Nightmares & Dreamscapes by Stephen King audiobook

Nightmares & Dreamscapes

By Stephen King
Read by various narrators

Simon & Schuster Audio

The Nightmares & Dreamscapes Series

26.90 Hours Unabridged
Format : Digital Download (In Stock)
  • Regular Price: $69.95

    Special Price $55.96

    ISBN: 9780743581370

From the master of horror, here is the short story collection containing the story "Dolan's Cadillac," now a feature film starring Christian Slater and Wes Bentley. With numerous unforgettable movies based on his short stories—including Shawshank Redemption1408, and The Green Mile—listeners will be delighted to rediscover this classic collection, also released as a television miniseries and on DVD. Featuring twenty short horror stories, a television script, an essay, and a poem, Nightmares & Dreamscapes contains unique and chilling plots including everything from dead rock-star zombies to evil toys seeking murderous revenge. It will be treasured by King fans new and old.

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Summary

Summary

From the master of horror, here is the short story collection containing the story "Dolan's Cadillac," now a feature film starring Christian Slater and Wes Bentley.

With numerous unforgettable movies based on his short stories—including Shawshank Redemption1408, and The Green Mile—listeners will be delighted to rediscover this classic collection, also released as a television miniseries and on DVD. Featuring twenty short horror stories, a television script, an essay, and a poem, Nightmares & Dreamscapes contains unique and chilling plots including everything from dead rock-star zombies to evil toys seeking murderous revenge. It will be treasured by King fans new and old.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“Merely by tickling the keys on his word processor King can make flesh creep half a word away. But where he differs from so many chill merchants is that his horror is rarely gratuitous and often informed with a wry humor.”  Times (London)
“A bumper collection of short stories…You can’t help admiring King’s narrative skills and his versatility as a storyteller.”  Sunday Telegraph (London)
“Wonderful…An illusionist extraordinaire, King peoples his fiction, long and short, with believable characters. The power of this collection lies in the amazing richness of his fevered imagination—he just can’t be stopped from coming up with haunting plots.”  Publishers Weekly
“May be the most suspenseful and moving writing he’s ever done.”  Booklist

Reviews

Reviews

by Ash Ryan 9/13/2017
Narration
Overall Performance
Story

One of King's best

Stephen King is a much better short story writer than novelist. In On Writing, he explained that he opposes what he calls "plotting," by which he basically means figuring out ahead of time where the story is going---which explains why the longer the work of his, the weaker (if not outright awful) the ending tends to be.

His short stories tend not to suffer from this problem, both because plot is not as crucial to a good short story as it usually is to longer literary forms; and because, where it is important, structuring a shorter piece does not seem to overtax his ability like a novel does.

There is a more serious dimension to many of King's stories than one might expect, and I like that about them. For one thing, there is a strong moral sensibility to his writing, and while I disagree with this moral sensibility (it being strongly informed by his Methodist upbringing), I like the fact that it's there at all. Too many writers these days are amoralists, whether explicitly or by omission, so it's somewhat refreshing to read a collection of stories that contains a little moralizing (though it's usually pretty subtle, almost more a mood pervading the piece than an obvious point to the story).

Another thing I like very much about King's writing is the sort of self-reflective nature of it, the examination of what it is that a writer is doing as an artist---namely, recreating the universe in his own image. This comes across most strongly here in the story "Umney's Last Case" (though King has dealt with it explicitly elsewhere as well, notably in The Dark Tower series). But the implication is present in the rest of the collection, growing out of the interconnectedness of detail and the integrity of style, which communicate the feeling that all of the characters in all of these stories inhabit the same world, and that it's Stephen King's world, a fact of which he is well aware and wants his readers to be aware, as well.

Several of the stories here are attempts to utilize the style of other writers, such as H. P. Lovecraft in "Crouch End" and Arthur Conan Doyle in "The Doctor's Case". These attempts are surprisingly successful. "The Doctor's Case", for instance, is a Sherlock Holmes story in which Watson solves the case---a twist that Conan Doyle himself may never have employed, but which King manages to pull off very much in the spirit of the original Holmes stories. At the same time, King makes these stories his own, bringing them into his own artistic vision.

There are several stories here that are basically adult versions of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark---stories about downpours of carnivorous toads, incredibly long fingers poking out of bathroom sink drains, and chattery teeth with a will of their own---but even these are pretty fun because King does not take them too seriously, but is perfectly aware of their absurdity and tells them with tongue slightly in cheek. If he tried playing them completely straight, the readers' ability to suspend their disbelief would become a real problem. Thankfully, he does not.

Finally, there is a non-fiction piece about little league baseball, to which King brings his fiction writer's sensibility and makes it surprisingly suspenseful, and meaningful.

Author

Author Bio: Stephen King

Author Bio: Stephen King

Stephen King has written more than sixty books, many hitting the #1 spot on the New York Times bestsellers list. He has won the World Fantasy Award, several Bram Stoker Awards, and the O. Henry Award for his story “The Man in the Black Suit.” He is the 2003 recipient of the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, and in 2007 he received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. His epic works The Dark Tower and It are the basis for major motion pictures.

Details

Details

Available Formats : Digital Download
Runtime: 26.90
Audience: Adult
Language: English