The Latest(ish)
I like hotels: the soothing anonymity, the agreeable sensation of watching people pick up after you, the questionable pleasures of pay-per-view. Needless to say, Stephen King, a writer at his best when conjuring up evil from the everyday, disagrees. In the prelude to his short story, “1408,” he explains why hotel rooms are “naturally creepy”: “How many people have slept in that bed before you? How many of them were sick? How many were losing their minds? How many were perhaps thinking about reading a few final verses from the Bible in the drawer of the nightstand beside them and [...]
A Room With a Bloody View
June 22, 2007
Room 1408; published originally in The New York Sun
At one time or another, most of us have gone through that gray-faced morning routine: the shameful stumble through the shambles of a living room reduced to a wasteland of empty bottles, dirty glasses, and elusive memories, you know how it goes. The night before had been fun, you think, you hope, but what was it, exactly, that had happened? And so it was with that starburst we call “the ’60s.” For a few brief, blinding moments, there was illumination, chaos, and destruction, sometimes creative, sometimes not, sometimes fun, sometimes not. When it all ended, we were left with the [...]
A Magical Mystery Tour
June 7, 2007
Summer of Love: Art of the Psychedelic Era (The Whitney, NYC); published originally in The New York Sun