Cell (novel)
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Cell | |
First edition cover |
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Author | Stephen King |
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Cover artist | Mark Stutzman |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Horror novel |
Publisher | Scribner |
Publication date | January 2006 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 449 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 0-7432-9233-2 |
Preceded by | The Colorado Kid |
Followed by | Lisey's Story |
Cell is an apocalyptic horror novel published by American author Stephen King in January 2006. The plot concerns a New England artist struggling to reunite with his young son after a mysterious signal broadcast over the global cell-phone network turns masses of his fellow humans into groups of nearly-mindless, murderous telekinetic hive-minds.
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
It is October 1st. Clayton Riddell, a struggling artist estranged from his wife, Sharon, and a young son named Johnny, has come to Boston from his home in Maine and landed a lucrative comic book deal after having spent years teaching art instead of producing it. As he prepares to celebrate, somebody, somewhere, triggers "The Pulse", a signal sent out over the global cell-phone network which instantly strips any cell-phone user of their reason and humanity, locking them into a merciless homicidal frenzy. Civilization promptly crumbles as the masses of "phoner" victims attack each other and any unaltered "normals" in view. Amidst the chaos, Clay is thrown together with Tom McCourt and 15-year-old Alice Maxwell. While the city burns behind them, they walk to Tom's house in the Boston suburb of Malden. The journey is not only successful but almost peaceful; as night falls the Pulse victims all mysteriously drop out of sight.
The next morning the phoners, while still engaging in spasms of violence, reappear and begin "flocking", migrating in lockstep outside Tom's home, only to disappear once again at dusk. They also begin to regain a semblance of intelligence, and forage for food. Despite these new developments, Clay is unalterably determined to return to Johnny. Having no better alternatives, the other two come with him.
They trek north by night across a devastated New England, having fleeting encounters with other "normie" survivors and catching disturbing hints about the activities of the phoners, who still attack non-phoners on sight. Crossing into New Hampshire, they arrive at the Gaiten Academy, a prep school with one remaining teacher, the kindly but definitely "old school" Charles Ardai (or "The Head"), and one pupil, a very bright boy named Jordan. The two of them show the newcomers where the local phoner flock goes at night: packing its components into the Academy's soccer field like sardines, "switched off" until morning. The Head also demonstrates that the phoners have become a hive mind, and are developing psychic and telekinetic abilities. The five of them decide that they must destroy the flock before its powers grow even stronger. They do this by parking two propane tankers on the soccer field, waiting for the flock to settle in for the night and blowing up the vehicles with a shot from a revolver. Clay tries to get everyone to flee the resulting scene of carnage, but The Head is too elderly to travel, and the others refuse to leave him, particularly Jordan.
The sleep that follows is filled with horrific dreams, in which everyone sees themselves in a stadium, surrounded by hundreds of phoners who broadcast a grim telepathic threat in Latin. A disheveled African-American man wearing a Harvard University hooded sweatshirt approaches, bringing their death. Waking, the heroes compare notes and dub him "The Raggedy Man". A new flock then surrounds their residence, and the trapped normies face the flock's metaphorical spokesman: the man (or body) wearing the Harvard hoodie. The flock commits bloody reprisal on all other normals in the area, and orders the protagonists to head north to a spot in Maine called "Kashwak". To preempt one objection, the flock psychically compels the Head to commit suicide. Clay and the others bury him and travel north, mostly because Clay is still determined to go home.
En route, they learn that as "flock-killers" they have been psychically marked as untouchables, to be shunned by other normals who refer to them as "The Gaiten Bunch". They are further disheartened to learn the phoners have now recruited normals to guard them while they "sleep". The worst blow of all hits when, following a petty squabble on the road, Alice is killed by a loutish pair of normals. Again the group buries its dead and pushes on. Arriving in Clay's hometown of Kent Pond, the remaining three discover notes from Johnny which tell them that Sharon was turned into a phoner on October 1, but that her son survived for several days, before he and all the other local normies were prompted to head to Kashwak, deluded by the phoners into thinking it was a safe haven. Clay has another nightmare which reveals that once there, they were all exposed to the Pulse by the phoners. He is still intent on finding his son, but after meeting another trio of flock-killers (Dan, a technical school teacher; a pregnant woman named Denise; and Ray, a construction worker), Tom and Jordan plan to head west, avoiding the ceremonial executions the phoners clearly have planned. Before leaving, the group discover that Alice's murderers were compelled into suicide as punishment for touching an untouchable.
Clay sets off alone, but the others soon reappear driving a small school bus; the phoners have used their ever-increasing powers to force them to rejoin him. Ray secretly gives Clay a cell-phone and phone number, tells him to use them when the time is right, and shoots himself.
Kashwak is the site of a half-assembled county fair. The travelers notice that more and more of the phoners are behaving erratically and breaking out of the flock. Jordan theorizes that a computer program was the source of the Pulse, and while it is still pumping its signal into the battery-powered cell-phone network, it has become corrupted with a computer worm, infecting the newer phoners with a mutated version of the Pulse on October 1. Nevertheless, an entire army of phoners is waiting for the arrivals; among them is the battered shell of Sharon, whom Clay pushes aside. Night falls, and the phoners lock the group in the fair's exhibition hall.
As a sleepless Clay waits for his execution the next morning, he realizes what Ray planned with the cell-phone: he covertly filled the rear of the bus with explosives, wired a phone-triggered detonator to them, and then killed himself to prevent the phoners from telepathically discovering his plan. The heroes break a window large enough for Jordan to squeeze through, and he drives the bus into the midst of the inert phoners. Thanks to a jury-rigged cellphone patch set up by the fair workers pre-Pulse, the bomb works exactly as hoped, and another scene of mass carnage rains down. The Raggedy Man and his flock have been destroyed.
The majority of the group heads north into Canada, to get out of cellphone coverage and let the approaching winter wipe out the region's unprotected phoners. Clay still seeks his son; after making arrangements with the others for a later rendezvous, he heads south. Against all odds, he finds Johnny, who received a "corrupted" dose of the Pulse; not only did he successfully wander away from Kashwak, he seems to almost recognize his father. However, Johnny is an erratic shadow of his former self, and so, following a theory of Jordan's, Clay gives Johnny another blast from the Pulse, hoping that the increasingly corrupted iterations of the Pulse will destroy each other and reset his son's brain to normal. The book ends with Clay putting a cell-phone to his son's ear, repeating what he would say to Johnny in pre-Pulse days when there was a phonecall; "Fo-fo-you-you."
[edit] eBay auction
A role in the story was offered to the winner of a charity auction sponsored by eBay:
"One (and only one) character name in a novel called CELL, which is now in work and which will appear in either 2006 or 2007. Buyer should be aware that CELL is a violent piece of work, which comes complete with zombies set in motion by bad cell phone signals that destroy the brain. Like cheap whiskey, it's very nasty and extremely satisfying. Character can be male or female, but a buyer who wants to die must in this case be female. In any case, I'll require physical description of auction winner, including any nickname (can be made up, I don't give a rip)."
Other authors like Peter Straub also participated in the online auction, selling roles in their upcoming books. The King auction ran between September 8 and 18, 2005 and the winner, a Ft. Lauderdale woman named Pam Alexander, paid over $20,000. Ms. Alexander gave the honor as a gift to her brother Ray Huizenga; his name was given to one of the zombie-slaughtering "flock killers" in the story, a construction worker who specializes in explosives, but then later commits suicide in the aid of the "flock killers" escape.
[edit] Literary significance & criticism
The book generally received good reviews from critics. Publishers Weekly described it as "a glib, technophobic but compelling look at the end of civilization" and full of "jaunty and witty" sociological observations [1]. Stephen King scholar Bev Vincent said "It's a dark, gritty, pessimistic novel in many ways and stands in stark contrast to the fundamental optimism of The Stand". [2]
[edit] Allusions/references
[edit] References
- The book makes reference to "the panic rat", which is a motif in King's work to showcase fear as an imaginary creature feeding away at the thoughts of the lead character. Clayton experiences this continually throughout the book in fear of his son's fate. This was previously mentioned in Gerald's Game, in which the lead female character Jessie Burlingame experiences the panic bug as she's handcuffed to a bed.
- The enigmatic reference "Dodge had a good time, too", made by a traveler when "Lawrence Welk and his champagne music makers" can be heard playing Baby Elephant Walk, is a reference to Dodge Division of the Chrysler Corporation. It was The Lawrence Welk Show's in-studio sponsor early on, and was later replaced by Geritol.
- The concept of an auditory signal that can destroy a person's brain is very similar to the concepts put forth in Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson. King also references Stephenson in the book, when the character of Jordan calls him "a god".
- The Raggedy Man is the name of a poem by the American poet James Whitcomb Riley.[3]
- The book is co-dedicated to film director George A. Romero and sci-fi/horror writer Richard Matheson. Romero has worked with King on numerous occasions, including Creepshow and the feature film version of The Dark Half, and is most famous for his "Living Dead" horror movies, which feature swarms of zombies overwhelming human civilization; Night of the Living Dead and Dawn of the Dead are both directly mentioned in Cell — although the effects of The Pulse more closely resemble the effects of the bioweapon in Romero's 1973 film The Crazies, in that phoners are not dead and that they indiscriminately attack each other and normals, unlike Romero's ghouls who exclusively attack the living. In much the same vein as Cell, Matheson's novel I Am Legend depicts a lone "normal" waging a grim post-apocalyptic battle against an army of hideously-altered former humans.
- In the story, King makes a reference to Juniper Hill (a mental hospital), which he has used in other stories as well, such as It.
- Clay's son goes to a middle school in Chamberlain, Maine, which is is the town where King's novel Carrie was set.
- As is typical of King's novels, several elements of the Cell reference King's The Dark Tower series. A "half-constructed kiddie ride" at Kashwak is named Charlie the Choo-Choo, which is also the name of a plot-important children's book in The Dark Tower series. Also, the graphic novel that Clay sells prior to the Pulse is called Dark Wanderer, a story (as his wife puts it) involving "apocalypse cowboys." The story, and its characters, are likely a reference to the Dark Tower series and the gunslingers of King's apocalyptic fantasy world. Most notably, the protagonist of Clay's novel is named Ray Damon, who shares the initials of Roland Deschain, the hero of The Dark Tower Series.
- The town of Kashwak is said to be somewhere in the vicinity of the unincorporated township of TR-90 - the setting for King's earlier novel Bag of Bones .
- In the story, the Head's vegetable garden is called the 'Victory Garden', the same name as was given to the vegetable garden at Hetton House in King's Blaze
[edit] Outside references
- The character of Charles Ardai was named after the entrepreneur who published King's novel The Colorado Kid.
[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
On March 8, 2006, Ain't It Cool News announced that Dimension Films have bought the film rights to the book and will produce a film directed by Eli Roth (Hostel, Cabin Fever) for a 2009 release.
Says Roth about his approach to the film:
I fucking love that book. Such a smart take on the zombie movie. I am so psyched to do it. I think you can really do almost a cross between the Dawn of the Dead remake with a 'Roland Emmerich' approach (for lack of a better reference) where you show it happening all over the world. When the pulse hits, I wanna see it hit EVERYWHERE. In restaurants, in movie theaters, at sports events, all the places that people drive you crazy when they're talking on their cell phones. I see total armageddon. People going crazy killing each other - everyone at once - all over the world. Cars smashing into each other, people getting stabbed, throats getting ripped out. The one thing I always wanted to see in zombie movies is the actual moment the plague hits, and not just in one spot, but everywhere. You usually get flashes of it happening around the world on news broadcasts, but you never actually get to experience it happening everywhere. Then as the phone crazies start to change and mutate, the story gets pared down to a story about human survival in the post-apocalyptic world ruled by phone crazies. I'm so excited, I wish the script was ready right now so I could start production. But it'll get written (or at least a draft will) while I'm doing Hostel 2, and then I can go right into it. It should feel like an ultra-violent event movie.[4]
On June 15, 2007, Eli Roth posted in his MySpace blog that he will not be directing Cell "anytime soon", as he plans to spend the rest of this year writing other projects.
[edit] References
- ^ - Publishers Weekly review, January 5, 2006
- ^ Breaking News from the Dead Zone (Archive), January 4, 2006, Bev Vincent
- ^ The Raggedy Man - A poem by James Whitcomb Riley - American Poems
- ^ Lilja's Library - The World of Stephen King [1996 - 2008]
[edit] External links
- Cell at the Internet Movie Database
- Literary review at Reader Meet Author