![]() The worst nursing home deaths, and King knows this, were directly caused by anti-science Democrats, like former New York Gov. The Democrat governors who committed murder on an industrial scale by forcing COVID patients into nursing homes go without the least mention. nCJKuKT39bĬcording to King, COVID nursing home deaths were all because an orderly refused to get an mRNA “vaccine” because it was developed using cells from aborted fetuses. Were people always this insufferably unsubtle? You'd think an experienced, bestselling novelist could cleverly allude to his politics rather than beating you over the head with them like a crowbar. Here are some excerpts captured on the Twitterzzz:įrom the latest Stephen King. When the black lesbian aborts the resultant baby, her family disowns her completely. This “sin,” King claims, is so dishonorable that several members of the family’s Church gang-rape the black lesbian. He writes in Holly of a vegan black lesbian who is victimized by her Christian family on religious grounds for not eating meat. Lastly, King’s treatment of Christians is beyond scurrilous. They are all women, minorities, homosexuals, or some combination of the three. The protagonists of the book are equally predictable. The antagonists are a husband and wife who are racist, anti-vax, old, and white. Which brings me to Holly, his 900 th novel.įirst, the hate and bigotry by way of American Thinker: ![]() If someone faithfully reincarnated EC Comics today, he’d be right there with a pitchfork screaming about the “ male gaze” and whatever else offended his fellow woketards.īasically, King became an uptight square, a stiff Margaret Dumont with an overbite. The cool, nerdy guy who adored schlocky horror movies and the taboo pleasures of EC Comics has become a humorless scold, yelling at everyone from the front lawn of his Twitter account. King’s biggest problem is how full of himself he’s become. Flash-forward 27 years to when I gave Billy Summers a read, which only confirmed my 1994 decision. His 1994 novel Insomnia cured me of its title. And with that change came bloated books, an air of self-importance, and spell-breaking diatribes. There were still some great novels to come- Misery and Eyes of the Dragon, for instance, but by this time, he was Stephen King, no longer an outsider but an insulated, pampered, filthy-rich elitist. If King had retired in 1983, everyone would still know his name. Name a novelist with an uninterrupted, decade-long run of page-turners like Carrie, Salem’s Lot, The Shining, The Stand, The Dead Zone, Firestarter, Cujo, Christine, and Pet Sematary. And so are the strangers they encounter.Sounds like Stephen King’s latest novel is more bigoted and dishonest than usual.īefore Stephen King became Stephen King, he was a breathtakingly talented storyteller. The dying, natural and otherwise, has been going on in Derry for a long, long time. ![]() They remember It, also set in Derry, and know there's a mean streak running through this small New England city underneath its ordinary surface awesome and terrifying forces are at work. But Ralph has lived his entire life in Derry, Maine, and Derry isn't like other places, as millions of Stephen King readers will gladly testify. Soon, Ralph thinks, he won't be sleeping at all, and what then? A problem, yes - though perhaps not so uncommon, you might say. He's begun to notice a strangeness in his familiar surroundings, to experience visual phenomena that he can't quite believe are hallucinations. The books call it "premature waking" Ralph, who is still learning to be a widower, calls it a season in hell. Each morning, the news conveyed by the bedside clock is a little worse: 3:15.3:02.2:45.2:15. Ralph Roberts has a problem: he isn't sleeping so well these days.
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