Suffering of Stephen King's conspiracy: Paul Shelton is a famous writer who created a popular "tragedy" series and just killed the hero Misa Lechastein. He just went to New York to print the manuscript when his car crashed in Colorado where he completed the writing of a new novel called "Fast Car". He was broken by his number one fan, Ann Wilks, and pulled out of his debris. She took him home and managed him health. But Ann Wilks was a bit crazy and asked Paul to take back his life to another book when he read a new "suffering" novel.
Struggling, Stephen King - Anne Wilk What is necessary to scare the author of the best-selling horror novel? In "Les Miserables", Stephen King embodies in the terrible female Ann Wilks where the writer's fear of being a writer and his continuation of creativity were well designed. In the novel, Ann represents the image of the mother, the goddess, and "unchanged readers". In fact, however, Ann only represents the creative part of the king's heart. Ann Wilks is a proud mother of two children - a historic romantic novelist Paul Shelton, and his very popular heroine, Misery Chastain. Ann must take care of Paul and educate. Gottschalk described in detail, "Annie is looking at Paul like crazy
With the novel "suffering", Stephen King embodies possession of the existence of evil that happens to be elaborately mentally ill women Ann Wilks. In this story Ann represents the image of mother, faithful reader of goddess, and romantic novelist Paul Shelton. However, in reality, Ann only represents a person who interprets between reality and fiction. This strange commitment is not only Paul but also a tragic and tragic personality, it shows her spiritual instability.
I saw a Stephen King movie like a pet cemetery, a shining one, a redemption of Shawshank and a storm of the century. Most of his work is also in a dark and tragic era. Steven King 's theme is usually supernatural and includes a struggle between good and evil. Suffering is not the best work of Stephen King, but it provides high quality entertainment throughout the reading process.