The Body Stephen King Direct
They overhear Vern’s older brother, “Eyeball” Chambers, talking about the location of a dead body: a boy named Ray Brower, struck by a train somewhere in the deep woods near the Down east railroad line. The four friends decide to embark on a two-day, twenty-mile trek to find the body, hoping to become heroes in their small town.
Gordie Lachance is King’s surrogate. In the most famous passage of the book, Gordie reflects: “The most important things are the hardest things to say. They are the things you get ashamed of, because words make them smaller.” The entire novella is an act of resistance against that shrinkage. Storytelling is the only weapon against oblivion. Gordie writes to make Chris immortal, to make the summer of 1960 eternal. Yet, the novella is also about the failure of stories to change the world. Gordie cannot write his way into saving Chris’s life. The Body Stephen King
What follows is an epic, picaresque journey. They cross a junkyard haunted by the mythical guard dog “Chopper” (who turns out to be a sleepy, harmless mutt), swim through a leech-infested water hole, and tell stories around a campfire, including Gordie’s best-known fictional tale: “The Revenge of Lardass Hogan,” a gross-out masterpiece about a fat boy who gets revenge on a town by vomiting spectacularly at a pie-eating contest. In the most famous passage of the book,
The novella also solidified King’s reputation beyond horror. Different Seasons proved he could write “serious” literature, though King himself would reject that distinction. He has always argued that horror is simply a tool to talk about real life. Rob Reiner’s Stand by Me (1986) is a faithful and beloved adaptation, but it softens King’s edges. The film is warmer, funnier, and more redemptive. The novella is bleaker. In the film, the epilogue is poignant but brief. In the book, it is a long, cold, unflinching autopsy of a friendship. The film ends with the line, “I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?” That line is in the book, but in the book, it hangs over a vast graveyard of lost potential. Gordie writes to make Chris immortal, to make