Duma Key

Unabridged
Author: Stephen King
Narrator: Unknown
Genres: Horror, Fiction
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Date: January 2008
Length: 23 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • MP3

Overview

In Florida, on the Gulf of Mexico, the brilliantly written and profoundly disturbing Duma Key reveals why America's darkest imagination has become, over the past several years, so attached to this coast.

After a falling crane crushes him inside his pick-up truck, self-made construction millionaire Edgar Freemantle must begin his life- a geographical cure, his psychologist calls it. During his excruciating physical rehabilitation (he lost his right arm and suffered multiple fractures), his wife of twenty-five years asks for a divorce. Prone to fits of rage, he has stabbed her with a plastic knife, and tried to strangle her with his one remaining hand; she wants out. And so Edgar leaves Minnesota for Duma Key, a stunningly beautiful, eerily undeveloped stretch of the Florida coast where he has rented a house. He arrives knowing only that he wants to draw. He need to do something, his psychologist tells him, as 'a hedge against the night'. Duma Key and its few houses are owned by Elizabeth Eastlake, an old woman whose tragic and mysterious family history begins to unfold as Edgar first begins to draw and then to paint, sometimes feverishly, with a talent that seems to come from someplace outside himself. Many of his paintings have a power that cannot be controlled. when the ghosts of Elizabeth's childhood begin to appear, the damage of which they are capable is truly terrifying.

Reviews (14)

Duma Key

Written by Kathy from Stratham, NH on August 18th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I am addicted to Stephen King!!! Loved this story! Dark, mysterious, and all-absorbing! Couldn't stop listening! Can't wait for Part 2 to arrive!

Great novel by the King

Written by Angie Teal on July 24th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Great story by Stephen KIng. It had me glued to my car seat many evenings. In my opinion Stephen King is getting better the older he gets. The story is building up after a slow start and then just pulls you in and will not let go. Loved all the characters and the narrator was outstanding.

Duma Key

Written by Bonnie Enzian on June 23rd, 2009

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I agree with "Large" that this is classic Stephen King and the best book he has written in a long time. A great ghost story akin to "Bag of Bones" which is one of my favorites. I loved the characters, the setting, the story and the narrator. Stick with it-it's long but well worth listening until the end.

duma keys

Written by Anonymous on June 11th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 2/5

this book is just terrible period. i would expect better from stephen king. I could not even finish this book it was so bad.

King rocks

Written by Bill on April 18th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Somehow, Stephen King always delivers. This story was not quite as spooky as some by him, but I really enjoyed it. The reader was excellent.

Boring...

Written by Anonymous on March 19th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I just really found this story to be boring. The reader was pretty good, but I just never got into it. I have read/listened to many King books and I found this one to be one of the least engaging of the bunch. Even if he doesn't hit greatness, I normally am entertained... not so with this one.

Feeling Cheated

Written by Steven on January 16th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 1/5

If this was a first novel it would not have been published. Because this is far from a first novel the reader has a right to expect much more than this product. If Mr. King has an editor he needs to listen to him or fire him. This novel is brimming with cliches in word play and in content. It rambles and wastes the reader's time. It bears almost no qualitative similarity to Mr. King's fine works such as The Shining, The Stand and many others. Mr King has become self indulgent. One example of this is his frequent expression of his political bias through his characters. By doing so he shows himself to be as simple minded and intolerant of others as he apparently believes those others to be toward his point of view. Sometime ago Mr. King announced that he had retired from writing for money. That was a good idea, apparently, because this novel feels as if it was written for some reason other than the love of the art.

DUMA KEY

Written by LARGE ROBERT on December 20th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This is one of the best books KING he's written in a long long time. It is as good or better than his early books, just not as far out there. A very good read, well worth the money. Enjoy

Duma Key--A King Winner

Written by Anonymous on October 30th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

King introduces his main characters, Edgar Freemantle and Elizabeth Eastlake, with his masterful weaving of plots within plots. He begins with just that one line of horizon and ends with real life characters that you care for etching them onto a background of horror. One nibbles his story and continues to be reeled in and follows the trail of the main character, whose trek takes him from "crane roadkill" to a new life as an artist on Duma Key (an island with a past). Scattered along that trail are eerie encounters, each connected to and creepier than the last. When the reader finally gulps that last bit of bait, Stephen King begins to reel in so fast that one wants to close their eyes (but can't help peeking every moment or two). Along with Edgar's story is Elizabeth's, who is the key to the terror. Stephen King's talent takes you where he wants you...and where you want to be! AND narrator John Slattery added the dimension that made this story even better.

Duma Dull

Written by Anonymous on August 26th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

3 Discs into the story was enough...I didn't even finish it.

Author Details

Author Details

King, Stephen

American novelist and short-story writer, whose enormously popular books revived the interest in horror fiction from the 1970s. King's place in the modern horror fiction can be compared to that of J.R.R. Tolkien's who created the modern genre of fantasy. Like Anthony Trollope, Charles Dickens or Balzac in his La Comédie humaine, King has expressed the fundamental concerns of his era, and used the horror genre as his own branch of artistic expression. King has underlined, that even in the world of cynicism, despair, and cruelties, it remains possible for individuals to find love and discover unexpected resources in themselves. His characters often conquer their own problems and malevolent powers that would suppress or destroy them.

"I wish I could get away from horror for a while, and I do - or I think I do, and then suddenly I discover that I'm like the guy in the poem by Auden who runs and runs and finally ends up in a cheap, one-night hotel. He goes down a hallway and opens a door, and there he meets himself sitting under a naked light bulb, writing." (King in Faces of Fear by Douglas E. Winter, 1990)

Stephen King was born in Portland, Maine. His father, a merchant seaman, deserted the family in 1950. The young Stephen and his brother David were raised in Durham, Maine, by their mother who worked in odd jobs to support her children. At the age of six, he had his eardrum punctured several times - a painful experience which he never forgot. King attended a grammar school in Durham and Lisbon Falls High school, where he started to write short stories and played in an amateur rock band. In 1960 he submitted his first story for publication - it was rejected. He edited the school newspaper, The Drum, and also wrote for the local newspaper, Lisbon Weekly Enterprise. His first story, entitled 'In a Half-World of Terror', King published in a horror fanzine. In 1970 King graduated from the University of Maine. Next year he married Tabitha Spruce, who has also gained fame as a writer. "My wife is the person in my life who's most likely to say I'm working too hard, it's time to slow down, stay away from that damn PowerBook for a little while, Steve, give it a rest." (from On Writing, 2000) Most of his career King has lived in Bangor, Maine. Many of his books are set in the imaginary town of Castle Rock, Maine, which is totally destroyed by greed in Needful Things (1993).

From 1971 to 1974 King was an instructor at the Hampden Academy, earning $6,400 a year. His first novel, Carrie (1974), was a tale of a girl with telekinetic powers. King had thrown the first pages of the story in a garbage pail, but his wife rescued them and urged him to finish the work. Carrie had first only a moderate success and sold 13 000 copies in hardcover. However, Signet paid $400,000 for its paperback rights. Carrie's film version was launched in 1976 and after the breakthrough novel Salem's Lot (1976), King established quickly his reputation as a major horror writer. In the late summer of 1974 King moved with his family to Colorado for an extended holiday. He visited the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, and set there his next novel, The Shining. Stanley Kubrick's film version of the book, from 1977, did not satisfy the author, and he King himself turned his novel into a television miniseries in 1997.

In the late 1970s King published his first paperbacks under the name of Richard Bachman. The Talisman (1984) and its sequel, The Black House (2001), were written with Peter Staub. King has also published non-fiction. In his collection of essays, Danse Macabre (1981), King described the writing process as a kind of "dance" in which the author searches out the private fears of each reader. In the textbook of macabre he goes through the horror genre, from film monsters to books, focusing mostly on the post-war era. "It's not a dance of death at all, not really. There is a third lever here, as well. It is, at bottom, a dance of dreams. It's a way of awakening the child inside, who never dies but only sleeps ever more deeply. If the horror story is rehearsal for death, then its strict moralities make it also a reaffirmation of life and good will and simple imagination - just one more pipeline to the infinite." (from Dance Macabre)

After writing The Pet Sematary King considered he don't need to publish his "thebmost wretched, awful thing" he made, Bag of Bones (1998). The story dealt with the grief process in an uncompromising way. In Bag of Bones King returned to the theme of loss of a family member, and added into it the classical haunted house idea and familiar elements from his previous works: a small town where people know more than they tell, the collective guilty, and a hero who can't avoid confrontation with the evil powers. Old crimes, sins and secrets, hidden deep, are gradually revealed in an analysis of the conscious and unconscious like on a Freud's sofa. Playing with fire, King plunges into the mind of Mike Noonan, an author who suffers from the writer's block. Noonan's wife has died unexpectedly and he retreats to Sara Laughs, their happy home during summers. There he meets a young mother, Mattie, and her daughter, whom he helps in an custody struggle. - Mattie is one of the liveliest characters in King's works. Her sudden death, a logical twist of the plot, comes like electric shock. In the last pages of the novel Noonan/King returns to it and states correctly that 'to think I might have written such a hellishly convenient death in a book, ever, sickens me.' Bag of Bones continues the series where King explorers the writing process and the work of an author. The Shining, Misery, The Dark Half and now Bag of Bones are among his most revealing and personal works. - King is not among those writers who claim that they don't have time to read. Bag of Bones offers a delightful analysis of Herman Melville's story Bartleby, and comments about books and authors. Among them is Thomas Hardy, who stopped writing novels at the peak of his career and changed into poetry. Hardy supposedly said, that the most brilliantly drawn character in a novel is but a bag of bones.

A number of King's stories have been adapted into screen, among others Carrie (1976), The Shining (1980), Misery (1990), The Shawshank Redemption (1995), and The Green Mile (1999). His novels are richly textured with multitudinous references to films, television, rock music, literature, popular culture, and in his own books. Several of early King's novels explored the agonies of childhood, parental neglect and abuse (Carrie; Firestarter, 1980). In the 1980s his perspective shifted into the various pains of adulthood, the loneliness of older people (It, 1986; Insomnia, 1994). He has also provided fully-realized women characters in such novels as Gerald's Game (1992), Dolores Clairborne (1993), and Rose Madder (1995).

'"Michela reads all your books," the fat woman said. "Where in the world do you get all those crazy ideas?"
"I don't know," Kinnell said, smiling more widely than ever. "They just come to me. Isn't that amazing?"'
(from 'The Road Virus Heads North', 1999)

King's Dark Tower series, which started in 1982 with The Gunslinger, has combined Tolkien's sense of wonder with a horror and Sergio-Leone influenced Western. Partly the novel is based on Robert Browning's narrative poem, 'Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came'. The world of Roland has many intertextual relationships with King's other books and maps the boundaries of his imagination or universe. Occasionally characters cross over from one genre to another, from fantasy to realism. Roland and his friends, other gunslingers, are helped by the Old Fella, Father Callahan from Salem's Lot.

King confesses in On Writing that he had problems with alcohol as early as in 1975, when he wrote The Shining, and he also developed in the 1980s a drung addiction. In June 1999 King was struck by a van and seriously injured. Soon after the accident, in July, King began publishing a serial novel, entitled The Plant, at his website, stephenking.com. In the story a supernatural vine starts to grow in a paperback publishing house. It brings success and riches and all it wants in return is a little drop of blood, a little flesh. King also announced that he will not continue with the story if payments for downloading the work fall off. "What made The Plant such a hilarious Internet natural (at least to my admittedly twisted mind) was that publishers and media people seem to see exactly this sort of monster whenever they contemplate the Net in general and e-lit in particular: a troublesome strangler fig that just might have a bit o' the old profit in it. If, that is, it's handled with gloves." (King in Time, January 8, 2001)

While convalescing from the accident, King returned to his early career as a writer in On Writing (2000), but most of all, the book gives down-to-earth advises for aspiring writers. "Write what you like, then imbue it with life and make it unique by blending in your own personal knowledge of life, friendship, relationships, sex and work. Especially work. People love to read about work. God knows why, but they do." In February 2002 King revealed to the Los Angeles Times that he has decided to stop publishing at year's end after finishing the last three novels in his "Dark Tower" series, and some other works. In 2003 King received the National Book Award. Its previous recipients include John Updike, Arthur Miller, Philip Roth and Toni Morrison. From Lisey's Story (2006) onwards, King's stories seems to have taken a new turn, in which the horror is not only a genre manifestation but the feelings of angst and fear are a definition of the whole human existence.

From the beginning of his career, King has examined the demons that are hidden behind the work of an author. In Misery a monstrous muse forces the writer into a slavery in front of typewriter. The writer is addicted to his work, but at the same time he is haunted by the demands of his fans. Although King is respected as a major force in popular fiction, his books blend the line between high art and pulp culture. In The Shining the writer, Jack Torrance, a former alcoholic, attacks his own family, and in The Dark Half (1898) he must fight against the demon of his own imagination. This self-conscious way to approach the art of fiction is also seen in King's controlled use of images that are meant to scare the reader. In Hearts in Atlantis (1999) typical horror elements are reduced as a metaphor of lost innocence. In the story King pointedly refers to William Golding's modern classic, Lord of the Flies.