|
|
By Sarah Jane Abbott
| Friday, April 03, 2015 - Off the Shelf
Right from its release in 2008, The Hunger Games was a hit. It was
critically acclaimed and a bestseller and has spawned a billion-dollar film
franchise. Despite all of this, in Stephen King’s review of the novel
for Entertainment Weekly,
he gave the smash-hit book a “B” grade. “B” as in, good, but could be
better. So how would Stephen King take a similar concept and do it his way?
The answer is the 1979 novel The
Long Walk by Richard Bachman,
also known as Stephen King.
In a near-future, military-controlled dystopian United States,
there is an annual, televised competition called The Long Walk. Teenage
boys across the country apply to be contestants and those that pass the
application process are entered into a televised drawing for The Walk where
one hundred “lucky” boys are chosen to participate. At precisely 9 AM on
May 1, these boys begin walking down a highway in Maine. The rules are as
follows: the boys must continuously walk forward on the road at four miles
per hour or above and must not physically interfere with one another. If a
walker’... READ
FULL POST
|
No comments:
Post a Comment