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Gargoyle Books
7525 Olive PlaceLa MesaCA 88044United States
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1977 Book Club Edition (BCE)
Hardcover
USD$1,500

Description

Garden City, New York, U.S.A.: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1977. Book Club Edition (BCE) . Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good+. SIGNED by the AUTHOR to half-title page, this was King's stunning third book (far superior to the movie, which he hated), with a nearly pristine original issue DJ illustrated by Dave Christensen. Same design as on the First Edition, but this is a Book Club Edition, slightly larger (6.25" x 9.5"), in 447 pages. Tan paper over quarter black cloth-covered boards, lettered in bright gilt to spine, is in Near Fine condition, marred only by light soil & dust dulling to external page surfaces. Else, clean & crisp, pages creamy white & completely unmarked EXCEPT for this writing: looks like someone attempted to forge King's signature on the half-title page: based on our professional experience, it just looks & feels & smells wrong. The unclipped (no price) DJ VG+, with extremely slight edgewear, including some light crazing/wrinkling at both ends of spine &…

About The Shining

In Stephen King's "The Shining," published in 1977, Jack Torrance, a recovering alcoholic and struggling writer, accepts a job as the winter caretaker at the Overlook Hotel in Colorado. Jack sees this as an opportunity to reconnect with his family—his wife Wendy and their young son Danny, who possesses psychic abilities known as "the shining." As winter descends and the hotel becomes snowbound, strange and eerie events begin to unfold. Danny, sensitive to the hotel's dark history and its supernatural influences, starts experiencing visions of the hotel's disturbing past. He communicates telepathically with the cook, Dick Hallorann, who also possesses the shining and warns Danny of the dangers lurking within the hotel. As the isolation and malevolent forces of the Overlook take hold, Jack's mental stability begins to crumble. Influenced by the hotel's sinister spirits and haunted by his own demons, he becomes increasingly erratic and violent. The malevolent entities within the hotel exploit Jack's vulnerabilities, leading to his descent into madness. Danny's psychic abilities intensify, allowing him to see the horrors hidden within the hotel and foresee the danger posed by his father. With Wendy increasingly worried about Jack's erratic behavior, Danny and his mother attempt to escape the hotel's grasp while evading Jack, who has become a terrifying and dangerous threat. Throughout the novel, King masterfully portrays the psychological horror of isolation, addiction, and the disintegration of the family unit. He explores themes of supernatural malevolence, the impact of past traumas, and the struggle against inner darkness. "The Shining" is celebrated for its atmospheric tension, vivid characterization, and the haunting portrayal of a family unraveling in the face of supernatural evil. The novel has captivated readers for decades, earning its place as a cornerstone in the horror genre and solidifying Stephen King's reputation as a master storyteller of chilling and psychologically gripping tales.