Showing posts with label Carrie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carrie. Show all posts

Saturday, 5 April 2014

How Stephen King's "Carrie" Made Me Find My Own Power.

So this week, one of my favourite books turns 40! That book is Stephen King's "Carrie" and I cite it as one of the most influential books I've ever read. Sure, it isn't the book that most people would say is a book that influenced them, but it is for me. I found it at the exact point in my life when I needed it most.

I found it in my first year of secondary school. I was the girl with bad teeth and a mess of ratty blonde hair. I preferred Broadway musicals to hip hop and I was more likely to be find buried in a book than buried in the arms of a boy. It was during this time that I began working as a student librarian. I'd chosen to attend the school because of the beautiful, old library. There seemed something so hallowed and peaceful about it. It was a good place to hide, though it didn't really feel like hiding. I found so many books, so many first loves, on those book shelves. On of them was Carrie. The cover featured Sissy Spacek's face covered in blood. I'd always been interested in horror and I'd heard my father mention the book before. I quickly checked it out of the library and took it to read on the forty minute bus journey home at the end of the day.

I sat down at the front of the bus and began reading. I'd learned that sitting near the bus driver minimised the bullying rather than sitting further back, in the middle of a crowd of people. I was instantly captured by the narrative style, using fictional newspaper clippings, letters, articles. Very quickly I became interested in the book. One kid, a veritable show off, leaned over my chair and began reading an extract from the book out loud to some of the other kids. It was, of course, the part where Carrie has her first period. He began reading it aloud to other students who laughed at me and began mocking me for reading something "perverted" and "gross" in my spare time. The boy took the book from my hands and promptly hit me around the back of the head with it. I snatched the book back, closed it and sat in silence for the next thirty minutes just staring blankly out at the road ahead. That was a real changing point for me. The more I read this book, the more I empathised with Carrie. I knew all too well what it was to be the weird girl in school. Reading this book, for me, was a strangely therapeutic experience. Though I didn't have the powers that Carrie had, it made me start to stand up for myself. I began finding a new strength in myself. I realised that even the weird, geeky kids have power and that allowing people to walk over you wouldn't really solve the problem. From that point on I stood up for myself more. All too often we're told to just ignore bullies but I've found that the more you ignore them, the more they will walk over you. In all honesty, I did sometimes imagine having telekinetic powers and exacting vengeance upon my bullies but after reading Carrie I found myself feeling a little stronger.

Now, as a writer, I highly appreciate King's writing style. Over the years I saw the Sissy Spacek version of the film, then the one starring Angela Bettis. I'm yet to see the most recent adaptation featuring Chloe Grace Moretz, mainly because I felt the trailers gave away so much of the plot that it missed an opportunity to properly introduce the horror of the text to a new generation. I would urge every young girl, or every young person who feels left out, to read this book. Maybe don't use it as inspiration to take revenge on your entire high school, but you should certainly read it and realise that we do have some power within us: the power to endure, the power to stand up for ourselves, the power to make people feel bad for treating us so poorly to begin with.

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

"Carrie" by Stephen King: An appreciation post

Reading "Carrie" by Stephen King during my first year of high school was one of the best gifts I ever gave myself. For All Hallows Read this is my book to you. I can't give a copy of "Carrie" to every single one of you but if you haven't read it then you must. Please go down to your book stores and libraries and look for it. Search for it online at Amazong (I'll put links to the book below)

For me this was a strangely empowering read and I think I found it at the exact right moment in my life. Carrie, to me, follows an awkward girl who says no to being bullied. She finds something strong and extraordinary in herself. It's the kind of underdog tale we often look for but with a gruesome twist. When I was reading Carrie I was the nerdy girl. I worked in the library (which is where I found Carrie) and I recall a moment where I was sitting on the bus reading Carrie. Some snotty kids sat behind me reading passages of the book out loud (it was that infamous shower/menstruation point right at the beginning) and one of the kids took the book from my hands and started to hit me round the head with it. The more I read, the more I sympathised with Carrie. The book, for me, was strangely empowering. I felt I embodied much of Carrie's character in my own teenage awkwardness and lack of voice. The book almost gave me the confidence to thicken my skin and endure the bullying I was going through at the time. That was my power. This book will always hold a special place in my heart and so, for all Hallows Read, I simply ask that you take a copy of this book out from your local library or buy a copy. I'll put an Amazon link to it below.

The original film adaptation featured the wonderful "Sissy Spacek" as Carrie White. I think that Sissy gave a miraculous performance. She totally resembles that awkward, mousy high school girl in a strange but charming way. In my opinion this is the best of the three Carrie movies. There's the Angela Bettis one which doesn't live up to the Spacek original. Now there's a newer adaptation with the sweet Chloe Grace Moretz playing Carrie White. For me Moretz is almost too sweet and likeable to play Carrie White. Sissy Spacek has this awkward face and isn't traditionally beautiful and so she really makes sense in the role. Moretz is just too lovely.

I'll be honest though: I love Julianne Moore. I respect her as an actress and a person. I do really want to see her portrayal of Carrie's crazy, religious mother. This particular character, to me at least, really shapes the book and provides for real moments of discomfort.

I've not seen the latest Carrie, I'm not even sure if it's been released yet, but I did see the trailer and was so utterly pissed off because they managed to pretty much show the entire plot of the film in the trailer. They were advertising it to a generation of kids who probably didn't know the Carrie plot like so many of the rest of us do. They had a real opportunity here to interest people in a horror classic but whoever cut the trailers gave away far too much which utterly defeats the purpose of advertising a film and rebooting this excellent story.



I'll certainly watch the new Carrie when I can for contrast, I just have very mixed feelings at this moment in time.

So please, read this book and find out for yourself.
You won't regret it: