Richard Alex Jenkins's Reviews > Pet Sematary
Pet Sematary
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by

Stephen King can be as smooth to read as butter and therefore easy to forget as horror. The short and accessible chapters are a blessing too and even the intentional spelling mistake of 'sematary' feels right.
The character building is incredible as you would expect from Stephen King while you get to know the peeps and how they interact with each other and the other side.
Although I've never seen any of the Pet Sematary movies, I was expecting plenty of silliness from this book, perhaps waves of rabid cats and dogs leaping over tombstones and sieging the house with Gremlin cackles and howls of evil laughter, becoming gradually apparent that this isn't that type of book but closer to a slow-burning family thriller with notable horror elements.
Published in 1983 and nine years after his first book, Carrie in 1974, and 'Salem's Lot in 1975, the writing maturity in comparison to his early work is evident, with lower amounts of characters and convoluted plot twists that are confusing and untethered in 'Salem's Lot, for example. This book slows down and concentrates on building up emotional attachment between family and friends and the fear of potentially losing connections and emotional ties. Slow but never plodding, intriguing and mildly gripping at first, ultimately leading to foreboding as you sense what's coming next.
At 55% (part two) I had to put the book down and take stock before carrying on. For a day or two. A genuine fear that this might go too far. If you've ever loved anything or anyone and fear possible and unimaginable loss, maybe unable to breathe because of irrational thoughts that things will never be the same, perhaps spasming with terror at the horrible concept of spending the rest of your life bereft of hard-earned love and being abandoned or finding yourself alone, you'll emotionally connect with this book.
Pet Sematary plays on such fears in droves.
You may question whether you need the psychological stress at what's laid out in front of you? But to spur on and find out what happens next is worth it.
Although this is a scary book, Stephen King is more dependent on your personal apprehensions, circumstances and experience at what his stories mean to you. He doesn't do hardcore or splatterpunk and there are only moderate graphic descriptions, but psychological horror is here in swathes and the core storytelling skill is the prize.
It's something about the way the book is written, the close proximity and homeliness of all the characters, the bond between family and neighbours, even the punch up later on, rather than the stark horror itself. We don't get to see many lurching monsters but can regularly feel the evil under the surface as it waits to rise up and take over because we invite it into our lives through ill-advised perceptions of what's right and wrong. It's our silly egos, our inability to accept loss and move on from the past, while trying to make everything whole again at any cost or consequence.
This book makes you realize that we are sentimental to the point of absurdity and unable to forget because, after all, that's all we have, our memories and connections to each other.
This is profound horror literature instead of jump scares and cheap thrills and if you're looking for serious gore or mayhem maybe isn't the best place to find it, as too slow paced and closer to perfect psychological terror.
It's amazing that a book can be so mature and dark when presented on the surface like action-packed survival against zombie-like pets with soul-piercing stares and incredibly springy rear haunches, with 'pet cemetery' more like an allegory for our inner fears connected to loss and shattered existence.
This is a five-star read and measured consistency is what it's all about by not taking it too far or taking us for an impossible ride that could never happen, which enables us to accept the improbable as very possible from a horror perspective.
The character building is incredible as you would expect from Stephen King while you get to know the peeps and how they interact with each other and the other side.
Although I've never seen any of the Pet Sematary movies, I was expecting plenty of silliness from this book, perhaps waves of rabid cats and dogs leaping over tombstones and sieging the house with Gremlin cackles and howls of evil laughter, becoming gradually apparent that this isn't that type of book but closer to a slow-burning family thriller with notable horror elements.
Published in 1983 and nine years after his first book, Carrie in 1974, and 'Salem's Lot in 1975, the writing maturity in comparison to his early work is evident, with lower amounts of characters and convoluted plot twists that are confusing and untethered in 'Salem's Lot, for example. This book slows down and concentrates on building up emotional attachment between family and friends and the fear of potentially losing connections and emotional ties. Slow but never plodding, intriguing and mildly gripping at first, ultimately leading to foreboding as you sense what's coming next.
At 55% (part two) I had to put the book down and take stock before carrying on. For a day or two. A genuine fear that this might go too far. If you've ever loved anything or anyone and fear possible and unimaginable loss, maybe unable to breathe because of irrational thoughts that things will never be the same, perhaps spasming with terror at the horrible concept of spending the rest of your life bereft of hard-earned love and being abandoned or finding yourself alone, you'll emotionally connect with this book.
Pet Sematary plays on such fears in droves.
You may question whether you need the psychological stress at what's laid out in front of you? But to spur on and find out what happens next is worth it.
Although this is a scary book, Stephen King is more dependent on your personal apprehensions, circumstances and experience at what his stories mean to you. He doesn't do hardcore or splatterpunk and there are only moderate graphic descriptions, but psychological horror is here in swathes and the core storytelling skill is the prize.
It's something about the way the book is written, the close proximity and homeliness of all the characters, the bond between family and neighbours, even the punch up later on, rather than the stark horror itself. We don't get to see many lurching monsters but can regularly feel the evil under the surface as it waits to rise up and take over because we invite it into our lives through ill-advised perceptions of what's right and wrong. It's our silly egos, our inability to accept loss and move on from the past, while trying to make everything whole again at any cost or consequence.
This book makes you realize that we are sentimental to the point of absurdity and unable to forget because, after all, that's all we have, our memories and connections to each other.
This is profound horror literature instead of jump scares and cheap thrills and if you're looking for serious gore or mayhem maybe isn't the best place to find it, as too slow paced and closer to perfect psychological terror.
It's amazing that a book can be so mature and dark when presented on the surface like action-packed survival against zombie-like pets with soul-piercing stares and incredibly springy rear haunches, with 'pet cemetery' more like an allegory for our inner fears connected to loss and shattered existence.
This is a five-star read and measured consistency is what it's all about by not taking it too far or taking us for an impossible ride that could never happen, which enables us to accept the improbable as very possible from a horror perspective.
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Reading Progress
November 10, 2023
– Shelved
November 10, 2023
– Shelved as:
to-read
May 25, 2024
–
Started Reading
May 25, 2024
– Shelved as:
horror
May 25, 2024
– Shelved as:
supernatural
May 25, 2024
– Shelved as:
thriller
May 27, 2024
–
30.0%
May 28, 2024
–
55.0%
May 30, 2024
–
70.0%
May 31, 2024
–
Finished Reading
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message 1:
by
Kasia
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rated it 5 stars
May 31, 2024 06:27PM

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Wow, Duma Key?
I hadn't even considered it until now.
Thanks, Kasia, take care.


I don't think it's perfect but still five stars and a top recommend. Thanks, mate!

Cheers, Bianca. So much better than I was expecting, it surprised me.

I was expecting Gremlins, Michael, but ended up with nigh on perfect psychological horror. I'm glad you enjoyed this too; what an excellent read.

I hadn't even considered it until now.
Thanks, Kasia, take care."
Everything about Duma Key spoke to me, it was very evocative, almost like turning a painting into a book but a painting that was sentient if that makes sense. It's just a delight, I loved it. Even the cover was a big part of the book's effect on me.
Hope you're having a great weekend :) take care as well.

I hadn't even considered it until now.
Thanks, Kasia, take care."
Everything about Duma Key spoke to me, it was very evocative, almost like turning a painting into a..."
I am about as advanced in my knowledge of Stephen King as a newt in its evolutionary cycle into a dinosaur, which is how I stand at the moment, somewhat lumbering and braindead, but gradually getting there.
I will definitely keep Duma Key on my radar now.
Top recommend! Thank you.

It's such a silent sleeper isn't it :D and your comment made my heart leap yay!

I hadn't even considered it until now.
Thanks, Kasia, take care."
Everything about Duma Key spoke to me, it was very evocative, almost like turning a p..."
Hope you enjoy it :) He's so good at creating characters and their stories tell themselves, I'm currently reading my 26th Stephen King book and his approach to crafting tales is still such a comfort to me.

Isn't it odd that a man who writes horror is such a source of comfort? I don't even think he's that great a writer; I'm reading F. Scott Fitzgerald at the moment and his literary skill is at another level, but what he does is excel in his genre of socially interconnected horror that we can all relate to.
I've read a pitiful five SK books and Carrie is still my favourite after this. Wow, am I in for a treat over the next few years.

That's exactly how SK's writing feels to me too: comforting. I think it's that his understanding of horror is the idea of messing with the mundane. He introduces characters that just go about their lives and then some unthinkable shit happens to them. My favorite part of every SK book is how they try to digest that. That's what's most relatable to me


I'm listening to You Like It Darker right now and it's good so far, pleasantly surprised as short story collections aren't my jam as much as longer stories.


I think the comfort comes from knowing what to expect from his writing and how he talks about life but also I never know what to expect when a story starts taking a wild turn, it's that mix I enjoy.
I should pick up more of F. Scott Fitzgerald, thank you for the recommendation!

I was just reading that thread, made me happy!

Suggest something else if you want now I've done it for you 😄.

Thanks, mate!
Trying to place your profile photo... Wish You Were Here? Amazing.


Thanks, mate, it's one of mestre King's best.