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Stephen King mentions Jack Ketchum in National Book Awards speech

post #1 of 4
Thread Starter 
His speech is good, bittersweet, some familiar ground for SK readers, and includes a plea for respect for the genre. I say bravo. I thought it was particularly cool that he referenced Ketchum.

Quote:
There's another writer here tonight who writes under the name of Jack Ketchum and he has also written what may be the best book of his career, a long novella called The Crossings. Have you read it? Have any of the judges read it? And yet Jack Ketchum's first novel, Off Season published in 1980, set off a furor in my supposed field, that of horror, that was unequaled until the advent of Clive Barker. It is not too much to say that these two gentlemen remade the face of American popular fiction and yet very few people here will have an idea of who I'm talking about or have read the work.

This is not criticism, it's just me pointing out a blind spot in the winnowing process and in the very act of reading the fiction of one's own culture. Honoring me is a step in a different direction, a fruitful one, I think. I'm asking you, almost begging you, not to go back to the old way of doing things. There's a great deal of good stuff out there and not all of it is being done by writers whose work is regularly reviewed in the Sunday New York Times Book Review. I believe the time comes when you must be inclusive rather than exclusive.
That said, I accept this award on behalf of such disparate writers as Elmore Leonard, Peter Straub, Nora Lofts, Jack Ketchum, whose real name is Dallas Mayr, Jodi Picoult, Greg Iles, John Grisham, Dennis Lehane, Michael Connolly, Pete Hamill and a dozen more. I hope that the National Book Award judges, past, present and future, will read these writers and that the books will open their eyes to a whole new realm of American literature. You don't have to vote for them, just read them.

Read the whole thing
post #2 of 4
LOOOOOVE this:

Quote:
Nor do I have any patience with or use for those who make a point of pride in saying they've never read anything by John Grisham, Tom Clancy, Mary Higgins Clark or any other popular writer. What do you think? You get social or academic brownie points for deliberately staying out of touch with your own culture?
post #3 of 4
Damn. Now I feel like I have to go and read Mary Higgins Clark.

Seriously, though, that's some great stuff from a great man. I really wish I could've been there to see it.
post #4 of 4
That's great! And I've actually read Ketchum's THE CROSSINGS, which makes me feel kinda cool.

Here's my politically correct review from the pages of amazon.com:

With this 100-page novella Jack Ketchum once again proves his diversity as a writer. This time around he takes the reader to the Wild West, a period he has only once explored in the past in a short story that can be found in the collection "Peacable Kingdom". "The Crossings" is a first-person narrative, the account of a journalist who recalls his violent encounter with lawless criminals who force women into prostitution and whose sinister leader has a connection to an old native religion that most thought extinct. No it isn't and while this novel, like most of Ketchum's books, is not supernatural fiction, there is plenty of nasty stuff crammed into its few pages. It's quite expensive at 35$ but personally I found it worth every cent.

But let me tell ya that any Western that has Aztek blood sacrifice and rape by dead chicken definitely needs any hype it can get ...
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