Everything’s Eventual, by Stephen King

Reading this book was a mistake.

You almost certainly misunderstood that last statement.

I like Stephen King. He’s a darn good story teller, and he’s
darn good at evoking just the response he wants (which, it seems to me,
isn’t quite the same thing). I use to buy all of his books as they came
out, until I got to Insomnia, which was frankly a waste of
time. He told the story well, but the story itself was too silly for
words. After that I more or less stopped buying him, and even got rid of
all but my favorite books by him.

I kept all of his short story collections. He’s a darn good story
teller. So when I saw Everything’s Eventual at the bookstore
and realized it was a new collection, I almost bought it. Almost, but
not quite. I wasn’t in a buying mood, and I wasn’t in a
Stephen King mood.

Well, then came the day when I was to leave for Australia. I didn’t much
want to go, so I was in a foul mood. And then I came across this book
again, at the airport, and thought it would distract me a bit, and so I
bought it and started reading it in lieu of the book I’d brought for the
trip.

That was the mistake.

See, when you write a horror novel you can make it as scary and awful as
you like, and still provide a bit of a happy ending after all of that
catharsis. When you write a short story in the same genre, you mostly
can’t–there’s not time or space. Reading a short horror story is
something like hitting yourself on the head with a hammer, because it
feels so good when you stop. The horrible thing happened to someone
else, someone you don’t know, someone who isn’t even real.

If you read a horror anthology straight through in one sitting, it
doesn’t stop. You just keep getting hit with that hammer through story
after story. It’s enough to make a guy feel really lousy, and indeed
that’s usually the effect a Stephen King collection has on me
if I’m stupid enough (after all this time) to read it that way.

I started reading Everything’s Eventually in the terminal. I
continued reading it on the plane. And when I finished a story, I was
still on the plane, with many hours to go (it was a
fourteen-and-a-half-hour flight) before I got to Australia, feeling
cramped, confined, and really out-of-sorts about leaving my family.

I guess you could say that the book fit my mood…but on the whole I’d
have been better off with something cheerful. At the very least, I didn’t
do the stories justice, reading them that way.

Which is a pity, because it’s really a rather good book, if you like that
sort of thing.