Analysis Of The Long Walk By Stephen King

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“Monsters are real, and ghosts are real too. They live inside us, and sometimes, they win.”, so says Stephen King, a popular, present-day adult and young adult horror writer. The second son of his divorced parents, Donald and Nellie Ruth Pillsbury King, King spent his childhood, mainly with his mother, but also partly with his father in Fort Wayne, Indiana. After King made it to college, he became a part of its school newspaper which helped shape his early fondness for writing. A Baby Boomer, King grew up during a time of unrest during the Cold War of the late 20th Century. King spent his early adulthood immersed in the society focused on such things as the Vietnam War, civil rights talks, and an impending war with the Soviet Union. Popular at the time, anti war sentiments helped shape King during his early years as a writer. Fear of an all powerful government also shaped the way King and many other writers at the time …show more content…

Also written by Stephen King, the novel was published first in 1979 by Signet Books. The story follows one hundred teenage boys in their quest to be the final one walking in a competition set in a dystopian America. The boys either die of exhaustion or are shot one by one if they use their three warnings for not walking fast enough. Although the stakes are high, the winner of the event will get anything they want for the rest of their life. Raymond Davis Garraty, the protagonist of the story watches as his friends die by his side until he finally wins the walk. Garraty is mindless as he wins and continues to walk, and even run, as he is proclaimed the winner. The tone and mood of the novel are exhausted, mindless, and almost anxious; a feeling the walkers felt as they competed in the competition. It helps to include the reader in the events as they unfold and connects them to Garraty through the walk. Through these novels, Stephen King helps to shape current popular

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