What starts out sounding like it could be a pastiche tribute to the likes of John Ford and Zane Grey soon takes a very sharp turn into something out of a late 60s acid trip. I suppose that kind of makes sense, considering what King said about the genesis of his idea. He claims to have gotten started writing this little oddity sometime back during his college years at the University of Maine. Turns out one of his friends had gifted him a whole ream of bright green writing paper (307-9). He was living, at the time, in a part of what I guess you might call a student dorm. To hear King tell it, however, the place he chose for a Crash Pad was a step or two below the house Abraham Lincoln was born in. Years later, he would go on to immortalize this little hovel for college alumni in the pages of his 1999 book, Hearts in Atlantis. It's there he refers to that dormitory setup as follows: "I finished my senior years living off-campus in LSD Acres, the rotting cabins down by the Stillwater river (328)". I think the name of the place might be an important clue to the exact nature of the curious saga that King eventually spun out from that initial collection of green writing sheets. The least surprising thing to me about the Dark Tower books is that they get their start in a moment of youthful chemical exhilaration. In a later essay on the genesis of the series, King explains how "Hobbits were big when I was nineteen...
"There were probably half a dozen Merrys and Pippins slogging through the mud at Max Yasgur’s farm during the Great Woodstock Music Festival, twice as many Frodos, and hippie Gandalfs without number. J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings was madly popular in those days, and while I never made it to Woodstock (say sorry), I suppose I was at least a halfling-hippie. Enough of one, at any rate, to have read the books and fallen in love with them. The Dark Tower books, like most long fantasy tales written by men and women of my generation (The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, by Stephen Donaldson, and The Sword of Shannara, by Terry Brooks, are just two of many), were born out of Tolkien’s. But although I read the books in 1966 and 1967, I held off writing. I responded (and with rather touching wholeheartedness) to the sweep of Tolkien’s imagination—to the ambition of his story—but I wanted to write my own kind of story, and had I started then, I would have written his. That, as the late Tricky Dick Nixon was fond of saying, would have been wrong. Thanks to Mr. Tolkien, the twentieth century had all the elves and wizards it needed". Then, so far as the writer can recall, that's when inspiration hit him from what might seem like the most unlikeliest of angles, or places to happen."Then, in an almost completely empty movie theater (the Bijou, in Bangor, Maine, if it matters), I saw a film directed by Sergio Leone. It was called The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, and before the film was even half over, I realized that what I wanted to write was a novel that contained Tolkien’s sense of quest and magic, but set against Leone’s almost absurdly majestic Western backdrop. If you’ve only seen this gonzo Western on your television screen, you don’t understand what I’m talking about—cry your pardon, but it’s true. On a movie screen, projected through the correct Panavision lenses, TG, TB, & TU is an epic to rival Ben-Hur. Clint Eastwood appears roughly eighteen feet tall, with each wiry jut of stubble on his cheeks looking roughly the size of a young redwood tree. The grooves bracketing Lee Van Cleef’s mouth are as deep as canyons, and there could be a thinny (see Wizard and Glass) at the bottom of each one. The desert settings appear to stretch at least out as far as the orbit of the planet Neptune. And the barrel of each gun looks to be roughly as large as the Holland Tunnel.
What I wanted even more than the setting was that feeling of epic, apocalyptic size. The fact that Leone knew jack shit about American geography (according to one of the characters, Chicago is somewhere in the vicinity of Phoenix, Arizona) added to the film’s sense of magnificent dislocation. And in my enthusiasm—the sort only a young person can muster, I think—I wanted to write not just a long book, but the longest popular novel in history. I did not succeed in doing that, but I feel I had a decent rip; The Dark Tower, Volumes One through Seven, really comprise a single tale, and the first four volumes run to just over two thousand pages in paperback. The final three volumes run another twenty-five hundred in manuscript. I’m not trying to imply here that length has anything whatsoever to do with quality; I’m just saying that I wanted to write an epic, and in some ways, I succeeded. If you were to ask me why I wanted to do that, I couldn’t tell you. Maybe it’s a part of growing up American: build the tallest, dig the deepest, write the longest. And that head-scratching puzzlement when the question of motivation comes up? Seems to me that that is also part of being an American. In the end we are reduced to saying It seemed like a good idea at the time (web)". According to scholar Bev Vincent, King "told an audience at Yale in April 2003...he was flying high on mescaline at the time (Road to Tower, 24)".
Like I say, none of that would surprise me in the least. If anything, it all helps the whole jumbled mess to make sense (at least as far as any creative concept that gets way too out of hand for its own good can ever be said to have a shred of through-line logic attached to it). Looking back on it all now, The Dark Tower really is the kind of idea that could only have emerged as a viable notion during a very specific span of time. It's the kind of Gonzo inspiration that would have had it's best chances either in the lead up to, or somewhere not too long in the aftermath of the Summer of Love. King was a teenager in those years, and like the rest of his peers, he sort of Turned on, Tuned In, and Dropped Out. It's a philosophy that I don't think he's ever quite lost, come to think of it. He might have had to give up the drugs, yet a lot of the philosophy and life lessons he picked up along the way still seem to remain a part of his creative toolbox. How else do you explain a concept like Mid-World? I called it a secondary world a moment ago, yet if there's any truth to the way that term applies here, then it does so in one of the most ironic ways imaginable. Bev Vincent has described the Tower series as an extended work of collective Metafiction. That is, it's a story whose sole purpose for existing turns out to be the examination of the art and craft of stories, and storytelling. Think The Simpsons, yet a lot more Ivy League sometimes.Some of the most famous names who have been able to pull this sort of narrative hat trick off are Vladimir Nabokov, Lewi Carroll, and King's own close friend, Peter Straub. The key thing about this subgenre is that when it's done right, the results can vary from memorable (in the case of Nabokov, and Straub) to an all out timeless classic (as Carroll was able to prove not once, but twice, in the Alice books). When it fails, the results can sometimes come off as a hodgepodge of ideas that never quite manage to coalesces together. King's efforts fall into the latter category, I'm afraid. It's a collection of interesting notions and concepts that might sound interesting in rough draft. However, in terms of a finished execution, it's debatable if a lifetime of continuous rewrites and drafting would have been enough to salvage anything of value here. Don't get me wrong, King has done plenty to earn himself the distinction of being perhaps one of the premiere authors in the history of American Letters, right up there with Mark Twain and Nathaniel Hawthorne. The trick is none of those accolades are ever bound to come from his work on the Tower, no matter how fond he is of it. If I had to take a guess, I'm pretty sure King himself is aware of this, and probably isn't all that put out by it. It also still doesn't change the fundamental nature of The Dark Tower either as a multi-part book series, or even as a literary concept.
It's what happens when an author tries to see if he can turn one of his acid fantasies into a maybe publishable book. To be fair, there's nothing inherently wrong with such an idea. If that were the case, then we wouldn't have books like Alice in Wonderland, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, or even works like It (and yes, I still continue to defend the ending; there's a lot more sophistication to it anyway, than just "This is Your Premise on Drugs"). The trick here seems to be down to two choices. You can either try to rest some semblance of coherence from your daydreams, or else you have to find a way to make it so over the top bonkers that it kind of has no other choice except to be labeled as entertaining. Again, Lewis Carroll remains the all-time champ at being able to pull the latter creative strategy off without a hitch. Ken Kesey, meanwhile, was successful in the opposite direction. He found a way of humanizing all the madness inherent in an acid trip, and made us care about the cast of characters that emerged from his chemical jaunts. King's Tower, on the other hand, remains something of an unbuilt edifice. That's down to two major, interlocking reasons. The first is that the entire series amounts to a poster child warning for what can happen when a writer's ambitions get the better of his ability to live up to whatever kind of hype he's built up for himself in his head. Works like the Tower have made me realize how futile it is for anybody to try and be the next J.R.R. Tolkien.
In the first place, it can't be done for one simple reason. Only Tolkien could ever be himself. It's not the kind of thing anybody else has ever been able to truly replicate. To those who would point to books like Watership Down or the original Star Wars trilogy, I'd point out that what makes those efforts work is twofold. First, the stories never extend to such a far off point as that found in the Mid-World saga. What makes Richard Adams's animal fable work so well is that it is this neat, compact, and above all, standalone fairy tale of the natural world. The same thing originally applied to the Galaxy Far, Far, Away. Everything built to a series of more or less well wrought plot beats, and that was it. Even Lord of the Rings can be said to work because of one very important aspect of its concept. It's just one, single, book. It gets marketed today as a trilogy, but in actual truth, Tolkien only ever wrote it as this one, doorstopper of a novel. There's just one reason for why people are calling it a Trilogy at all now, and that's because book publishers learned you can double your value by taking what is just this one story, and breaking it up into three parts. This may have been a mistake, in retrospect, as it left even Tolkien's professional fans with the idea that all great epic Fantasy sagas are meant to work this way.So now you've got guys like Terry Brooks, who have spent an entire lifetime trying to outdo the college professor from Oxford in terms of worldbuilding and output, yet the whole thing remains a cheap knockoff. That's a problem that has repeated itself over the years, to the point where Tolkien's original achievement runs the risk of being degraded and lost sight of amidst a sea of copy cat mediocrity. King's efforts in this direction don't quite sink that low, yet the final product can't be called well made, either. The Dark Tower is one of those stories that seems forever doomed to have never really gotten anywhere past the planning stages. In distinction to a book like Misery or Salem's Lot, there's the lingering air of looking at the textual equivalent of an unfinished painting. You can see which bits and pieces of other books and films might have inspired this or that incident. It might even be possible to catch the faint glimpses of something approaching an over-arching idea to the series as a whole. However, even if that's the case, the fact remains that, in this instance, at least, King (unlike Tolkien) was never able to find the right way of embodying these ideas within the narrative proper. In all the best stories, the theme and the narrative are able to blend together so well as to be a seamless whole. This is an effect King was able to achieve best in works like It or The Shining. These are instances of the author at the top of his game. The fact that it's difficult to get that vibe here tells us something.It leads to the second main reason for why The Dark Tower comes off as such an abortive project. The simple fact of that matter is that every author has their specific level of strengths and weaknesses. In King's case, the way this fact of life works out boils down to an ability to create a kind of "portable magic" (in his own words) when sticking to tales set in the genre known as the American Gothic, or else when crafting these neat, and sometimes heartfelt slice of life dramas. Even in a relatively self-contained work like the Lot, you come away with the sense of the author being able to tap into that same kind of epic scope that Tolkien was able to grant to his work. The only difference is this time the grandeur of Hobbiton and Mordor are each being applied at once to either a series of fictional small towns, or else to various spots of the American landscape in general. When he's being himself, King can turn America into an EC Comics version of Middle Earth. It makes for sort of a fitting irony that the very moment he tries to deliberately copy Tolkien that his inner creative workshop seems to grind to a halt. I think it might have something to do with the indelible individuality of the author's own true creative voice. What makes King stand out so well in the field is that he is one of the few artists who has managed to leave an impact on both the vocabulary and even iconography of the Horror genre.
It's an impact that has been able to seep its way into the vernacular of both pop culture, and of common, everyday discourse as well. It's become so ubiquitous at this point that at least two whole generations have been born unknowing that a certain part of their dialogue is set by books like The Dark Half and The Dead Zone. There have been efforts on the part of Tower Junkies to make the same thing happen for Mid-World. However, the fact that names like Cujo or Christine have a greater currency than that of Roland says a lot about which books are more favored by the public at large. A book like The Stand, meanwhile is interesting, in that it seems to be ubiquitous on one level, while on another, it's almost like it shares the same fate as the Tower saga. Perhaps a lot of that has to do with the fact that King later tied it into the exploits of Roland and his quest. By shackling a story commonly touted as his most popular book to such a niche series, King seems to have created an unintended side effect in The Stand's reception history. It still maintains a certain level of its former popularity. At the same time, it has begun to garner a reputation as part of a small collection of titles set apart from his more popular writing. Perhaps part of what has helped this lopsided audience response along can be discerned when you take a look at the tale of Randall Flagg, and then place it alongside the exploits of Roland.When you do this, the similarities between the two titles kind of have no choice except to jump out at you. It becomes pretty clear real fast that each set of novels share a lot of the same inspiration in common. Both works can be thought of as something like the ultimate Counterculture Apocalypse Fantasy. The Stand is a novel haunted by the 60s decade out of which pretty much all of its inspiration sprang. This is something that is noticeable in its current incarnation, yet it becomes obvious if you go back and read its original 1978 edited release. Even in its truncated state, it becomes clear as day that this is the work of a man who's formative years were spent in the crucible of anti-war campus protests and Civil Rights marches. It's written from a perspective that knows how to survive the love taps of a policeman's nightstick, or the painful sense of suffocation that comes from being teargassed. It's general outlook is one that was used to seeing Flower Power signs and posters as a normal part of its everyday, waking landscape. The musical references go no further than the glory years of Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin. The death of men like Elvis and Jim Morrison are still a fresh memory in the original publication. A lot of the sentiment of the novel can be found in a simple throwaway line at the start of Chapter 35, the moment where "Larry thought dazedly, give me the sixties and cram 1980 up your ass (286)". That's a line that transitions to, and loses all its sense of urgency in, the 1900 re-edit edition.Perhaps that in itself explains another reason for the shifting sense of this book's reputation. As a lot of those old Flower Children begin to enter the clearing at the end at the path, pretty soon the way people relate to the vibes and outlook of that novel are going to take on a very different tone from the ones that once made it one of King's most well regarded works. For what it's worth, while it's not my absolute favorite of his (that honor still belongs to, and remains with the ghoulish exploits of Pennywise the Dancing Clown) it is possible to see how all of these elements used to make it such a blockbuster back in the day. It also probably doesn't hurt that I'm a fan of the 60s, myself. You might even say I'm something of an informal student of that decade. Perhaps it's this otherwise quiet bit of personal enthusiasm that has enabled me to see and therefore grasp at all the ways in which the same sense of shared inspiration is able to pass neatly from The Stand in the works of the Tower proper. In Mid-World, the reader is treated to that same sense of late 60s apocalypticism. This time, however, true to the roots of the decade that birthed it, the same world of The Stand has now been taken and amplified up into Gonzo levels of lunacy. Here we're treated to the sight of Clint Eastwood's nameless cowboy as he's taken and transposed into a version of The Stand's Captain Trips Americana as it is shaped and molded in the kind of setting that can only be found within the pages of old issues of Heavy Metal.
The main stage that Roland traverses is a version of America in which the ravages of Flagg and the plague have somehow managed to render everything into the kind of trippy, symbolist landscape that could only have emerged from the mind of graphic artists like Jean "Moebius" Giraud and Alejandro Jodorowsky when they've each taken their share of the same mescaline that King claims to have been on, or else plain old LSD. This is the kind of inner, mental topography that belongs to someone who remembers what it was like the relax on a Summer day, trying to devour the words of Frank Herbert or Carlos Castaneda, while chilling to the wired folk rock of Traffic, King Crimson, or Blue Oyster Cult on the record player. All of these influences find themselves mirrored in the terrain Roland finds himself wandering through, and the kind of people he meets along the way. It's this same landscape that guys like George Lucas was able to take from the pages of Heavy Metal and translate it all in a way that was able to grant it a genuine form of mainstream popularity. It's pretty clear King was always trying to do the same thing in his own Gothic way. The difference is here he strayed too far out of his comfort zone for any of it to do any good. You get the sense its one of those ideas that wanted to go all the way. If so, it needed someone with the manic intensity of a Harlan Ellison or a Philip K. Dick to pull it off. King is neither of those guys, he's just a simple New England Pastoralist, for goodness sake. His strength's are in tales of American life as it is encroached by the Fantastic. Anything more than that is the author asking for trouble. Still, the fact remains that the Tower books amount to a series with a great deal of multiple inspirations that went into it all. Alissa Burger's The Quest for the Dark Tower is perhaps the best place where the both curious and incredulous reader can trace down the various strands of other narratives that have woven their way into the total patchwork tapestry that is Mid-World. What I'd like to do here today is devote an article to just one single aspect of King's ambitious, yet flawed attempt at a dark fantasy series. It involves one of the central ideas governing Roland and his story. For all it's flaws (and there are many), it is at least possible to say that King tried his best at fleshing out an attempt at yet another secondary world. The Gunslinger's home is best thought of as something like the jumbled contents of a world library, with characters and settings from various texts all somehow occupying the same space. One day you find yourself in a Sergio Leone Western, the next day you're in Lyman Frank Baum's Emerald Palace. Because: Metafiction. Yeah, it's that kind of world. Writers like Kelly Link and Jasper Fforde are way better at this kind of thing, and King is always playing catch-up.Which sort of makes the fact that he was able to weave a number of interesting concepts around the main setting something of a remarkable feat. What might be called the Reigning Ideas of Mid-World are also the one aspect of the Tower books that I find the most fascinating. This is because they are the single handful of elements that can be traced back to their original, literary sources. Once you do that, you'd be surprised to learn that for all the faults of the story proper, it's got some pretty heady influences in back of it. People like to think of King as the literary equivalent of a Rock n' Roll guitar artist. It's easy to see why this is the case. In addition to a lyrical kind of style which can put one in mind of a good piece of R-n-B music at it's best, it doesn't hurt that King came of age with the birth of Rock as an artistic genre. So it does make a certain amount of sense that this is an influence that is at least capable of encoding itself into the rhythms of modern literate prose. King just turns out to have been the one to perfect it to an artform. It's a style that makes its way even into Roland's quest, yet the real point is that he's able to take that guitar riff lyricism, and match it to themes and ideas that stretch all the way back to the eras of guys like Chaucer and Shakespeare. If that sounds far-fetched, let me assure you it's not.
Near the end of his non-fiction study, Danse Macabre, King makes a statement which probably has no choice except to come off as one hell of a left-field idea. At the same time, though, for better or worse, he has given us at least some kind of insight into the thinking that powers the themes of his fiction. The import quote comes in the middle of the author's justification for the value of the modern American Gothic as a genre worth of being called literature. He suggests that Horror's "main purpose is to reaffirm the virtues of the norm by showing us what awful things happen to people who venture into taboo lands. Within the framework of most horror tales we find a moral code so strong it would make a Puritan smile. In the old E.C. comics, adulterers inevitably came to bad ends and murderers suffered fates that would make the rack and the boot look like kiddy rides at the carnival". Here's the part where King drops the crucial reigning idea. "Modem horror stories are not much different from the morality plays of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, when we get right down to it. The horror story most generally not only stands foursquare for the Ten Commandments, it blows them up to tabloid size. We have the comforting knowledge when the lights go down in the theater or when we open the book that the evildoers will almost certainly be punished, and measure will be returned for measure. "Further, I’ve used one pompously academic metaphor, suggesting that the horror tale generally details the outbreak of some Dionysian madness in an Apollonian existence, and that the horror will continue until the Dionysian forces have been repelled and the Apollonian norm restored again (442)". The idea that someone who writes the sort of stories King does might very well be plying in the same sort of literate branch office that was once inhabited by the likes of Edmund Spenser is enough to sent any tenured Ivy League Professor of English into an apoplectic fit. If someone like Harold Bloom had ever read, or heard King repeat those paragraphs in an interview, he might have gone on the warpath. For the rest of the faces in the audience, however, it's almost like our favorite Horror scribe just handed us some kind of riddle written in a foreign language. That's because the notions King uses to describe the nature of both his own efforts and Horror as a genre are all taken from the era of the Renaissance. That's the time period when modern literature was born, and in the process, a lot of the writers of that early modernistic generation utilized all of the words that King just used to describe the American Gothic genre. He's saying that most Horror fiction makes use of tropes dating all the way far back before the Founding of the American Colonies. He also says that these concepts make up the nature and content of his own books. It sounds strange, yet I think King has been of some assistance here. For better or worse, he's given critics and readers a hitherto overlooked and unexplored aspect of his work. The interesting thing about it is just how much it helps to make sense of the writer's own fiction.Mid-World is a thematic amalgamation of insights, and maybe even philosophical concepts which find their earliest artistic expressions in works like The Canterbury Tales, or the oeuvre of the Globe Theater. The reason I'm able to say this with a decent enough amount of assurance is because it's ever so often possible to catch King in the act of using words, or phrases that would have been familiar to someone like the Bard of Avon. Specifically, in nonfiction works like Danse Macabre, King keeps utilizing the same set of terms, over and again. These are the Microcosm and the Macrocosm. An attentive reader of that study text will note King's acknowledgment that he got those terms from the writings of sophisticated literary critics such as John G. Parks and Irving Malin. These are the kind of guys whose reputation goes all the way back to the days of T.S. Eliot, William Empson, and Northrup Frye. The kind of people who wrote articles you might in journals with names like The Sewanee Review, or other places like it. What's interesting to note is that King further states that he knows a lot more about the thematic history or background of those terms even beyond what it found in the work of Parks and Malin. It's clear he knows that they are a shared vocabulary between Shakespeare and Chaucer. The Macabre paragraph quoted above is proof that King knows where Parks and Malin got it from. The trick is this is the aspect of his thinking that he chooses to keep and play close to the vest.
If I had to say why this is the case, then all I can do is point to the motto from the world of a certain type of stage performer. "A good magician never reveals his secrets". If it's a question of where else King might have gotten both an interest in the themes of guys like Shakespeare? Well, I mean that's sort of a loaded dice question, isn't it? There's like a ton of places where that can happen for just about anyone who decides to allow themselves to be curious about that sort of thing. In terms of how King fell into it all, then I'd have to point to a college teacher that the writer has always cited as one of his biggest influences. His name was Burton Hatlen, and like Parks and Malin, he was the product of both a literate household and background. Hell, even the guy's doctoral dissertation was about John Milton (web). What do you suppose that tells you about his level of sophistication? What it says to me is that King got his interest in the thinking of men like Geoff, Big Bill, and Uncle Milty from first taking part as an enthusiastic student of Hatlen's college courses. Then going on from there with his tutor's instruction and encouragement to branch out and explore the related topics of Macro and Microcosm for himself. It wouldn't surprise me to learn that his later friendship with Peter Straub acted as a further encouragement to study these words and the ideas in back of and beyond them. In fact, it wouldn't surprise me to learn that Peter Straub got King further interested in these arcane subject matters.It's all a bit esoteric when you get down to it, more or less a form of lost language, yet it seems to have captured King' Imagination in a way that is still visible even in his latest written works. It's what allows me to make the startling discovery and declaration that King is something of, for all intents and purposes, something of a literal Renaissance Man. The literary themes and ideas of that Era somehow became a permanent part of his artistic storehouse. The good news about this is that these are concepts that have a life outside of the Tower series. You can find them inhabiting the pages of even a simple short story like "The Monkey". That's an example of King employing his Elizabethan influences at the summit of his creativity. In Mid-World, by contrast, we're seeing the author spread himself too thin. Yet it's also the one place where King seems comfortable allowing himself to be more up front about his literary Inspirations. Which, paradoxically, might be the ultimate explanation for a writer spending so much time and effort on what is otherwise a cistern well that's run dry a long time ago, or else never really worked properly to begin with. To be fair, it's excavating the themes of The Dark Tower that stands out as the most interesting part about the whole affair. One particular aspect of these books jumped out at me recently in the middle of a passage found in the series' third book, The Wastelands.It's a moment that comes relatively early in the proceedings, and one of the interesting things to note about Wastelands is that it seems to have been the volume where you can sense King trying to get down to basics facts, of a sort. It's the book where he tries to make a concerted effort to layout the nature of Roland's world. He never really quite succeeds in this endeavor, I'm afraid. Yet along the way he does manage to throw his readers a bone in terms of allowing us to figure out where he got some of his ideas for the series. To be specific, there's a point where the author tries to let the characters do some world-building, and it results in the following exchange, where the protagonist tells the characters, and also the readers the meaning of a very specific word, one that King tries to hang a great deal of weight on as the series moved forward. That word is, "Ka - the word you think of as 'destiny'...although the actual meaning is much more complex and hard to define, as is almost always the case with words of the High Speech. And tet, which means a group of people with the same interests and goals. We three are a tet, for instance. Ka-tet is the place where many lives are joined by fate.” “Like in The Bridge of San Luis Rey,” Susannah murmured. “What’s that?” Roland asked. “A story about some people who die together when the bridge they’re crossing collapses. It’s famous in our world.” Roland nodded his understanding.
That whole bit of lore drop conversation can be found on page 79 of the current trade paperback edition, as of this writing. It's one of those passages that I think even self-described Tower Junkies tend to overlook. It's something I'm guilty of myself. I'd coasted through an audiobook version of this text only once before, and somehow it must have gotten lost in the shuffle of my attention span. I had a chance to pick up a copy of an book on tape version of Wastelands, recently. This one was read by the author himself. Maybe that's what allowed both the word and the nature of the conversation outlined above to jump out at me this time. Whatever the case, the fact is on this go-round I was either smart or else just attentive enough to realize something. That name drop of a long forgotten book wasn't just some throwaway piece of literary trivia. This was the writer signaling to any who could or would listen that this is where he must have got the idea for one of the most intriguing and/or frustrating features of the Tower series. A great deal of it must have come from The Bridge of San Luis Rey, whatever that was. It turned out to be one of those accidental discoveries that tends to spark a kind of bulldog curiosity in bookworms like me. If I'm able to find even the slightest scrap of a topic fascinating, then I'll tend to try and hunt the meaning down to it's source. Yeah, I'm that kind of reader, if it that matters.It's not the sort of thing that happens every day. Yet it is what you might call a normal, standard operating procedure for anyone who decides to take an active interest in the reading and critiquing of stories. Something you need to do if you ever want to be a professional arts critic, in other words. If that's the kind of goal you can ever conceptualize for yourself, then you'd be surprised how sometimes even a little hint like the one King provides can go a long way. It can provide the start of sometimes very intriguing breadcrumb trails that can lead you through all sorts of fascinating textual thickets and forests. In fact, it's sort of how I learned about King incorporating the themes and ideas of Renaissance literature into the entirety of his work. In this case, just hearing the title was enough to send me to the posthumous doorstep of a writer by the name of Thornton Wilder. He's a name I'd heard of before, yet never in anything like a major capacity. He's the kind of name you run across in passing during English 101. I guess you could call him something of a literary polymath. He wasn't just a novelist, but also a playwright, a lecturer, broadcaster, WWII soldier, and maybe even something of a literary theorist. So far as I can tell, his most famous works are plays like Our Town, and that's about it for most of us.He counts, in other words, as something of a famous obscurity. It's the kind of fate that can happen to a lot of talent if you're not too careful. When most people here the name Jack Nicholson, for instance, most of us think of his role in Kubrick's The Shining, or else it's the Joker from Batman. It's easy to see why this is the case. These are the two performances of his that have managed to capture the imagination of pop culture. With that said, how many people today even remember that he was in a film like One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? That's the same kind of fate that appears to have caught up with guys like Thornton Wilder, albeit in a more all-encompassing manner. His fame, such as it is, belongs more to the sequestered halls of high school theater programs than to either the Ivory Tower or pop culture. It is therefore possible for a flesh and blood human being to become an anachronism. Still, King must have been impressed with the guy's work if he allowed one of his quaint, curious, and forgotten tomes to shape the lore of the Tower books. After finding out this is what happened, I then became curious about what it was, or might be, about The Bridge of San Luis Rey that made King want to incorporate it as one of the governing ideas of Mid-World. So I decided to look into it myself, and the result is the following article. It's going to be a review of Wilder's text, yet there's a trick to it.
I'm going to do the best I can to give my thoughts about how well the merits of Wilder's novel holds up on it's own. At the same time, I'm not going to review it in a vacuum, like I do with other texts or films here. Instead, I'll also examine the fact that it inspired King's notion of literary fate, not just in the Tower saga, but in a lot of his other fiction as well. What this means in practice is I'm going to keep comparing notes between the two authors. I want to take a look at what King borrows from Wilder, and how it either fits, or doesn't within the story of the Gunslinger. In that sense, what happens next will be almost like a double review, in a way. I'm not only going to be giving a regular critique of Wilder's book, but I'm also going to see how well King does in utilizing this as part of his dark fantasy series.