The Dead Zone
was published in 1979. The copy I read is a hardcover Book Club Edition.
This blog started out as Michael Doherty's Personal Library, containing reviews of books that normally don't get reviewed: basically adult and cult books. It was all just a bit of fun, you understand. But when I embarked on a three-year Shakespeare study, Shakespeare basically took over, which is a good thing.
Monday, July 13, 2020
Shakespeare References in The Dead Zone
Stephen King’s The
Dead Zone contains a few Shakespeare references, most of them related to Macbeth. The first is actually a
reference to a Ray Bradbury book, itself a reference to Macbeth. King writes, “After the carousel came the mirror maze, a
very good mirror maze as a matter of fact, it made her think of the one in
Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way
Comes, where the little-old-lady schoolteacher almost got lost forever” (p.
27). The title for Bradbury’s novel comes from the lines “By the pricking of my
thumbs/Something wicked this way comes.” The next reference comes soon after
that, when Johnny has called a taxi. It is that cab ride that really sets
things in motion. King writes: “‘The deed’s done,’ he said, hanging up.
‘They’ll have a guy over in five minutes’” (p. 41). That is a reference to the
line “I have done the deed,” spoken by Macbeth after the murder of Duncan. We
then return to the witches for the next Macbeth
reference: “The hurly burly’s done, the election’s lost and won” (p. 304). The
lines from Macbeth read: “When the
hurly-burly’s done/When the battle’s lost and won.” There soon follows another
mention of the Ray Bradbury novel, this time coming within a letter that Chuck
has written to Johnny: “P.S.: The foxy chick’s
name is Stephanie Wyman, and I have already turned her on to Something
Wicked This Way Comes” (p. 324). That is the book’s final reference to Macbeth. Interesting that its first and
last Macbeth reference is to Something Wicked This Way Comes. But
there is one more Shakespeare reference in The
Dead Zone. Johnny has known for some time that he must kill a character
named Greg Stillson, but he has understandably held off carrying out the deed.
In a letter mailed to his father on the day he plans on finally killing the
man, Johnny says: “It’s wrong, but it may
turn out right. I don’t know. But I won’t play Hamlet any longer. I know how dangerous Stillson is” (p. 368).
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