There was a time when Stephen King didn’t write about ancient evils that threatened the universe. Sure, ‘Salem’s Lot was about a town full of vampires, but it was a small town, and yes, The Shining was about a haunted hotel, but it wasn’t a chain of them. The Stand was a big sprawling book about good and evil that rambled from Maine to Colorado, but it was balanced by Christine about a boy and his car, and Cujo about two families, a dog, and a car. Despite the presence of the Wendigo, Pet Sematary is essentially a domestic novel that takes place in two houses, a patch of woods, and a cemetery.
But at some point King decided to go big. Desperation, The Regulators, and Insomnia are books where King isn’t content to write about anything less than the fate of the universe, and I blame The Dark Tower for super-sizing his fiction.
If you were born in the 70’s or 80’s, a book like The Stand or It or ‘Salem’s Lot was probably your Stephen King gateway drug. But for kids coming of age in the 2000’s, King’s big book is his eight novel Dark Tower series. Originally a limited edition fix-up of some short stories called The Gunslinger, it was first published in 1982 by specialty press, Donald M. Grant. Relatively unknown at first, when King added The Gunslinger to his “Also by” page in Pet Sematary fans and booksellers went nuts, demanding a bigger printing. King reluctantly conceded, allowing bigger and bigger print runs until 1988 when the whole shebang acquired critical mass with the release of a mass market paperback of The Gunslinger, followed by publication of the second book in the series, The Drawing of the Three, seven months later.
This chunk of the re-read I’m doing covers Insomnia (1994) to From a Buick 8 (2002), and the Dark Tower casts its shadow over almost every single book in this period. King wasn’t just going back to previous titles like It, ‘Salem’s Lot, and The Stand and weaving them retroactively into the Dark Tower mythology, he was also working the Dark Tower mythos into seven of the ten books he wrote in this period (Rose Madder, Bag of Bones, Hearts in Atlantis, Desperation, The Regulators, From a Buick 8, and Insomnia). If you love the Dark Tower, prepare yourself for fan service of the highest order. If you don’t (and I’m not) then prepare yourself for the word ka. A lot.
Insomnia didn’t have to be a massive book. In fact, it almost wasn’t a book at all. Spurred by a bout of insomnia, King spent a sleepless four months writing it in 1990 before abandoning the project. In an interview with Wallace Stroby for Writer’s Digest in 1991, he said, “It’s a long piece of work, it’s about 550 pages long. It’s no good. It’s not publishable…the last 80 or 90 pages are wonderful. But things just don’t connect, it doesn’t have that novelistic roundness that it should have. And maybe some day you’ll read it, but it won’t be for a long time.”
Actually, it was exactly three years later that King changed his mind and published Insomnia anyways, and the result is…long. After the relatively short and realistic Gerald’s Game (332 pages) and Dolores Claiborne (305), King revived the fictional town of Derry for the first time since It and used it as the setting for this 787-page fantasy story full of proper nouns like Short-Timers, Long-Timers, All-Timers, The Random, The Purpose, The Higher Random, The Higher Purpose, The Crimson King, Deathbags, and The Great Ones (who are a dream dinner party trio consisting of Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, and Augustus Caesar).
Ralph Roberts is 70 years old and his wife has just died, leaving him with creeping insomnia: every night, he sleeps a little bit less. When he hits full sleeplessness he begins to see his neighbor’s auras. He thinks he’s going crazy, until his 68-year-old lady friend, Lois, reports that she’s seeing them, too. Soon they’re mutually hallucinating three small bald doctors who sneak around carving off chunks of unsuspecting Derryians’s auras. They name the doctors after the fates, and two of them, Clotho and Lachesis, are good while Atropos has gone off the reservation and is killing people at random. Atropos also lives in the roots of an old oak tree, so basically these three guys are the Keebler Elves. Running in parallel is a plot involving Ralph’s mild-mannered neighbor, Ed Deepneau, turning into a wifebeater and obsessing over a pro-choice rally that’s coming to town, headlined by feminist activist Susan Day. As the rally approaches, it turns out that Ed has been recruited by an evil, intergalactic catfish named The Crimson King to fly a plane into the stadium hosting Day, and Clotho and Lachesis recruit Ralph and Lois to stop him. The fate of the universe is, of course, at stake.
King’s writing is beyond rebuke at this point in his career, and there are some nice touches throughout Insomnia, from a genuinely moving epilogue to the characterization of the Keebler Elves. Rather than dispensing wisdom, Clotho and Lachesis are pompous and high-strung, given to panic at every moment, sort of like chihuahuas. However, your enjoyment of this book will largely depend on how much tolerance you have for long descriptions of visual hallucinations that seem intended to fill you with wonder but come across like someone describing every single second of their last acid trip in mind-numbing detail:
“Overhead, on the wall-to-wall mural depicting Derry as it had been during its halcyon lumbering days at the turn of the century, dark brown arrow-shapes chased each other, growing closer and closer together until they touched. When that happened they flashed a momentary dark green and changed direction. A bright silver funnel that looked like either a waterspout or a toy cyclone was descending the curved staircase…”
Insomnia is smart about aging, but it also contains a lot of feminist moments that would feel more at home in a more down-to-earth novel. Here, a no-holds-barred debate over abortion rights sits uncomfortably next to sentences like “There’s really that much of this aural energy in the human race?”
And then there are the italics. Not only do the Keebler Elves communicate in italics, and not only are italics used for the telepathy that Lois and Ralph increasingly use to talk to each other, but King seems to have lost confidence in his ability to convey what’s important with his writing and instead uses italics to take the reader by the hand and guide him or her to every important word. The result is that you start to feel like the book is shouting at you.
King wrote this book fast, saying that he suffered badly from insomnia during the process, and maybe that accounts for how slapdash it sometimes feels. Whether it’s his clunky profanity (“Fucking booger! Ratdick ringmeat! Suckhole!”) or his terrible dialect (“Dis lady a real princess! I jus hope you know dat!” shouts a wino) or his windy scenes (one conversation between Ralph, Lois, and two of the Keebler Elves runs for 45 pages), Insomnia feels like an enormous first draft sandwiched between a nicely-done prologue and a beautifully written epilogue.
This book also contains a strange bit of synchronicity. At one point, one of the Keebler Elves is trying to explain the workings of some metaphysical hoo-hah to Ralph and says, “When a dog—yes, even a dog, for the destinies of almost all living things in the Short-Time world fall among either the Random or the Purpose—is run over in the road because the driver of the car that hit him picked the wrong moment to glance at his watch…” Less than five years later, Bryan Edwin Smith would pick the wrong moment to glance at his dog, and run over Stephen King in the road, nearly killing him.
King loved to take long walks alongside Maine’s rural routes, so it’s no coincidence that animals getting run over might have been on his mind. But it’s fascinating that five years before he received five operations in ten days, almost had both legs amputated, and wound up experiencing the worst pain of his life, King wrote Insomnia in which the dispensers of extensive pain and misery are three men he describes as doctors, and that their emotions range from sadism to cold dispassionate regard for human suffering.
Viking went out with a first printing of 1.5 million copies of Insomnia when it debuted in September, 1994, and it spent three weeks at number one on the bestseller list, ultimately staying on the list for sixteen weeks. More importantly, to promote the book King set out on his motorcycle to tour independent bookstores across the country. That experience would resurface two books later, forming the spine of one of his better novels of this period, Desperation.
Grady Hendrix has written for publications ranging from Playboy to World Literature Today and his latest novel is Horrorstör, about a haunted Ikea.