Uma historinha da vida pessoal do grande autor Stephen King Contada por ele mesmo.
Uma historinha da vida pessoal do grande autor Stephen King Contada por ele mesmo.
http://zenpencils.com/comic/king
________________________________________________________
Mais sobre a recente mijada dele sobre Trump...
And, yes, Stephen King did an amazing Tweetdown of Trump a bit ago.
https://twitter.com/StephenKing . You don't have to log in to read, you'll
have to scroll just a bit to see it. Meanwhile, enjoy this Zen Pencils
bit. ✌ Clicking through to the toon is a good thing to do, also; the toon
makes the rest make sense.
[image: Zen Pencils Email Disptach]
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=rfcRD3QfV6a9vDpj96rrpw>
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=9l8TKsGRBVMrGYv07lYylA>
*CLICK TO VIEW COMIC *
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=9l8TKsGRBVMrGYv07lYylA>
Think about this: Stephen King has been releasing one, sometimes two books
a year pretty much every year since his first novel, Carrie, was
published in 1974. That’s 43 freakin’ years of consistent output! He’s
become such a mainstay of our culture that it’s easy to take his genius for
granted.
King’s been writing since he was 7 years-old, when he would copy and
rearrange the stories out of his favourite comic books. Impressed by her
son’s talent, King’s mother urged him to write an original story. He began
submitting short stories to horror and sci-fi magazines at age 12 and would
use a nail hammered into the wall above his typewriter to hold all his
rejection letters. By the time he was 14, the nail wouldn’t hold the weight
of the letters anymore and King had to replace it with a larger spike. By
the time he was 16, King was still getting rejection letters, although at
least now there were hand-written notes of encouragement from editors
scribbled on them. By his mid 20s, King was selling the occasional short
story to pulp and mens magazines but not nearly enough to make a living. He
was working in an industrial laundry, cleaning maggot-infested restaurant
and hospital sheets, while his wife Tabitha, also a writer, worked at
Dunkin’ Donuts. They had two young children, were living in a trailer and
although King managed to find better work as an English teacher, he was
starting to despair that his writing career would never take off.
*“Good story ideas seem to come quite literally from nowhere, sailing at
you right out of the empty sky: two previously unrelated ideas come
together and make something new under the sun. Your job isn’t to find these
ideas but to recognise them when they show up.”*
King chanced upon the idea for Carrie when he recalled working as a high
school janitor. While he was cleaning the female locker room he paid
special attention to the shower curtains since he knew the boys lockers
didn’t have them. He imagined an opening scene (NSFW)
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=MU2ik4OV0bewbqHWdrSbkQ>
in which a girls locker room didn’t have the curtains and students were
forced to shower in front of each other. What if a girl had her period in
the shower but didn’t know what it was, and all the other girls laughed and
threw tampons at her? How would that girl retaliate? Then King remembered
reading an article about telekenisis and how there was evidence that it was
prevalent in young girls, especially around the time of their first period.
Boom, that’s when two unrelated ideas came together to create something
new. King knew he had found an idea for a book and wrote three pages of a
first draft while working his teaching job. He hated it and threw it in the
trash. It was King’s wife Tabitha who found the pages while emptying the
bin and encouraged her husband to finish it. Carrie was published in 1974
and was King’s breakthrough novel. King finished off the decade with a
string of bestsellers including ‘Salem’s Lot and The Shining.
By the ’80s King and his family were living in a beautiful house in Bangor,
Maine, and King was writing at his dream, massive oak desk. However, he was
also an alcoholic and a drug addict. He would write all hours of the day
strung out on cocaine and medicate at night with a whole case of 16-ounce
beers. In 1985 and at risk of losing his family, Tabitha held an
intervention and gave King an ultimatum: get help or get out of the house.
Thankfully, King managed to get clean and put his family life back
together. And thankfully for us, through it all, he never stopped writing.
I tried to find a picture of the actual massive oak desk King mentions. The
best I could do was this brief glimpse into King’s office in an interview
from the mid ’80s.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=HtlIeeD0mjdEoTN0AjMh.g>
You can see it at the 2.40min mark. The newer, smaller desk I’m guessing is
this one.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=MdkGjqXxlTO_yVZIoKb7CQ>
I could be wrong about both.
RELATED COMICS
Bill Watterson *A Cartoonist’s Advice
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=tP6ZLIBvYZI2fgjKCyjufg>*
Stanley Kubrick *answers a question
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=GKXjM_Pc3yQvVpegKpUpug>*
Neil Gaiman *Make Good Art
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=sq5hu5EutJUPv7SkwJxGyA>*
Jack Kirby *Hero Worship
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=1HfQjkLdQKEu6_ls5udpkQ>*
Chuck Jones *An Animator’s Advice
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=mHYCuDr9b6hpfsBVyIzERA>*
– The quote used for the comic and all the info sourced for the post come
from King’s fantastic memoir/how-to book* On Writing: A Memoir of the
Craft.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=eU4P5XE9Wfdu1X6pHCdXFw>*
A must-read for anyone with the slightest interest in writing.
– Further reading: *Stephen King’s Family Business.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=qykfoBBUW.btoeGNSWLBfQ>*
A beautiful profile of the entire King family from The New York Times.
Not only is King’s wife a writer, but so are his two sons and
daughter-in-law.
– My Top 5 Stephen King books: *Misery, Different Seasons, The Stand, The
Long Walk, Under the Dome.* I admit I haven’t read any of The Dark Tower
books (hangs head in shame). What’s your favourite?
http://zenpencils.com/comic/king
http://zenpencils.com/comic/king
________________________________________________________
Mais sobre a recente mijada dele sobre Trump...
And, yes, Stephen King did an amazing Tweetdown of Trump a bit ago.
https://twitter.com/StephenKing . You don't have to log in to read, you'll
have to scroll just a bit to see it. Meanwhile, enjoy this Zen Pencils
bit. ✌ Clicking through to the toon is a good thing to do, also; the toon
makes the rest make sense.
[image: Zen Pencils Email Disptach]
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=rfcRD3QfV6a9vDpj96rrpw>
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=9l8TKsGRBVMrGYv07lYylA>
*CLICK TO VIEW COMIC *
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=9l8TKsGRBVMrGYv07lYylA>
Think about this: Stephen King has been releasing one, sometimes two books
a year pretty much every year since his first novel, Carrie, was
published in 1974. That’s 43 freakin’ years of consistent output! He’s
become such a mainstay of our culture that it’s easy to take his genius for
granted.
King’s been writing since he was 7 years-old, when he would copy and
rearrange the stories out of his favourite comic books. Impressed by her
son’s talent, King’s mother urged him to write an original story. He began
submitting short stories to horror and sci-fi magazines at age 12 and would
use a nail hammered into the wall above his typewriter to hold all his
rejection letters. By the time he was 14, the nail wouldn’t hold the weight
of the letters anymore and King had to replace it with a larger spike. By
the time he was 16, King was still getting rejection letters, although at
least now there were hand-written notes of encouragement from editors
scribbled on them. By his mid 20s, King was selling the occasional short
story to pulp and mens magazines but not nearly enough to make a living. He
was working in an industrial laundry, cleaning maggot-infested restaurant
and hospital sheets, while his wife Tabitha, also a writer, worked at
Dunkin’ Donuts. They had two young children, were living in a trailer and
although King managed to find better work as an English teacher, he was
starting to despair that his writing career would never take off.
*“Good story ideas seem to come quite literally from nowhere, sailing at
you right out of the empty sky: two previously unrelated ideas come
together and make something new under the sun. Your job isn’t to find these
ideas but to recognise them when they show up.”*
King chanced upon the idea for Carrie when he recalled working as a high
school janitor. While he was cleaning the female locker room he paid
special attention to the shower curtains since he knew the boys lockers
didn’t have them. He imagined an opening scene (NSFW)
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=MU2ik4OV0bewbqHWdrSbkQ>
in which a girls locker room didn’t have the curtains and students were
forced to shower in front of each other. What if a girl had her period in
the shower but didn’t know what it was, and all the other girls laughed and
threw tampons at her? How would that girl retaliate? Then King remembered
reading an article about telekenisis and how there was evidence that it was
prevalent in young girls, especially around the time of their first period.
Boom, that’s when two unrelated ideas came together to create something
new. King knew he had found an idea for a book and wrote three pages of a
first draft while working his teaching job. He hated it and threw it in the
trash. It was King’s wife Tabitha who found the pages while emptying the
bin and encouraged her husband to finish it. Carrie was published in 1974
and was King’s breakthrough novel. King finished off the decade with a
string of bestsellers including ‘Salem’s Lot and The Shining.
By the ’80s King and his family were living in a beautiful house in Bangor,
Maine, and King was writing at his dream, massive oak desk. However, he was
also an alcoholic and a drug addict. He would write all hours of the day
strung out on cocaine and medicate at night with a whole case of 16-ounce
beers. In 1985 and at risk of losing his family, Tabitha held an
intervention and gave King an ultimatum: get help or get out of the house.
Thankfully, King managed to get clean and put his family life back
together. And thankfully for us, through it all, he never stopped writing.
I tried to find a picture of the actual massive oak desk King mentions. The
best I could do was this brief glimpse into King’s office in an interview
from the mid ’80s.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=HtlIeeD0mjdEoTN0AjMh.g>
You can see it at the 2.40min mark. The newer, smaller desk I’m guessing is
this one.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=MdkGjqXxlTO_yVZIoKb7CQ>
I could be wrong about both.
RELATED COMICS
Bill Watterson *A Cartoonist’s Advice
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=tP6ZLIBvYZI2fgjKCyjufg>*
Stanley Kubrick *answers a question
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=GKXjM_Pc3yQvVpegKpUpug>*
Neil Gaiman *Make Good Art
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=sq5hu5EutJUPv7SkwJxGyA>*
Jack Kirby *Hero Worship
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=1HfQjkLdQKEu6_ls5udpkQ>*
Chuck Jones *An Animator’s Advice
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=mHYCuDr9b6hpfsBVyIzERA>*
– The quote used for the comic and all the info sourced for the post come
from King’s fantastic memoir/how-to book* On Writing: A Memoir of the
Craft.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=eU4P5XE9Wfdu1X6pHCdXFw>*
A must-read for anyone with the slightest interest in writing.
– Further reading: *Stephen King’s Family Business.
<http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=9LgMP&m=iKRkUUXDduOzRpk&b=qykfoBBUW.btoeGNSWLBfQ>*
A beautiful profile of the entire King family from The New York Times.
Not only is King’s wife a writer, but so are his two sons and
daughter-in-law.
– My Top 5 Stephen King books: *Misery, Different Seasons, The Stand, The
Long Walk, Under the Dome.* I admit I haven’t read any of The Dark Tower
books (hangs head in shame). What’s your favourite?
http://zenpencils.com/comic/king
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