Thursday, January 5, 2012

Memory always needs a marker

I bow down to The King.

Stephen King.

Teaching is just four - relaxing - days away, which means it has crept back into my mind as careers are wont to do.

My freshman are reading short stories this quarter, so I thought I might liven up my break with some by Stephen King.

My history with Stephen King began as me being a hater for much of my life, but has come full circle to me now calling him the Jane Austen of horror.

I shouldn't - then - be surprised to find his short story collection, Just After Sunset, to be fabulous.

Writing this is filling up the halftime I'm taking in the middle of the collection because I just read a short story that was so meaningful I have to take a moment. Let it marinate. I can't let any other words mess with the ones currently floating around my head.

The story: "The Things They Left Behind"

It is about a man who didn't die in the twin towers on 9/11 because he was playing hooky from work. A little less than a year later, artifacts from his now deceased co-workers show up in his apartment. They don't talk to him really, but when they are around he begins to remember them and then - later - also knows how they died.

I won't tell you how it ends. At 29 pages you can read it for yourself. I will say that throwing the objects away does NOT get them out of his apartment for long...

I find that after reading the story, I don't want to read anything else for a bit. I just want to think for a bit. Kudos to King, because isn't wanting to pause your reading to let the words resonate with you the mark of a successful tale?

Then again, I could be touchy because I teach a group of young people to which 9/11 means barely anything. I want to yell and say, "The world changed that day; don't you understand?"

They don't. Perhaps if they read this story they could begin to.


"The things I want to tell you about - the ones they left behind - showed up in my apartment in August of 2002.I'm sure of that, because I found most of them not long after I helped Paula Robeson with her air conditioner. Memory always needs a marker, and that's mine."
Stephen King

2 comments:

  1. I should probably be embarrassed to say this, but I've never read anything by King. I'm in love with his son's short stories and I've been told King is amazing in that form as well. I also know that he is all kinds of prolific when it comes to short story publications. I may need to track some down.

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  2. I gasped out loud when I read this post and came across the name Jane Austen.

    But I trust you.

    I used to read his books when I was a teenager. (Pet Semetary, Cujo, It) I enjoyed them, but I always found myself skipping through a LOT of his writing. Maybe I was too young to understand it.

    Maybe I should try again?

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