood (think of the menstrual blood of "Carrie"), fire, violence and many others. The other major change is Florida. Stephen King has been everywhere in the States except the Deep South under Virginia and of course Florida, though the black man who possesses the shining in the eponymous book spends his winter in Florida. But that is light. Change in place, climate, geography, and even people, plus of course natural dangers with tropical storms, hurricanes and alligators, all of these not very common in Maine, or even in California, Nevada, Colorado or other kingian states. But beyond this continuity and change spliced together the novel has a rhythm that is new for Stephen King. By rhythm I mean slightly more than the speed of the story or the storytelling but also some themes that determine that rhythm. The main characters are beyond middle age for two of them out of three (the third one resembles of lot to the young Stephen King raised by his mother in the absence of a father, though with a brother in King's personal case, and yet King has used that situation of a son or a daughter with a one parent - mother - family a lot), which is by far a change from "The Stand", "The Dark Tower", "Carrie" and many other "Firestarter's", though we already have such characters in "The Tommyknockers", a woman writer and a poet. That leads to the second element. The artistic endeavor in this book is painting. That is nearly a first in Stephen King's books, definitely a first as a central theme and even weapon in the book. But Stephen King seems to become more interested in this book in some magic or supernatural phenomena that are connected to old Amerindian elements. There is in a way a rhythm that reminds us of Anne Rice and her latest novels when she brings a black Mayfair witch into the world of vampires on a background of Mesoamerican and Vodun legends and religious rituals. This rhythm turns the novel into a trip that tries to recapture some past elements that inform the present. Here what happened in 1927 is essential in 2007 to understand what is happening eighty years later. That treatment is not common in Stephen King, even if his use of North American Amerindian lore and legends is quite common like in "Pet Semetery", "The Dark Half" or "The Dreamcatcher". This luxuriant nature, extreme climate and very contemplative attitude or hypnotizing power create an interesting cocktail that makes us run through the novel, though we do take our time to turn the pages and keep them down against hostile winds. There is also another theme that is used with a lot more force here: the basic group of muck cleaners is a trio of three men. This is apparently a first too. In "The Dark Tower we have a group of four people, three men and a woman, though note the woman is black and in a wheelchair. "The Stand" is also more complex even if the sacrificed ones started three on the road, with a fourth one who had been sent before as a scout. But this fourth one was the retarded character and only two of the three will reach Las Vegas because one will break his leg and survive thanks to a dog and the passing fourth one on his way home. Their mission is to re-enact the Christian crucifixion, which has no import in the present novel, and moreover women are essential in "The Stand", the old black lady who plays the role of the seer and the prophet in a very religious line, whereas the old lady in "Duma Key" is white and she does not speak of the future but of the past.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines

Summary of Duma Key: A Novel

NO MORE THAN A DARK PENCIL LINE ON A BLANK PAGE. A HORIZON LINE, MAYBE.

BUT ALSO A SLOT FOR BLACKNESS TO POUR THROUGH...

A terrible accident takes Edgar Freemantle's right arm and scrambles his memory and his mind, leaving him with little but rage as he begins the ordeal of rehabilitation. When his marriage suddenly ends, Edgar begins to wish he hadn't survived his injuries. He wants out. His psychologist suggests a new life distant from the Twin Cities, along with something else:

"Edgar, does anything make you happy?"

"I used to sketch."

"Take it up again. You need hedges...hedges against the night."

Edgar leaves for Duma Key, an eerily undeveloped splinter of the Florida coast. The sun setting into the Gulf of Mexico calls out to him, and Edgar draws. Once he meets Elizabeth Eastlake, a sick old woman with roots tangled deep in Duma Key, Edgar begins to paint, sometimes feverishly; many of his paintings have a power that cannot be controlled. When Elizabeth's past unfolds and the ghosts of her childhood begin to appear, the damage of which they are capable is truly devastating.

The tenacity of love, the perils of creativity, the mysteries of memory and the nature of the supernatural -- Stephen King gives us a novel as fascinating as it is gripping and terrifying.


Amazon Significant Seven, January 2008: It would be impossible to convey the wonder and the horror of Stephen King's latest novel in just a few words. Suffice it to say that Duma Key, the story of Edgar Freemantle and his recovery from the terrible nightmare-inducing accident that stole his arm and ended his marriage, is Stephen King's most brilliant novel to date (outside of the Dark Tower novels, in which case each is arguably his best work). Duma Key is as rich and rewarding as Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption (yes, that Shawshank Redemption), and as truly scary as anything King has written (and that's saying a lot). Readers who have "always wanted to try Stephen King" but never known where to start should try a few pages of Duma Key--the frankness with which Edgar reveals his desperate, sputtering rages and thoughts of suicide is King at the top of his game. And that's just the first thirty pages... --Daphne Durham


Duma Key: Where It All Began
A Note from Chuck Verrill, the Longtime Editor of Stephen King
In the spring of 2006 Stephen King told me he was working on a Florida story that was beginning to grow on him. "I'm thinking of calling it Duma Key," he offered. I liked the sound of that--the title was like a drumbeat of dread. "You know how Lisey's Story is a story about marriage?" he said. "Sure," I answered. The novel hadn't yet been published, but I knew its story well: Lisey and Scott Landon--what a marriage that was. Then he dropped the other shoe: "I think Duma Key might be my story of divorce."

Pretty soon I received a slim package from a familiar address in Maine. Inside was a short story titled "Memory"--a story of divorce, all right, but set in Minnesota. By the end of the summer, when Tin House published "Memory," Stephen had completed a draft of Duma Key, and it became clear to me how "Memory" and its narrator, Edgar Freemantle, had moved from Minnesota to Florida, and how a story of divorce had turned into something more complex, more strange, and much more terrifying.

If you read the following two texts side by side--"Memory" as it was published by Tin House and the opening chapter of Duma Key in final form--you'll see a writer at work, and how stories can both contract and expand. Whether Duma Key is an expansion of "Memory" or "Memory" a contraction of Duma Key, I can't really say. Can you?

--Chuck Verrill

"Memory"
Memories are contrary things; if you quit chasing them and turn your back, they often return on their own. That's what Kamen says. I tell him I never chased the memory of my accident. Some things, I say, are better forgotten.

Maybe, but that doesn?t matter, either. That's what Kamen says.

My name is Edgar Freemantle. I used to be a big deal in building and construction. This was in Minnesota, in my other life. I was a genuine American-boy success in that life, worked my way up like a motherf---er, and for me, everything worked out. When Minneapolis?St. Paul boomed, The Freemantle Company boomed. When things tightened up, I never tried to force things. But I played my hunches, and most of them played out well. By the time I was fifty, Pam and I were worth about forty million dollars. And what we had together still worked. I looked at other women from time to time but never strayed. At the end of our particular Golden Age, one of our girls was at Brown and the other was teaching in a foreign exchange program. Just before things went wrong, my wife and I were planning to go and visit her.

I had an accident at a job site. That's what happened. I was in my pickup truck. The right side of my skull was crushed. My ribs were broken. My right hip was shattered. And although I retained sixty percent of the sight in my right eye (more, on a good day), I lost almost all of my right arm.

I was supposed to lose my life, but I didn?t. Then I was supposed to become one of the Vegetable Simpsons, a Coma Homer, but that didn't happen, either. I was one confused American when I came around, but the worst of that passed. By the time it did, my wife had passed, too. She's remarried to a fellow who owns bowling alleys. My older daughter likes him. My younger daughter thinks he?s a yank-off. My wife says she?ll come around.

Maybe , maybe no. That's what Kamen says.

When I say I was confused, I mean that at first I didn?t know who people were, or what had happened, or why I was in such awful pain. I can't remember the quality and pitch of that pain now. I know it was excruciating, but it's all pretty academic. Like a picture of a mountain in National Geographic magazine. It wasn?t academic at the time. At the time it was more like climbing a mountain.

Continue Reading "Memory"

Duma Key
How to Draw a Picture
Start with a blank surface. It doesn't have to be paper or canvas, but I feel it should be white. We call it white because we need a word, but its true name is nothing. Black is the absence of light, but white is the absence of memory, the color of can't remember.

How do we remember to remember? That's a question I've asked myself often since my time on Duma Key, often in the small hours of the morning, looking up into the absence of light, remembering absent friends. Sometimes in those little hours I think about the horizon. You have to establish the horizon. You have to mark the white. A simple enough act, you might say, but any act that re-makes the world is heroic. Or so I?ve come to believe.

Imagine a little girl, hardly more than a baby. She fell from a carriage almost ninety years ago, struck her head on a stone, and forgot everything. Not just her name; everything! And then one day she recalled just enough to pick up a pencil and make that first hesitant mark across the white. A horizon-line, sure. But also a slot for blackness to pour through.

Still, imagine that small hand lifting the pencil... hesitating... and then marking the white. Imagine the courage of that first effort to re-establish the world by picturing it. I will always love that little girl, in spite of all she has cost me. I must. I have no choice. Pictures are magic, as you know.

My Other Life
My name is Edgar Freemantle. I used to be a big deal in the building and contracting business. This was in Minnesota, in my other life. I learned that my-other-life thing from Wireman. I want to tell you about Wireman, but first let's get through the Minnesota part.

Gotta say it: I was a genuine American-boy success there. Worked my way up in the company where I started, and when I couldn?t work my way any higher there, I went out and started my own. The boss of the company I left laughed at me, said I'd be broke in a year. I think that's what most bosses say when some hot young pocket-rocket goes off on his own.

For me, everything worked out. When Minneapolis?St. Paul boomed, The Freemantle Company boomed. When things tightened up, I never tried to play big. But I did play my hunches, and most played out well. By the time I was fifty, Pam and I were worth forty million dollars. And we were still tight. We had two girls, and at the end of our particular Golden Age, Ilse was at Brown and Melinda was teaching in France, as part of a foreign exchange program. At the time things went wrong, my wife and I were planning to go and visit her.

Continue Reading Duma Key



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