This weekend saw the debut of the University Of Massachusetts Lowell's Chancellor's Speaker Series, and for their first speaker, they brought in the man who's sold over 350 million books in the last 40 years and been responsible for probably just as many people having Insomnia, Stephen King, the undisputed King of Horror.
Joining me on behalf of Middlesex Community College was Donna Corbin, one of the more voracious readers we have on campus, and a true student of literature. So needless to say, her It factor is sky-high and she's the toast of her book club after getting a few moments to chat with one of the most prolific writers who has quickened the Pulse of our generation!
For Donna, though, it was a two-fer, as she also got to chat with one of her favorite local authors, Andre Dubus III, who played host and questioner to King up on stage Under the Dome at the Tsongas Center. A side note - interestingly, back in 1986, I was the Lowell Sun reporter who wrote about the tragic accident when Dubus' father was critically wounded in an Interstate 495 crash, losing a leg when he was hit by a car while stopping to help a disabled motorist!
Really, it was truly refreshing to see how comfortable he was, happy to Stand with his readers, chat with his Faithful fans, and thankfully Annie Wilkes was nowhere to be found this night.
The folks at the University should be pretty pumped with this Shining debut outing.
King debuted his new short story, Afterlife, reading the whole serial start to finish to an enraptured audience of more than 3,500. He then opened the show up to really engaging questions from the audience filled with Laughs, even fending off a Randall Flagg type fan trying in Desperation to rush the stage, and thwarting the night from going Dunhill.
Here's a few of the gems I was able to capture from King's 90 minute presentation:
"You guys put my kids through college and I scared the shit out of you while I did it!"
Universal Studios "wouldn't want a ride I created because there'd be no repeat customers"
"I've got this reputation as a horror writer but I've really got a marshmallow for a heart."
"I don't have bad dreams or anything because I pass all that shit on to you guys."
And my personal favorite: "College is great because there's tuition costs but the dreams are free."
After the show, I was able to meet up with Stephen King aficionado and fellow E Streeter John Piekos, who has a decades-long history following King, and happens to be friends with some of King's extended circle of contacts.