I have never been bashful about expressing my disdain for
about 80% of the authors who dominate the big bestseller lists, having at times
been particularly hard on the James Patterson factory and the novels of one Mr.
Dan Brown. That has led several people
to question my general fondness for the books of Stephen King, a writer whose
work they characterize as a guilty pleasure of my own. Well, I have been a fan of King’s work ever
since the Fourth of July holiday of 1980 that I spent reading the first book of
his I had ever heard of: The Shining. I went on to spend much of the rest of that
month catching up on his earlier books.
Over the years, my opinion of Stephen King’s writing has
changed somewhat. Where once I was most
eager to get my hands on his latest novel, these days it is his new short
stories and novellas that I most look forward to reading. I have come to believe that the novella is
really King’s forte and not, despite the fact that he has written some very
successful ones, the novel. Full Dark, No Stars makes me even more
certain of that.
Full Dark, No Stars
is a collection of over five hundred pages encompassing three novellas and one
short story. One or two of the stories
being told remind me, for the first time in a while, of two of King’s best (and
best known) novellas: Shawshank
Redemption and The Body. No so coincidentally, this pair also led to
two of the best received movies ever produced from King’s work (The Body was re-titled Stand by Me for its movie version).

“1922,” a grim confession by Wilf James to the bloody murder
of his wife that he convinced his teenage son to help him accomplish and
cover-up, opens the book. The youngster,
deeply in love with the girl from the next farm, is terrified that he might be
uprooted and moved to the city as his mother is insisting upon. Wilf plays on his son’s emotions to gain his trust
but starts a chain of events that will ultimately leave him regretting much
more than his wife’s murder. The outstanding
character development and feel for the period King invokes in this one make it,
I think, the overall strongest story in the collection.

“Big Driver” is a revenge story that will keep you on the
edge of your seat. When Tess, author of
a successful series of bloodless, cozy mysteries is brutally raped, beaten, and
left for dead by what she discovers is a serial killer, she must decide what to
do next. Using her mystery writing
skills (bloodless as they have been up to now), Tess comes up with a plan she
hopes will cover all the bases – and then, things get complicated.
Next up, is the book’s lone short story (about 45 pages), “Fair
Extension.” Perhaps the darkest story of
the lot, this one will make most readers wonder what they would do given the
same circumstances and choices. Mr.
Elvid offers Dave, a terminal cancer sufferer who is fast running out of time,
the chance to rid himself of his cancer and live a healthy life for another 20
years. The catch? Dave must choose someone to take on the
burden of his ill health and other bad luck – can he do it? Will he?
The last story, “A Good Marriage,” visits what might happen
if a woman happily married for almost 30 years were to discover that her
husband has been hiding a horrible secret from her the entire time. By the end of the story, Darcy Anderson,
facing just such a predicament, learns as much about herself as she learns
about her husband – and the last few pages of this one are the best section of
the whole book.
Whether you call them long stories or novellas, you will not
easily forget the four tales in Full
Dark, No Stars.
Rated at: 4.0