Everything's Eventual: 5 Dark Tales by Stephen King, Boyd Gaines (Read by), Jay O. Sanders (Read by), Judith Ivey (Read by), Justin Long (Read by)

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(Audio - Unabridged, 6 cassettes, 7 hrs. 30 min.)

  • Pub. Date: March 2002
  • 5pp

    Reader Rating: (2 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Dramatic" See All

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    • Overview
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    • Customer Reviews
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2002
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
    • Format: Audio, 5pp

    Synopsis

    Everything's Eventual features Dinky Earnshaw — a 19-year-old pizza boy — who gets hired by a mysterious stranger for a unique and totally "eventual" (awesome) job. Read by Justin Long.

    Autopsy Room Four The last thing Howard Cottrell remembers is entering the woods to find his golf ball. He wakes up as he is being rolled into an autopsy room. Read by Oliver Platt.

    In The Little Sisters of Eluria Roland is a gunslinger in a deserted town when he gets ambushed. Read by Boyd Gaines.

    In Luckey Quarter Darlene is a single mom struggling to raise two kids on her income as a chambermaid in Reno. When Room 322 leaves her a quarter for a tip, Darlene lets that quarter take her for a ride. Read by Judith Ivey.

    The Road Virus Heads North tracks an author who buys a creepy painting at a yard sale which was painted by a metal-head neighbor just before he committed suicide. Read by Jay O. Sanders.

    Intense, eerie, and instantly compelling, these five stories announce the stunningly fertile imagination of perhaps the greatest storyteller of our time.

    Kirkus Reviews

    These days, grumbles King (Hearts in Atlantis, 1999), "When you get done, you get done . . . I don't want to finish up like Harold Robbins." (Robbins wrote into his 80s despite aphasia from a stroke and kept publishing despite being dead.) Here, King gathers previously uncollected tales from sources that show his desire to stay fresh by diving into new waters: three pieces have never seen paper—having been electronic, part of a game, or for audio—and four are more polished pieces that ran first in The New Yorker. The title story is from a game called F13 (don't ask us) and tells of social outcast Dink Earnshaw, who uses symbols and personal words to lead others to suicide. A Mr. Sharpton from Transcorp gets Dink to join his company and write letters that deservedly kill evil people, although Dink must consequently live a constricted life bound by odd rules. (One day, he figures that he's killed over 200 people, and, hey, not all of them evil.) "Riding the Bullet," which made publishing history as an e-book and audio book, tells about Alan Parker hitchhiking from the University of Maine to see his hospitalized mother and getting a ride with George Staub, two years dead, whose grave Alan has seen (facing death—this is a "bullet" we all must ride). In "All That You Love Will Be Carried Away," Alfie Zimmer, a Gourmet Foods salesman, decides against suicide (for now) and thus saves his large collection of graffiti notes gathered while on the road. In the Poe-esque "In the Deathroom," an imprisoned New York Times reporter being tortured in some nameless South American version of hell faces death as certain as that faced under the Inquisitors of Toledo in the "The Pit and the Pendulum." Exceptthat. . . . Less stylish than The Green Mile (or than Poe), though King remains strong in the short form.

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    Biography

    Few authors have tapped into our secret fears as adeptly as Stephen King, Master of the Macabre and one of the most widely read novelists writing today. With his trademark blend of fantasy, horror, and psychological suspense, this prolific and immensely popular contemporary writer continues to remind us that evil is still a potent force in the world.

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    A must for Dark Tower Fansby Pilgrimsghost

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    September 29, 2009: The short story concerning Roland of the Dark tower series is clasic Stephen King in true "gunslinger" mode. If you are a Dark Tower addict this will give you a needed fix. We just need more of these. I have read all the Dark Tower books and the associated graphic novels. The short story "Little Sisters of Eluria" takes place during the period sometime before Roland travels across the desert in pursuit of the man in black. This short story alone is worth the cost of the entire book. The other short stories are also fantastic reading. However somewhere I have already read the scary Autopsy Room Four. It must have been included in another of his books.

    I am a King fan but...by Anonymous

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    July 16, 2002: I am a King fan, but I didn't care for these stories. I kept listening waiting for things to get better, but they did not. I am sad to write this review, but I have to be honest. Sincerely, feathers