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July 2015-Group Read #1-It by Stephen King

Now I don't recall if the town in The Colorado Kid was called Haven or not (the tv show Haven is loosely based off TCK), but as Bev's husband Tom is driving to Derry from Bangor, he passes a sign saying HAVEN 21, DERRY 15.

I'm interested to know what people think of the novel's early sexual politics. The (spoiler) death of a gay ch..."
I'm still in the first few pages of the book. I read it many many years ago as a child and I don't even remember any of the gay stuff. Was it in the movie because I don't remember that either :-/

If any of those mindsets were in the movie, they were few and far between.

The movie was made for TV so couldn't even be a true R rating, so it would have removed that stuff and watered down a lot of the book - the serious stuff, the horror stuff, and the violence.

Haven't read this book for more than 20 years (this is my first reading in original language) but it does not disappoint! I think King created something fantastic here, the length and detailed narrative makes you live, rather than being told the story.
A lot of horrible things happen, but nothing tops the (view spoiler) Damn! That passage is not good for my blood pressure!

As much as I dislike the gang bang, Bev at least willingly initiated it and none of the boys tried to hurt her. It was bonding them and helped clear Eddie's mind to be able to find their way out.
I wonder why IT doesn't like Bill saying the rhyme?

I think its for the same reason. Saying the rhyme helps Bill concentrate so he doesn't become overwhelmed by fear. Just like Richie's jokes and Stan's birds.



I LOVE this book. Every few years when there's a really bad thunderstorm with water rushing through the gutters here in Central FL I have to read it.
I love the Derry Interludes - even though the Black Spot story is so ugly, it really feels like a slice of Americana.
Agree on the kids having sex - it weirded me out when I originally read the book (about 17 I think?) and always has. The kids' age doesn't bother me, but it never felt like a big bonding moment, even though it's consensual. Bev's place in the Losers always bothered me too; even though she has the +5 Slingshot Ability the sex scene took that away and made her big contribution about her body again.






Tim Curry FTW! He OWNED scary clowns. I've seen dozens of scary clown movies and nobody's come close.
I'll read it again in another 29 years :)
Ha ha - My first SK book was Cycle of the Werewolf, which I read when I was 12 - I missed the 20 year anniversary reread, maybe I'll do 25 later this year! ;D



Yes that is very true! I write, I study, I have three small children, a house and pets to take care of but I still try to read as much as I can. If I didn't I think I would go mad!



I liked Pet Sematary too - saw it when I was probably too little before I read the book and both scared the hell out of me for years. But I kept coming back for more!


RIGHT?
MoviesForYourBrain:
I am right there with you, about the 70s-early 90s. I have only read a little of his more recent stuff, like Lisey's Story and the story collections.
I think you're really on to something with that observation: the content is B-movie, but the writing is always thoughtful and compelling, especially the older stuff. Like all the characters in IT are so real - you never question their actions (until the terrible scene). Even the creepy kid Patrick Hockstetter (I will NEVER forget that kid) is fascinating in his own disturbing way!


I feel like I read some of The Long Walk years ago - that sounds familiar (and also horrifying). If I dig myself out from my to-read pile I'll add it! :D


I think there must've been a bully named Patrick Hockstetter in King's past, because the name pops up in several novels (he's a creepy doctor in Firestarter).
If you're reading The Long Walk in the Bachman Books, have you read Rage? He pulled that story after school shooters claimed to have been inspired by that story.


I haven't read that book, but I'd wager Hockstetter was an evil/cruel character?
Either Hockstetter is a buddy and King just loves to needle him by giving his name to creeps and psychopaths, or Hockstetter is a tormentor from the past.
It would be one of the things I'd ask King if I'd ever get to speak to him.


I did in my youthful days, but I can't recall anything about it, other than stuff from the movie.
I haven't read Rage, but I remember another school-shooter type story of King's... Cain Rose Up? I recall a kid on a hillside or something and the last line was "In the end it took [specific information not recalled] to bring him down." I might be confusing some diff stories.
Patrick Hockstetter *shudders* - I think what upsets me most about him is that I was ALWAYS friends with kids like this in school, and there was a point where I wondered if I could be one, too; NOT the molesting other kids and smothering the baby thing, more like being a space cadet and having trouble relating to others. That's one of those transcendent 'what is real horror?' moments of King's that bring me back to his work so much.
I haven't read 11/22/63 but I do recall mention of him in Firestarter, can't recall the context though. I think you're on to something, Baron!

I did in my youthful days, but I can't recall anything about it, other than stuff from the movie.
I haven't read Rage, but I remember another school-shooter type story..."
"It was x hours later and almost dark before they took him down" - Apt Pupil. For the record my memory is terrible, but I'm on a King re-read and recently read it...


SO disturbing. I thought the story was scarier than the movie - the kid in the book was so much more self-assured, if I remember correctly, not brooding at all.


I don't think it was in the movie. I haven't watched the movie since I was a kid, but I don't think half the racial / sexual politics were involved.
There's a scene -- one of the early modern scenes -- where a gay man is murdered, and it goes into depth about the way Derry felt about the burgeoning gay population.
A bar owner doesn't realize his bar has become a gay bar and doesn't seem to care, because he's done relatively well with his business. The local cops are homophobic but have largely a "live and let live" policy on how they approach them.
I've also seen a LOT of weird racial politics in the book. Richie Tozier uses a pickaninny voice -- which would be really, REALLY weird in a current novel -- and yet he also uses it in front of Mike without even a second thought.
It's probably time-correct -- plenty of white people probably used racially insensitive voices back then -- but I wonder what a 2015 audience thinks of it.

Agreed. He's an excellent villain, because he recognizes what he's doing but doesn't really care. He follows in a long line of King villains killing off dogs -- Dead Zone, anyone? -- and seems to have a moral compass; it's just bent in the complete opposite direction it should have.


As a white person I always wondered this.
There's a moment in the book when Mike is talking to some other little boy and the little boy says something breathtakingly racist and Mike feels that divide between then open up - I don't know how other people felt about that but it always stuck with me. I've felt similar divides between myself and others (people making sexist jokes, or laughing about "trailer trash" when most of my family live in trailers). It's obviously not the same thing AT ALL but it started me thinking about racial politics in the U.S. in a more personal way than my history classes.
I'm writing a fantasy novel with a lot of different people of color characters (think Discworld meets The Wire, heh) and researching the discussion about how people of color are portrayed in speculative fiction has been interesting. I hope a lot of people chime in on this thread!

Yes The Dead Zone is also another really good King book! Will have to read it again one of these days
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I think this book had the same effect for clowns that JAWS had for sharks and the ocean, haha. We suddenly became hyper aware of every shark or shark attack.