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'Salem's Lot

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'Salem's Lot
First edition cover
AuthorStephen King
Cover artistDave Christensen
LanguageEnglish
GenreHorror
PublishedOctober 17, 1975
PublisherDoubleday
Publication placeU.S.
Media typePrint(Hardcover)
Pages439
ISBN978-0-385-00751-1
OCLC848489
813.54
LC ClassPS3561.I483

'Salem's Lotis a 1975horrornovelby American authorStephen King.It was his second published novel. The story involves a writer named Ben Mears who returns to the town ofJerusalem's Lot(or 'Salem's Lot for short) in Maine, where he lived from the age of five through nine, only to discover that the residents are becomingvampires.The town is revisited in the short stories "Jerusalem's Lot"and"One for the Road",both from King's story collectionNight Shift(1978). The novel was nominated for theWorld Fantasy Awardin 1976[1]and theLocus Awardfor the All-Time Best Fantasy Novel in 1987.[2]

In two separate interviews in the 1980s, King said that, of all his books,'Salem's Lotwas his favorite. In his June 1983Playboyinterview, the interviewer mentioned that because it was his favorite, King was planning a sequel,[3]but King has said on his website that becauseThe Dark Towerseries already continued the narrative inWolves of the CallaandSong of Susannah,he felt there was no longer a need for a sequel.[4]In 1987, he told Phil Konstantin inThe Highway Patrolmanmagazine: "In a way it is my favorite story, mostly because of what it says about small towns. They are kind of a dying organism right now. The story seems sort of down home to me. I have a special cold spot in my heart for it!"[5]

'Salem's Lothas been adapted into a1979 two-part miniseriesdirected byTobe Hooperand a2004 television miniseriesdirected byMikael Salomon.A newfeature film adaptationwritten and directed byGary Daubermanhas also been completed and is set to be released byMaxin 2024.[6]

Plot[edit]

Ben Mears, a writer, has returned toJerusalem's Lot,Maineafter 25 years to try to write his next novel. He quickly becomes friends with high school teacher Matt Burke and strikes up a romantic relationship with Susan Norton, a young college graduate with ambitions of leaving town. Ben has returned to "the Lot" to write a book about the long-abandoned Marsten House, where he had a bad experience as a child when he saw a hanging ghost. He learns that the house—the former home ofDepression-erahitmanHubert "Hubie" Marsten—has been purchased byKurt Barlow,ostensibly an Austrian immigrant who has arrived in the Lot to open an antique furniture store. Barlow is supposedly on an extended buying trip; only his business partner,Richard Straker,is seen in public. The truth, however, is that Barlow is an ancientvampireand Straker is his humanfamiliar.

The duo's arrival coincides with the disappearance of a young boy, Ralphie Glick, and the death of his 12-year-old brother, Danny, who becomes the town's first vampire turned by Barlow. Barlow also turns town dump custodian Dud Rogers and telephone repairman Corey Bryant. Danny turns other locals into vampires, including the graveyard digger, Mike Ryerson; a newborn baby, Randy McDougall; a man named Jack Griffen; and Danny's mother, Marjorie. Danny fails to turn his classmate Mark Petrie, who resists him by holding a plastic cross in Danny's face. To fight the spread of the new vampires, Ben and Susan are joined by Matt Burke and his doctor, Jimmy Cody, along with Mark and the local priest,Father Callahan.Susan is captured by Barlow, who turns her. She is eventually staked through the heart by Ben.

When Father Callahan and Mark go to Mark's parents' house to explain the danger that the family is in, the power is suddenly cut off and Barlow appears. After killing Mark's parents, Barlow takes the boy hostage. Callahan pulls out his cross in an attempt to drive him off, and it works until Barlow challenges him to throw the cross away. Callahan, not having faith enough to do so, is soon overwhelmed by Barlow, who forces Callahan to drink his blood, making him "unclean". When Callahan tries to re-enter his church, he receives an electric shock, preventing him from going inside. Defeated, Callahan leaves Jerusalem's Lot.

Matt suffers a fatal heart attack while Jimmy is killed when he falls from a rigged staircase and is impaled by knives set up by the vampires. Ben and Mark destroy Barlow, but are lucky to escape with their lives and are forced to leave the town to the now-leaderless vampires. Ben returns the following day to retrieve and bury the bodies of Mark's parents and Jimmy Cody in a clearing behind the Petrie residence. The novel'sprologue,which is set shortly after the end of the story proper, describes Ben and Mark's flight across the country to a seaside town in Mexico, where they attempt to recover from their ordeal. Mark is received into theCatholic Churchby a friendly local priest and confesses for the first time what they have experienced. Anepiloguereveals the two return to the town a year later, intending to renew the battle. Ben, knowing that there are too many hiding places for the vampires, starts a brush fire in the nearby woods with the intent of destroying the town.

Background[edit]

While teaching a course on fantasy and science fiction for students atHampden Academy,King was inspired byDracula,one of the books covered in the class. "One night over supper I wondered aloud what would happen if Dracula came back in the twentieth century, to America. 'He'd probably be run over by a Yellow Cab on Park Avenue and killed,' my wife said. [In the Introduction to the 2004 audiobook recording that Stephen King read himself, he says it was he who said," Probably he'd land in New York and be killed by a Taxi Cab, likeMargaret Mitchellin Atlanta "and that it was his wife who suggested a rural setting for the book.[7]] That closed the discussion, but in the following days, my mind kept returning to the idea. It occurred to me that my wife was probably right – if the legendary Count came toNew York,that is. But if he were to show up in a sleepy little country town, what then? I decided I wanted to find out, so I wrote'Salem's Lot,which was originally titledSecond Coming."[8]Though King initially planned to title the novelSecond Coming,he changed it toJerusalem's Loton the advice of his wife, novelistTabitha King,who thought the original title sounded too much like a "bad sex story." King's publishers then shortened it to the current title, thinking the author's choice sounded too religious. King's paperback publisher bought the book for $550,000.

King expands on this thought of the 20th-century vampire in his essay forAdeline Magazine,"On Becoming a Brand Name" (February 1980): "I began to turn the idea over in my mind, and it began to coalesce into a possible novel. I thought it would make a good one, if I could create a fictional town with enough prosaic reality about it to offset the comic-book menace of a bunch of vampires." Yet the inspirations for'Salem's Lotgo back even farther. InDanse Macabre,a non-fiction overview of the modern horror genre, King recalls a dream he had when he was eight years old. In the dream, he saw the body of a hanged man dangling from the arm of a scaffold on a hill. "The corpse bore a sign: ROBERT BURNS. But when the wind caused the corpse to turn in the air, I saw that it was my face – rotted and picked by birds, but obviously mine. And then the corpse opened its eyes and looked at me. I woke up screaming, sure that a dead face would be leaning over me in the dark. Sixteen years later, I was able to use the dream as one of the central images in my novel'Salem's Lot.I just changed the name of the corpse to Hubie Marsten. "

King first wrote of Jerusalem's Lot in the short story "Jerusalem's Lot",penned in college, but not published until years later in the short story collectionNight Shift.In a 1969 installment of "The Garbage Truck", a column King wrote for theUniversity of Maine at Orono's campus newspaper, King foreshadowed the coming of'Salem's Lotby writing: "In the early 1800s a whole sect ofShakers,a rather strange, religious persuasion at best, disappeared from their village (Jeremiah's Lot) inVermont.The town remains uninhabited to this day. "[9]

Politics during the time influenced King's writing of the story. The corruption in the government was a significant factor in the inspiration of the story. Of this he recalls,

I wrote'Salem's Lotduring the period when theErvincommittee was sitting. That was also the period when we first learned of theEllsbergbreak-in, theWhite House tapes,the connection betweenGordon Liddyand theCIA,the news ofenemies lists,and other fearful intelligence. During the spring, summer and fall of 1973, it seemed that the Federal Government had been involved in so much subterfuge and so manycovert operationsthat, like the bodies of the facelesswetbacksthatJuan Coronawas convicted of slaughtering inCalifornia,the horror would never end... Every novel is to some extent an inadvertent psychological portrait of the novelist, and I think that the unspeakable obscenity in'Salem's Lothas to do with my own disillusionment and consequent fear for the future. In a way, it is more closely related toInvasion of the Body Snatchersthan it is toDracula.The fear behind 'Salem's Lotseems to be that the Government has invaded everybody.[10]

Illustrated edition[edit]

Illustrated edition cover

In 2005,Centipede Pressreleased a deluxe limited edition of'Salem's Lotwith black and white photographs byJerry Uelsmannand the two short stories "Jerusalem's Lot"and"One for the Road",as well as over 50 pages of deleted material. The book was limited to 315 copies, each signed by Stephen King and Jerry Uelsmann. The book was printed on 100# Mohawk Superfine paper, measured 9 by 13 inches (23 cm × 33 cm), was over4+14in (11 cm) thick, and weighed more than 13 pounds (5.9 kg). The book included a ribbon marker, head and tail bands, three-piece cloth construction, and a slipcase. An unsigned hardcover edition limited to 600 copies was later released. Both the signed and unsigned editions sold out.[11]In an interview with the printed trade journalFine Books & Collections,King said of the illustrated folio version of his'Salem's Lot,"I think it's beautiful!"[12]A trade edition was later released.

Reception[edit]

In the short story anthologyA Century of Great Suspense Stories,editorJeffery Deavernoted that King

singlehandedly made popular fiction grow up. While there were many good best-selling writers before him, King, more than anybody sinceJohn D. MacDonald,brought reality to genre novels. He's often remarked thatSalem's LotwasPeyton PlacemeetsDracula,and so it was. The rich characterization, the careful and caring social eye, the interplay of story line and character development announced that writers could take worn themes such as vampires and make them fresh again.[13]

Peter Straubrecalls that "One day I wandered into a very good book store and sawSalem’s Loton the main table. If I had known that the book was about vampires, I might not have bought it. But I did buy it, and when I learned that one of the main characters was a vampire, it hit me like a ton of bricks. I thought, 'Oh my God, this guy is working with a very tired, almost exhausted, trope and he’s making something really vibrant out of it.' So I became a huge Stephen King fan on the spot. "[14]

Neil Gaimanrecalls that "My first encounter with Stephen King, long before I met him in the flesh, was on East Croydon station in about 1975. I was fourteen. I picked up a book with an all-black cover. It was calledSalem's Lot... I stayed up late finishingSalem's Lot,loving the Dickensian portrait of a small American town destroyed by the arrival of a vampire. Not a nice vampire, a proper vampire.DraculameetsPeyton Place.After that I bought everything King wrote as it came out. Some books were great, and some weren't. It was okay. I trusted him. "[15]

Adaptations[edit]

Film and television[edit]

In 1979,'Salem's Lotwas adapted to atwo-part television miniseries of the same namethat aired onCBS.It starsDavid Soulas Ben Mears, and was nominated for threePrimetime Emmy Awardsand anEdgar Award.[16]It was filmed on location inFerndale, California.[17]A truncated two-hour version was also released in cinemas in some countries. In 1987,Larry Cohendirected the filmA Return to Salem's Lot.[18]Marketed as a sequel to the 1979 miniseries, the film does not include any of the original characters despite using the image of Barlow from the 1979 version on the poster. In 2004,TNTpremiered anew television adaptation of'Salem's LotstarringRob Loweas Ben Mears, which also received a Primetime Emmy nomination.[19]

In 2018, the eighth episode of theCastle RockTV series (centered around the fictional town created by King) entitled "Past Perfect" was aired, which briefly showed a present-day bus stop in Jerusalem's Lot. A traffic sign indicated that the town was located 24 miles away from Castle Rock.[20]The Marsten House is featured in the show's second season. The 2021Epixtelevision seriesChapelwaite,starringAdrien BrodyandEmily Hampshire,is based on the short story "Jerusalem's Lot",a prequel to'Salem's Lotset in the 19th century. Atheatrical film adaptationof'Salem's Lot,fromNew Line Cinema,was announced in April 2019, withGary Daubermanset to write and direct, andJames Wanattached to produce.[21][22]Filming began inBostonin September 2021.Lewis Pullmanstars as Ben Mears,[23]whileSpencer Treat ClarkandMakenzie Leighwill co-star as Mike Ryerson and Susan Norton respectively. The film was originally scheduled to be released in cinemas on September 9, 2022, but was pushed back to April 21, 2023, before being pulled fromWarner Bros.release schedule indefinitely.[24]The film has been completed, with a running time released,[25]for a release byMaxin 2024.[6]

Radio[edit]

The novel was adapted in the U.K. as aradio dramaonBBC Radio 4in 1995.[26]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^"1976 Award Winners & Nominees".Worlds Without End.Archivedfrom the original on 2009-08-04.Retrieved2011-06-12.
  2. ^"Bibliography: 'Salem's Lot".isfdb Science Fiction.RetrievedDecember 23,2013.
  3. ^"Playboy Interview: Stephen King".Playboy Philippines.Archived fromthe originalon December 3, 2013.RetrievedDecember 23,2013.
  4. ^"Frequently Asked Questions".StephenKing.RetrievedDecember 23,2013.
  5. ^Phil Konstantin."An Interview with Stephen King".Articles Written by Phil Konstantin.Archived fromthe originalon April 12, 2014.RetrievedDecember 23,2013.
  6. ^abD'Alessandro, Anthony (2024-03-12)."Stephen King'sSalem's LotPivots From Theatrical To Max Streaming 2024 Release ".Deadline Hollywood.Retrieved2024-03-24.
  7. ^Introduction to"'Salem's Lot ", Simon & Schuster, Inc., 2004.
  8. ^StephenKing: 'Salems LotArchived2007-08-15 at theWayback Machine
  9. ^"The Stephen King Companion" Beahm, George Andrews McMeel press 1989, p. 267
  10. ^"The Fright Report",Oui Magazine,January 1980, p. 108
  11. ^Official Centipede Press webpage
  12. ^Goodman, Richard (July–August 2006). "Centipede Press".Fine Books & Collections:20–21.
  13. ^A Century of Great Suspense Stories, edited by Jeffrey Deaver [Pg. 290]/Publisher: Berkley Hardcover (2001)ISBN0425181928
  14. ^"What is it Like... To Co-write a Bestselling Novel With Stephen King?".USM Today.
  15. ^"Popular Writers: A Stephen King Interview".Neil Gaiman's Journal.
  16. ^"Salem's Lot Awards Page".imdb.
  17. ^Hesseltine, Cassandra."Complete Filmography of Humboldt County".Humboldt Del Norte Film Commission.Retrieved12 October2017.
  18. ^A Return to Salem's Lot,1987-05-01,retrieved2015-08-16
  19. ^Salem's Lot,2004-06-20,retrieved2015-08-16
  20. ^Squires, John."You May Have Missed It, But" Castle Rock "Briefly Took Us Into Salem's Lot This Week".Bloody Disgusting.Retrieved26 August2019.
  21. ^Kit, Borys (April 23, 2019)."James Wan, Gary Dauberman Tackling Stephen King's Vampire Tale 'Salem's Lot'".The Hollywood Reporter.Archivedfrom the original on August 27, 2021.RetrievedAugust 27,2021.
  22. ^Kit, Borys (April 10, 2021)."'Annabelle Comes Home' Filmmaker Gary Dauberman to Direct Stephen King's Vampire Tale 'Salem's Lot' (Exclusive) ".The Hollywood Reporter.Archivedfrom the original on August 27, 2021.RetrievedAugust 27,2021.
  23. ^Kit, Borys (August 27, 2021)."Stephen King Adaptation 'Salem's Lot' Finds Its Lead in Lewis Pullman (Exclusive)".The Hollywood Reporter.Archivedfrom the original on August 27, 2021.RetrievedAugust 27,2021.
  24. ^D'Alessandro, Anthony (July 11, 2022)."Theatrical Release Of Stephen King PicSalem's LotMoves From Post Labor Day To Spring 2023;House PartyUndated On HBO Max ".Deadline Hollywood.RetrievedJuly 11,2022.
  25. ^Thiessen, Sean (18 August 2023)."New Stephen King Movie Is Sitting On The Shelf At Warner Bros".Giant Freakin Robot.Retrieved18 August2023.
  26. ^Joshi, S. T. (2010).Encyclopedia of the Vampire.p. 271.

External links[edit]