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Riding the Bullet
 
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Riding the Bullet [Hardcover]

Stephen King


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Cemetery Dance Publications; Gift edition (September 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0984074503
  • ISBN-13: 978-0984074501
  • Product Dimensions: 25.4 x 17.3 x 2.5 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 816 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #235,080 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

E-publishing takes a giant step with the release of this grandly entertaining ghost story. Not only is it the first original e-publication by a megaselling author, but it may be the most accomplished work ever to appear only in cyberspace--and it's available through an unprecedented number of vendors and platforms. The story is vintage King. Narrator Alan Parker, 21, learns that his beloved mother has had a stroke and hitchhikes through rural Maine to see her. On the way he's picked up first by a horrid old man, then by someone far more awful: a dead young man who offers him a terrible choice. The simple, potent prose skims along spurred by high suspense. The atmospherics roil like a classic nightmare: a moonlit graveyard, howling wind, rising mist; but King spins them with a wicked modern touch--the dead man drives a Mustang, and as the corpse pulls on a cigarette, Alan sees "little trickles of smoke escape from the stitched incision on his neck." When Alan makes his choice, the story deepens as King taps horror fiction's particular ability to illuminate the terror of the human condition. Anyone concerned about King's writing abilities after his near-fatal accident can relax. This genuinely chilling, haunting tale finds his talent--and the state of e-publishing--in the pink.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Riding the Bullet was originally published in March 2000 exclusively as an e-book and has now found its way to print and audio. It's a classic King ghost story/urban legend about a college student who hitchhikes across Maine to visit his hospitalized mother and gets more than he bargains for during his rides. Film and theater actor Josh Hamilton provides an excellent reading, with a promising command of pace and characterization. However, for many libraries, the economics of buying an audio version of a single, extremely short story may be questionable. Recommended with that reservation only.
Kristen L. Smith, Loras Coll. Lib., Dubuque, IA
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A look at the Limited Edition of Riding the Bullet, Dec 18 2010
By Wayne C. Rogers - Published on Amazon.com
Achat Amazon vérifié(Quest-ce que cest?)
Ce commentaire est de: Riding the Bullet (Hardcover)
Riding the Bullet is an exquisite Limited and Gift Edition that's published in a somewhat larger book format. On the front side of the book you have Stephen King's 48 page novella. When you turn the book over to the back side and then upside down, you now have the screenplay of Riding the Bullet by Mick Garris, who also directed the film. It's reminiscent of the double-novel paperbacks of years past. Between the novella and the screenplay are an art gallery of Bernie Wrightson's ink drawings and still shots from the movie of Riding the Bullet with notes by Mick Garris.

For those of you who haven't read King's novella or seen the movie, the story deals with college student, Alan Parker, and his attempt to hitchhike home on night to see his mother, who's just been hospitalized with a stroke. Good rides, of course, are sometimes hard to find for a hitchhiker. Alan had hoped to be to Lewiston by night fall, but instead finds himself out on a lonely highway at night with his thumb stuck up in the air. When a muscle car happens along and the driver offers him a ride, Alan gladly hops in. Of course, this being a Stephen King story, the driver of the car turns out to be the spirit of a dead man from the past who'd lost his head in a car accident. Alan immediately wants to climb out of the car, but the driver won't allow him to leave. You see the ghost has something in store for the college student. He's going to offer Alan a choice. Either Alan can choose to take the long journey with the driver, or he can offer his dying mother up for the ride. It's a tough decision to make for a young man, but, hey, life isn't always fair, is it?

Stephen King's novella is a fine piece of writing that displays his craftsmanship with the written word, while at the same time exploring the themes of one's morality and the guilt that comes to a person when he/she knowingly makes the wrong decision. We all have a strong instinct for survival, but what would we do if we had to make a choice about who lives and dies. Would you be willing to surrender your life for another's in order to life? I don't know what I would do in a similar situation. It's always easy to think you would take the high ground, until you find yourself with having to make a life or death decision.

The screenplay by Mick Garris is longer than the novella. Mick had to increase the length of the story with more information about Alan Parker, some new characters, and with a changed ending. Even with this, Mick manages to stay true to King's story, following it as closely as possible with much of the dialogue that was used in the novella. If you're interested in writing for the movies, then you'll certainly learn a lot from the finished shooting script of Riding the Bullet. Script writing is different from writing a short story, novella, or novel. You have to see everything from the camera's point of view, or what viewers see on the screen when they go to the movies. Also, when writing a screenplay, one will usually have to add or delete material to it from the original source. In this case, new material had to be added to make an almost two-hour movie. I enjoyed the screenplay and Mick Garris's style of writing. In many ways, he's just as good as Stephen King is in his ability to create a story and to see it with his mind's eye on up a big movie screen.

Add to this some really beautiful ink drawings by the great Bernie Wrightson of some wicked-looking night crawlers and scantily-clad women, plus some behind-the-scenes shots of the movie, Riding the Bullet, sketch boards, and notes on production schedules, and you have a one-of-a-kind edition of a Stephen King novella. This is definitely a must-buy for collectors of King's fiction. Lonely Road Books has done a fabulous job on this very special edition with hot wrap-around dust jacket by Alan Clark. On a final note, though the price for the Gift Edition of Riding the Bullet on Amazon is far less than buying it directly from the publisher, you should be aware that no slipcase is included, nor is the book signed by any of the participants.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Riding The Bullet By Stephen King, Feb 1 2012
By Barb in Missouri - Published on Amazon.com
Ce commentaire est de: Riding the Bullet (Hardcover)
This book is a must have for any King fan, It is really cool because on one side is the story and flip the book on the other side is the screen play.
Awesome book!! I love it.

3 of 9 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars UPC sticker stuck directly to dust jacket, TWICE, Jan 4 2011
By M. Emrich "mattemrichphoto" - Published on Amazon.com
Achat Amazon vérifié(Quest-ce que cest?)
Ce commentaire est de: Riding the Bullet (Hardcover)
I ordered this collectible edition and had to return it twice. The first time I received the item I noticed there was a UPC (price code) sticker directly attached to the dust jacket, making this otherwise collectible item far from valuable. I tried peeling the sticker off but could tell it was going to tear the dust jacket so I stopped. I returned the item and explained why I had returned it. I asked for a replacement, since I really wanted this book, and the replacement copy arrived two weeks later...and it had a sticker on the dust jacket! Forget it. I returned it again and asked for a refund.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 3 reviews  3.7 out of 5 stars 

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