Good dog gone bad.
Professor Zee probably taught us things, but I'd be willing to bet that most of us remember her tangents more than any scrap of "physical" science, because they were generally off-topic, long-winded, highly personal, largely inappropriate, and relentlessly zany. Relating any details would be a dead giveaway, but I will say there were plenty of "husband" stories and almost none of them were chaste, Dagwood-variety antics with the two separate beds and innocent kisses on the cheek goodnight. Professor Zee was wildly entertaining, certainly unhinged, and very popular with all of her students. It should not shock you in the least that it was Professor Zee herself who urged us to cheat on that test.
Sometime around Halloween, we were revving up another cacophonous class of semi-learning, but Professor Zee was either out of gas or feeling magnanimous and offered the stage to someone else for a rare change. The question was posed, "Does anyone know any scary stories?" By ninth grade, who didn't? But one of my friends (which I could not tell you, my merciful memory spares both of us the chagrin) decides to pipe up, "Ooo Erin knows! Erin knows lots of scary stories." This was no doubt because I was known as a rabid (natch) Stephen King fan. While I cajoled some friends into reading most of my own short stories, I kept the darker stuff pretty close to the vest since those stories were, without question, thinly veiled murder fantasies about my real-life bullies. I don't think I even changed the names, for God's sake. So, I'm pretty sure I got "elected" to tell a scary story to the honors physical science class that afternoon for no other reason than my well-known obsession with all things Stephen King.
Mildly panicked and surely sweating, I scrambled to remember the most recent read, Cujo, to retell to the class. Professor Zee even turned off the overhead fluorescents to properly gloom the mood. In the silence, I took a breath, all eyes on me, and unfurled a scene of ball-constricting fear and gut-punching horror. I watched their expressions darken, my classmates, all middle-school survivors, as their faces drained, their eyes went dead with shock, their skin no doubt crawling . . . because I was so fucking BAD at storytelling it was criminal, y'all. The word "um" was uttered no less than one hundred million times on this planet that afternoon, and ninety-nine million were mine all mine. UMM, like, it was a disaster, a discombobulated, stuttering mess. Ugh. The humiliation. It was a wet and slithering thing and it was all over me. When you see that many faces looking at you with unmistakable pity . . . hoo boy, let me tell you. I cratered. I think I apologized at the end. I think I stopped my own heart. I remember feeling floaty and full of brimming vomit. Did Professor Zee sigh and make me take a bow or did I hallucinate that? We'll never know.
What I do know is that virtually no horror story is truly scary unless it's told by the right storyteller. Stephen King is a phenomenal storyteller. Ninth grade me was decidedly not.
I am delighted to say that I still love Cujo. Sure, the horror tropes are a bit thin by now (1981!), but I still felt the anxiety, the terror, and the decompressing emotion that packs such and visceral, hateful, anguishing punch at the climax of the life-or-death showdown between a terrified, injured mom and a sick, mad dog. I finished it in a few big gulps of time, racing through the story as any good horror/thriller writer can only hope for, and left it by with my eyes still shining with tears and satisfaction. Good book, great storytelling. King's ability to herd the reader from one harrowing plot point to another, the threat ever building, the fear percolating until it explodes in a scorching shot of confrontation, is a finely tuned, 200-pound-machine of charging death from start to finish.
The numbering is a bit weird, but this is probably a scan of the fifth reprint of the 1982 movie-tie-in paperback. See NAL hustling at the top? |
My first knowledge of Cujo was via the movie trailer shown on television, a teaser trailer that does not show the dog at all, but a series of tense moments and the title running spookily together in blood. I literally did not know what Cujo was, thinking it might be some sort of monster or alien, until someone at school told me it was a Saint Bernard, an idea so ludicrous it was impossible to take seriously. I mean, that ominous movie poster (the same as the original paperback, see above), the trailer never showing the dog, no explanations and just flashes of terror . . . what a fantastic marketing ploy, right? But once you find out it's a Saint Bernard it all falls apart. When I was a kid, Saint Bernards were the adorable lumps with the first aid casks around their necks (a fiction, by the way), saving people in the snow. Saint Bernards were slobbery, dopey, and fluffy. Who would make a horror movie about a dumb Saint Bernard?
The movie came out a couple of years before I ever read King, but I saw Cujo on cable eventually (well before I read it) and man oh man was that ever Gross. They were just like, okay, let's train these dogs to snarl and lunge, drown em in fake blood and puss, and have em attack the ever-lovin shit out of this little car, smearing the muddy, bloody, sick slime all over everything in the height of summer while pretty Dee Wallace and adorable Danny Pintauro sweat in terror and the greenhouse effect until everyone cries because it's seriously so awful to watch. It is gruesome, frightening, and just . . . rough. They did manage to make a Saint Bernard scary. And they created an effective public service announcement for vaccinating animals against rabies.
Dedication page (vii) |
Only King, who reportedly does not recall writing Cujo due to a cocaine binge, could explain why there is such a marked difference between Firestarter's two-dimensional Charlie and Cujo's fully realized human child, Tad Trenton. Both books were written around the same time, so the disconnect is perplexing. There is such a tender care to Tad's creation, with beautiful, strange, funny, beguiling details about his thinking, his habits, his world and the ways he moves within it, that make Tad as real as anyone who's walked this earth. His death, and Donna's completely feral reaction to it, packs a significant, lingering punch.
The world-building part of the story is just as engaging as the jump scares and swooning terror of Donna and Tad trapped in that Pinto by a rabid-mad, massive dog. Donna's infidelity, and the plain but piercing reasoning behind it, were especially eye-opening. None of the reasons were good enough, yet they were all valid in their own way. Reading Cujo at that particular age, the dead-end housewife life Donna Trenton was leading certainly seemed like a version of a horror story. Even at thirteen, I knew intellectually that things were rarely black and white, but there was something about the way Donna comes to understand her inner conflict, how lucidly she brings together the fragments of reasoning that led her down this path, even as she condemns herself for allowing it to happen, and how much harder it is to convey those feelings in any truly effective way during that first confrontation, with her husband deeply hurt and betrayed, and Donna supplicant but still suffering under the weight of her worries, not one of which benefited from the betrayal, even if they were the cause.
"It's knowing you can't wait any longer to be a grownup, or wait any longer to make your peace with what you have. It's knowing that your choices are being narrowed almost daily. For a woman--no, for me--that's a brutal thing to have to face. . . . Men . . . they know what they are. They have an image of what they are . . . They don't hear that wind, or if they do, they find a lance and tilt at it, thinking it must be a windmill or some fucking thing that needs knocking down. And what a woman does--what I did--was to run from becoming. I got scared of the way the house sounded when Tad was gone." (King, 91)
I felt that last part in my chest, always remembered it, and it bookmarks the place in my own history where I first read Cujo, even more than the embarrassing retelling of the tale in Professor Zee's Honors Physical Science Fiasco. My little family had gone through a particularly rough patch of years--a job loss, moving from a relatively happy home to a series of elsewheres, two years of wretched middle school, the humiliation of food stamps, begging off bill collectors, selling off irreplaceable heirlooms--to come out the other side shaky but still together, mom and me against the world, her in a new job, me in the mercifully anonymous halls of high school, both of us living in a better place with fewer worries and less stress. As much as the previous two years hurt, they taught me a great deal of perspective. I was still a brat, mind you, but a more empathetic brat. I knew what Donna meant when she said she got scared of the way the house sounded, for her when Tad was gone, for me the echoing clang or the grinding creak of another strange smelling old rental, temporary, dimly lit, each one farther from comfort, pushing us back into the proverbial washout, deep in the weeds with a broken compass, lost and keening for Home. Even though the concept of "home" was already overexposed and sun bleached from too much obsessing and not enough cohesion. Having moved around all my life, what was home, anyway? A rumor. A fiction. Home is where the boxes sit half unpacked.
King in full KING mode, one whole page to set up a fairy tale introduction... |
...only to start the book off reminding everyone of The Dead Zone's side- creep and Castle Rock's very own deputy dawg and serial killer, Frank Dodd. |
After his scrap with Donna and subsequent mailing of a very authentic, hard to refute revelatory letter to Donna's husband, Steve Kemp decides to blow town for the next gig, somewhere west and away, to keep on truckin, as it were, and live his rolling-stone life just as any real writer should aspire to do. His temper, and his appalling lack of character, get the better of him, so he decides to turn around and head back to Castle Rock to serve out some more punishment for Donna's impudence. He drops in on the Trentons' home, let's himself in, and finds the house empty (Donna and Tad are already in the midst of their fated encounter with Cujo). In a frenzy best described as childishly terrifying, Kemp trashes the house, smashing, breaking, crashing, destroying . . . then concludes his tantrum by jacking off on the Trentons' bed and leaving a snide note on the refrigerator "Left something upstairs for you, baby."
As Steve Kemp puts distance between himself and what he's done, something remarkable and grotesque happens. It's so common, so familiar, and yet it never struck me so hard as it did this time around:
Had the retribution been too heavy for the offense? So what if she didn't want to make it with him any more, so what? He had trashed most of the goddam house. Did that, maybe, say something unpleasant about where his head was at?
He began to work on these questions a little at a time, the way most people do, running an objective set of facts through a bath of various chemicals which, when taken together, make up the complex human perceptual mechanism known as subjectivity. . . . [H]e tore down what had happened and then carefully rebuilt it . . . until the facts and his perception of the facts jibed in a way he could live with. (King, 201)
As Kemp settles into the revised perception of what he's done, literally leaving it in the rear-view mirror as he drives toward Idaho, he revels in the familiar grift of his lifecycle, his belief that rolling on will keep him honest, enrich his writing, make him the man we wants to be perceived as.
He would have been unable to understand the significance if someone had pointed out the fact that, whether in Maine or in Idaho, he would still be apt to throw his racket down in angry frustration if he lost a game of tennis; that he would refuse to shake the hand of his opponent over the net, as he always had when he lost. He only shook over the net when he won. (King, 202)
By the end of the first day's drive, Kemp has not only absolved himself from his monstrous acts, he has canonized himself a modern day Che Guevara.
His sleep was easy. He had convinced himself that trashing the Trentons' house had not been an act of half-mad jealous pique but a piece of revolutionary anarchy--offing a couple of fat middle-class pigs, the sort who made it easy for the fascist overlords to remain in power by blindly paying their taxes and their telephone bills. It had been an act of courage and of clean, justified fury. It had been his way of saying "power to the people," an idea he tried to incorporate in all his poems. (King, 202)
The reason why this particular human failing struck me so hard at this time around should be abundantly clear when framed in the events of the world as I write this (June 2020). After months of Covid-19 quarantine, the world watched a nine minute murder via Twitter and an enormous number of society took a deep, shaking breath and said, "Stop." There have been protests, marches, looting, lynchings, and widespread police brutality, recorded, documented, and put on blast for anyone with an internet connection to see. It seems the answer to an unforgivable act of police brutality has been . . . more police brutality. In so many of these cases, mirroring countless police-involved shootings and deaths that came before, there is a flashfire, emotional reaction to a situation where minimal professionalism requires there should be none. The person with the badge and gun gets called something he doesn't like, or isn't obeyed immediately even as a suspect is asking why he's been pulled over while the officer refuses to answer, or perhaps someone just runs . . . and that is all it takes for that officer to lose all composure and attack, far too often with deadly force. Sometimes it is a baton, sometimes it is a shove, sometimes it is a rubber bullet. And sometimes it is a real bullet. It has been a sickening though not surprising display.
A fundamental fact of the human condition is hating to admit when we're wrong . . . or weak, or flawed. Some people go their entire lives in a constant state of self-absolution. "I would never do that," "I'm a good person," "how dare you question me." And on. It's an incredible feat of denial and one hundred percent excrement.
Gloss stock, black and white, movie still inserts. Dee Wallace and Danny Pintauro were perfectly cast in the roles of Donna and Tad Trenton. |
The first time I heard the contrarian phrase "All Lives Matter" my first thought was, "okay, understandable." It was easy to be flippant since, as a white woman, I literally had no skin in the game. Upon further reading, I was made to understand the full meaning of the phrase "Black Lives Matter" . . . and the thoughtless insensitivity of the All Lives Matter response. When shouted in public, meme, or blog post today, at best, it is just ignorant. Worse, it is deliberately ignorant. The very worst, it is toxic narcissism. I'm starting to believe that most people still countering with the All Lives mantra are the latter. The phrase "Black Lives Matter" and every conceivable, patient explanation of the meaning, the history, and the importance of the movement have all been around long enough for everyone to understand what it means if they really wanted to.
Let's face facts, some people don't give a shit and never will. Others are steaming in that subjectivity bath and are positively sodden in wrinkly denial.
King, epigraphing even at the close. |
The first time I saw someone write "I hate white people" on social media, I reacted as though they were attacking me personally. How could I not take it personally? I'm a good person! I am a white people! I shall clutch my pearls and squawk indignantly! First of all, not everything is about me. Second of all, even though whoever said it (and liked it, and shared it . . . ) probably meant "White People (TM)" there have undoubtedly been times in my life where I was acting like white people (TM). Third of all, I am generally a good person, but I do take things personally even when they are not directed at me and also are you mad at me you seem mad at me if you are mad at me that is not fair so I am now mad at you also fuk u and your entire ancestry and we are at WAR.
Denial is so much easier, and defensive anger stands point to beat those ugly truths into the ground. It poisons you, though, pickles your heart, turns your brain into a rancorous tumor of reactive rage. There is no peace in that. One of the longest, most harrowing breaches to traverse is coming to terms with white privilege and the simple truth that you have benefited from it even if you never asked for it. You can't hot potato privilege to someone else and scream "not mine." It just is. And there is no WAR in acceptance.
See? NAL is selling all its wares -- blanks are not allowed! |
All the introspection and emotional maturity in the world isn't going to save Donna Trenton from the shattering Hell that she must face, first by stepping out of her car for the last time, desperate to save her failing child, committed to battle the beast that has already laid her open and infected her with the rabies virus. She faces off with him, beats him with a bat, her rage and terror pushing her on even as he refuses to die, keeps at her, gnashing, biting her. Even when he is finally dead, she's crossed into some haze of delirium, beating his dead body to a pulp as her husband finally pulls into the Cambers' dooryard to find her there, a wretched, wasted figure in an ecstasy of annihilation. Despite everything, it is too late for Tad Trenton. Donna tries desperately to revive him, hissing and biting at her husband, later the paramedics, but he is gone.
Not! One! Blank! Page! Dammit! |
What of Steve Kemp? The book never says. He is of no true consequence other than the fleeting destruction and bad karma he leaves in his wake. This is where stunted fools who refuse to learn and grow belong, dead-end footnotes in the ten cent bin.
This, of course, is but one aspect of an enormous problem. But each individual can start by being personally accountable and reverent to the awesome responsibility of policing.
Anyway, aspire to be a mighty Donna Trenton. Don't be a mini-balled Steve Kemp. Black lives matter.
Grade: B+
Scary? (0-nope to 10-you will die): 8. Lots of building dread leading up to calamitous jump scares and shots of sheer terror. A solid work of unapologetic horror.
Warnings: Yes, n-word. Spoken by the turdy, mean country folk, of course. I want to say the usage is not as flippant as previous novels, but I'm probably reaching. Just a warning that it's there, an ugly, festering little sore of a word. Otherwise, the biggest warning is Tad. Even with the spoilers, it's hard to read. The kid gets under your skin and the blast circumference of the pain is miles wide.
Nah. Books rule, the rest drools.
Great read, as usual. I just want to comment on the audiobook thing. I often have a problem listening to audiobooks, but if it is read by the author, such as Neil Gaiman, Douglas Adams, and ESPECIALLY David Sederis, I'm totally happy. In fact, I can't read David Sederis' books without him reading it to me. I only get the audiobook version of his stuff, because it is so enhanced by his reading. And Amy Sederis joins him occasionally too, which makes it just that much better. But typically there is the Old Man Voice Of Authority, which I don't really take a liking to. Anyway, cheers!
ReplyDelete