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HE HATED THE MOVIE VERSION OF _THE SHINING_. King has cited many reasons for his disappointment in Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 film adaptation of his 1977 novel, including the portrayal of
Jack’s wife, Wendy. In the book, she is strong and independent, King said, but in the movie, where she’s played by Shelley Duvall, she came off as weak and weepy. King wanted Christopher
Reeve to play Jack (Superman! can you imagine?), but Kubrick went with Jack Nicholson. “I love Kubrick as a filmmaker, but I just felt that he didn’t have the chops for this particular
thing,” he told _The New York Times_ in 2020, noting that he preferred the 1997 TV miniseries of _The Shining_, which he scripted himself. HE POPS UP IN SCREEN ADAPTATIONS OF HIS BOOKS.
Many of his works have been transformed into movies or TV series, and you can sometimes spot the King of horror himself in cameos. He played Teddy Weizak in a few episodes of the 1994
miniseries _The Stand_; a diner patron in an episode of _Mr. Mercedes_ (2017); and a cemetery caretaker in the film _Sleepwalkers_ (1992). CASTLE ROCK WAS INSPIRED BY LITERATURE. King’s
famous fictional town of Castle Rock, which first appeared in his 1979 novel _The Dead Zone_, came from_ Lord of the Flies_, William Golding’s classic 1954 book about boys stranded on an
island who descend into violence without the strictures of civilization. In Golding’s novel, the Castle Rock is a narrow ledge that the character Ralph describes as “a rotten place.” HE’S
HAD HIS OWN PERSONAL DEMONS AND TRAUMA. King battled an alcohol abuse problem for years (though he’s been sober for decades). In 1999, King nearly died when he was hit by a Dodge van
while walking along a road near his home in North Lovell, Maine. His recovery required multiple surgeries, lengthy rehab and, he’s noted often, excruciating pain. HE TOTALLY ROCKS. AND
LOVES BASEBALL. King loves rock music, which he listens to while he writes. He played guitar in a charity band known as the Rock Bottom Remainders with authors including Amy Tan, Dave Barry
and Mitch Albom. He also loves baseball — particularly the Red Sox; some characters in his books are Red Sox fans or even players. He demonstrated his love for the sport (and his
hometown) when he and Tabitha donated $1.2 million to build a top-notch baseball facility, Shawn T. Mansfield Stadium, in Bangor, Maine, in the early ‘90s. (Locally, it’s referred to as “the
field of screams.”) HE HAS A SENSE OF HUMOR. King can be wryly funny on social media — although his humor is a bit dad-jokey. Think: “The difference between an onion and a bagpipe: nobody
cries when you chop up a bagpipe,” and “I saw toast in a cage at the zoo. The sign said bred in captivity.” He and Tabitha’s large Victorian house in Bangor, Maine, is fronted with a wrought
iron fence featuring bats, spiders, a dragon and cobwebs — making it a favorite pilgrimage stop for King fans paying homage to the author on his home turf.