• Complain

Richard Chizmar - Gwendy's Magic Feather

Here you can read online Richard Chizmar - Gwendy's Magic Feather full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2020, publisher: Gallery Books, genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover
  • Book:
    Gwendy's Magic Feather
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Gallery Books
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2020
  • City:
    New York
  • ISBN:
    978-1-9821-3972-8
  • Rating:
    5 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 100
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

Gwendy's Magic Feather: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Gwendy's Magic Feather" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

In this thrilling sequel to the bestselling novella by Stephen King and award-winning author Richard Chizmar, an adult Gwendy is summoned back to Castle Rock after the mysterious reappearance of the button box. Something evil has swept into the small Maine town of Castle Rock on the heels of the latest winter storm. Sheriff Norris Ridgewick and his team are desperately searching for two missing girls, but time is running out. In Washington, DC, thirty-seven-year-old Gwendy Peterson couldnt be more different from the self-conscious teenaged girl who once spent a summer running up Castle Rocks Suicide Stairs. That same summer, she had been entrustedor some might say cursedwith the extraordinary button box by Richard Farris, the mysterious stranger in the black suit. The seductive and powerful box offered Gwendy small gifts in exchange for its care and feeding until Farris eventually returned, promising the young girl shed never see the box again. One day, though, the button box suddenly reappears but this time, without Richard Farris to explain why, or what shes supposed to do with it. Between this and the troubling disappearances back in Castle Rock, Gwendy decides to return home. She just might be able to help rescue the missing girls and stop a dangerous madman before he does something ghastly. With breathtaking and lyrical prose, explores whether our lives are controlled by fate or the choices we make and what price we sometimes have to pay. Prepare to return again to Stephen Kings Castle Rock, the sleepy little town built on a bedrock of deep, dark secrets, just as its about to awaken from its quiet slumber once more.

Richard Chizmar: author's other books


Who wrote Gwendy's Magic Feather? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Gwendy's Magic Feather — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Gwendy's Magic Feather" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Richard Chizmar

GWENDYS MAGIC FEATHER

for Kara, Billy, and Noah

the Magic in my life

HOW GWENDY ESCAPED OBLIVION

by Stephen King

WRITING STORIES IS BASICALLY playing. Work may come into it once the writer gets down to brass tacks, but it almost always begins with a simple game of make-believe. You start with a what-if, then sit down at your desk to find out where that what-if leads. It takes a light touch, an open mind, and a hopeful heart.

Four or five years agoI cant remember exactly, but it must have been while I was still working on the Bill Hodges trilogyI started to play with the idea of a modern Pandora. She was the curious little girl, youll remember, who got a magic box and when her damned curiosity (the curse of the human race) caused her to open it, all the evils of the world flew out. What would happen, I wondered, if a modern little girl got such a box, given to her not by Zeus but by a mysterious stranger?

I loved the idea and sat down to write a story called Gwendys Button Box. If you were to ask me where the name Gwendy came from, I couldnt tell you any more than I can tell you exactly when I did the original 20 or 30 pages. I might have been thinking about Wendy Darling, Peter Pans little girlfriend, or Gwyneth Paltrow, or it might have just popped into my head (like the John Rainbird name did in Firestarter). In any case, I visualized a box with a colored button for each of the earths large land masses; push one of them and something bad would happen in the corresponding continent. I added a black one that would destroy everything, andjust to keep the proprietor of the box interestedlittle levers on the sides that would dispense addictive treats.

I may also have been thinking of my favorite Fredric Brown short story, The Weapon. In it, a scientist involved in creating a super-bomb opens his door to a late-night stranger who pleads with him to stop what hes doing. The scientist has a son who is, as wed now say, mentally challenged. After the scientist sends his visitor away, he sees his son playing with a loaded revolver. The final line of the story is, Only a madman would give a loaded gun to an idiot.

Gwendys button box is that loaded gun, and while shes far from an idiot, shes still just a kid, for Gods sake. What would she do with that box, I wondered. How long would it take for her to get addicted to the treats it dispensed? How long before her curiosity caused her to push one of those buttons, just to see what might happen? (Jonestown, as it turned out.) And might she begin to be obsessed with the black button, the one that would destroy everything? Might the story end with Gwendyafter a particularly bad day, perhapspushing that button and bringing down the apocalypse? Would that be so farfetched in a world where enough nuclear firepower exists to destroy all life on earth for thousands of years? And where, whether we like to admit it or not, some of the people with access to those weapons are not too tightly wrapped?

The story went fine at first, but then I began to run out of gas. That doesnt happen to me often, but it does happen from time to time. Ive probably got two dozen unfinished stories (and at least two novels) that just quit on me. (Or maybe I quit on them.) I think I was at the point where Gwendy is trying to figure out how to keep the box hidden from her parents. It all began to seem too complicated. Worse, I didnt know what came next. I stopped working on the story and turned to something else.

Time passedmaybe two years, maybe a little more. Every now and then I thought about Gwendy and her dangerous magic box, but no new ideas occurred, so the story stayed on the desktop of my office computer, way down in the corner of the screen. Not deleted, but definitely shunned.

Then one day I got an email from Rich Chizmar, creator and editor of Cemetery Dance and the author of some very good short stories in the fantasy/horror genre. He suggestedcasually, I think, with no real expectation that Id take him up on itthat we might collaborate on a story at some point, or that I might like to participate in a round-robin, where a number of writers work to create a single piece of fiction. The round-robin idea held no allure for me because such stories are rarely interesting, but the idea of collaboration did. I knew Richs work, how good he is with small towns and middle-class suburban life. He effortlessly evokes backyard barbecues, kids on bikes, trips to Walmart, families eating popcorn in front of the TV then tears a hole in those things by introducing an element of the supernatural and a tang of horror. Rich writes stories where the Good Life suddenly turns brutal. I thought if anyone could finish Gwendys story, it would be him. And, I must admit, I was curious.

Long story short, he did a brilliant job. I re-wrote some of his stuff, he re-wrote some of mine, and we came out with a little gem. Ill always be grateful to him for not allowing Gwendy to die a lingering death in the lower righthand corner of my desktop screen.

When he suggested there might be more to her story, I was interested but not entirely convinced. What would it be about? I wanted to know. He asked me what Id think if Gwendy, now an adult, got elected to the United States House of Representatives, and the button box made a reappearance in her life along with the boxs mysterious proprietor, the man in the little black hat.

You know when its right, and that was so perfect I was jealous (not a lot, but a little, yeah). Gwendys position of power in the political machinery echoed the button box. I told him that sounded fine, and he should go ahead. In truth, I probably would have said the same if hed suggested a story where Gwendy becomes an astronaut, goes through a space warp, and ends up in another galaxy. Because Gwendy is as much Richs as she is mine. Probably more, because without his intervention, she wouldnt exist at all.

In the story youre about to readlucky you!all of Richs formidable skills are on display. He evokes Castle Rock well, and the regular Joes and regular Jills that populate the town ring true. We know these people, and so we care for them. We also care for Gwendy. To tell you the truth, I sort of fell in love with her, and Im delighted that shes back for more.

Stephen KingMay 17, 2019

-

1

ON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1999, Gwendy Peterson wakes up before the sun, dresses in layers for the cold, and heads out for a run.

Once upon a time, she walked with a slight limp thanks to an injury to her right foot, but six months of physical therapy and orthotic inserts in her favorite New Balance running shoes took care of that little problem. Now she runs at least three or four times a week, preferably at dawn as the city is just beginning to open its eyes.

An awful lot has happened in the fifteen years since Gwendy graduated from Brown University and moved away from her hometown of Castle Rock, Maine, but theres plenty of time to tell that story. For now, lets tag along as she makes her way crosstown.

After stretching her legs on the concrete steps of her rented townhouse, Gwendy jogs down Ninth Street, her feet slapping a steady rhythm on the salted roadway, until it runs into Pennsylvania Avenue. She hangs a sharp left and cruises past the Navy Memorial and the National Gallery of Art. Even in the heart of winter, the museums are all well illuminated, the gravel and asphalt walkways shoveled clean; our tax dollars hard at work.

Once Gwendy reaches the Mall, she notches it up a gear, feeling the lightness in her feet and the power in her legs. Her ponytail peeks out from underneath her winter cap, rustling against the back of her sweatshirt with every step she takes. She runs along the Reflecting Pool, missing the families of ducks and birds that make it their home during the warm summer months, toward the obelisk shadow of the Washington Monument. She stays on the lighted path, swinging a wide circle around the famous landmark, and heads east toward the Capitol Building. The Smithsonian Museums line both sides of the Mall here and she remembers the first time she visited Washington, D.C.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Gwendy's Magic Feather»

Look at similar books to Gwendy's Magic Feather. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Stephen King - Gwendy's Button Box
Gwendy's Button Box
Stephen King
Richard Castle - Wild Storm
Wild Storm
Richard Castle
Richard Castle - A Bloody Storm
A Bloody Storm
Richard Castle
Richard Castle - A Raging Storm
A Raging Storm
Richard Castle
Richard Castle - Storm Front
Storm Front
Richard Castle
Richard Castle - A Brewing Storm
A Brewing Storm
Richard Castle
Vicki Selander - Castle Rock
Castle Rock
Vicki Selander
Jack Castle [Castle - Stranger Realm
Stranger Realm
Jack Castle [Castle
Jack Castle [Castle - Stranger Origins
Stranger Origins
Jack Castle [Castle
Carli Castle [Castle - Darkness Within
Darkness Within
Carli Castle [Castle
Richard Castle - Heat Rises (Nikki Heat)
Heat Rises (Nikki Heat)
Richard Castle
Reviews about «Gwendy's Magic Feather»

Discussion, reviews of the book Gwendy's Magic Feather and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.