313. Elevation
Rating: ☆☆☆
Recommended by:
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Fiction, Suspense, Thriller, Fantasy, Novella
146 pages, published October 30, 2018
Reading Format: Audio Book
Summary
In Elevation, Stephen King tells a supernatural story about Scott Carey, an ordinary man who has steadily been losing weight but whose appearance hasn’t changed. Scott weighs the same in his clothes and out of them, no matter how heavy they are. Scott is engaged in a battle with the lesbians next door whose dog regularly poops on Scott’s lawn. Both are trying to launch a new restaurant, but the people of Castle Rock want no part of a gay married couple, and the place is in trouble. When Scott finally understands the prejudices they face–including his own—he tries to help. They become friends and are with Scott as he approaches zero weight and all that entails.
Quotes
“Everyone should have this, he thought, and perhaps, at the end, everyone does. Perhaps in their time of dying, everyone rises.”
“Everything leads to this, he thought. To this elevation. If it’s how dying feels, everyone should be glad to go.”
“He thought he had discovered one of life’s great truths (and one he could have done without): the only thing harder than saying goodbye to yourself, a pound at a time, was saying goodbye to your friends.”
“life is what we make it and acceptance is the key to all our affairs.”
“Why feel bad about what you couldn’t change? Why not embrace it?”
“He used to say what you deserve has nothing to do with where you finish.”
“Gravity is the anchor that pulls us down into our graves.”
“Then his lungs seemed to open up again, each breath going deeper than the one before. His sneakers (not blinding white Adidas, just ratty old Pumas) seemed to shed the lead coating they had gained. His previous lightness of body came rushing back. It was what Milly had called the following wind, and what pros like McComb no doubt called the runner’s high. Scott preferred that. He remembered that day in his yard, flexing his knees, leaping, and catching the branch of the tree. He remembered running up and down the bandstand steps. He remembered dancing across the kitchen floor as Stevie Wonder sang “Superstition.” This was the same. Not a wind, not even a high, exactly, but an elevation. A sense that you had gone beyond yourself and could go farther still.”
My Take
My Take: While Elevation is lesser Steven King, it is still an engaging, page turning story.