Stephen King Awarded Lifetime Achievement Award
by sassymonkey

This past Friday night I filed into a downtown auditorium along with my friend. She is a long-time Stephen King fan who made the trip from Ottawa to attend with me. I, on the other hand, probably haven't read a Stephen King novel since high school. But still when I heard that Stephen King was making his very first public appearance in Canada I hopped online and got some tickets. The Lifetime Achievement Award was given to King by the Canadian Booksellers Association.

In the past it has been given to authors like Timothy Findley and Pierre Burton, as well as booksellers such as Charles Burchell. Friday was a historic event on more than one front - in addition to it being King's first Canadian appearance it was also the first time this award was given to a non-Canadian.

When I first looked at the program for the night I must admit I was a bit surprised to see one name on the list - Margaret Atwood. She was one of the authors that was there to toast King. I'm pretty sure I'm not alone in wondering what the connection between Atwood and King would be. In fact, Atwood opened her toast by saying to the audience, "I bet you didn't expect to see me here!" It turns out that she's referenced King in at least two of her non-fiction critical writings about literature (aptly enough, he's referenced her 2002 book, Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing). Who knew?

After Atwood finished her praise of King, Clive Barker took the stage for his turn. I'm afraid I missed his first few statements as I was distracted by the statement his pants were making. Oh my those were some colourful jeans. Sadly the zoom on my camera did not stand up to my balcony seats so you'll have to use your imagination (at least for now, I've heard that this will be televised at some point). Barker credits his success to Stephen King. After his first novel was published in England he said there was a deafening silence. And then one voice spoke and it was not any voice, but the voice of Stephen King and he calling Barker the future of horror. It was perhaps the best thing that anyone had done for him professionally and he says he does his best to pass on such acknowledgements to other up and coming authors.

Barker was followed by Susan Moldow. She has the lucky distinction of the being Stephen King's North American publisher at Scribner. She spoke of his generosity as a person and as a writer. She also described him as "one of the most important cultural forces on the planet." This makes sense to me as I personally blame King for a large chunk of my serious fear of clowns and I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one (I was still pretty young when I was exposed to It...someone possibly should have been screening my reading choices a bit more closely) .

Following that Chuck Klosterman sat down with King on the stage for a cozy interview. It was like dueling geeks! It was wonderful! After all of the above it's no surprise that when King was asked at the beginning of the interview what he thought about the night so far he responded with, "It's like being dead and going to your own funeral." Despite the fact that, yes, Klosterman asked that question that all people ask successful authors ("How do you do it?") the interview covered a lot of ground. It spanned from the early years of writing, touched on King's alcoholism, and discussed his 1999 car accident. When asked why he writes King's answer made me grin, "I just like to make shit up."

I don't think anyone could interview Stephen King and not ask about the supernaturalness that he applies to normal situations. When talking about the point where he crosses over between the normal and the supernatural King has this to say:

What I really like to do is sew that seam so fine that you don't even realize that you're crossing over.

He's exceptionally good at doing this in such a way as to scare the crap out of us and make us paranoid (please see the above comment regarding my serious fear of clowns).

After the interview King went on to accept his award and displayed a knowledge of Canadian authors that is considerably more extensive than my own. But if you don't mind I'm going to gloss over that and skip to my favourite quote of the night which is actually from the interview portion of the evening. It may need to be added to my favourite quotes of all time. This is what Stephen King had to say about writing:

From the beginning, I saw writing as a fundamentally aggressive act.

Stop and think about that for a moment. Take that statement and apply it to yourself. Writing is a fundamentally aggressive act. With every stroke of the pen or tap at the keyboard you are saying that you have a voice. You are telling people to listen to it. That statement alone was worth the $25 dollar admission fee.

Contributing Editor Sassymonkey also blogs at Sassymonkey and Sassymonkey Reads.

Comments

 

ARRGH! I am so JEALOUS!!

ARRGH! I am so JEALOUS!! King, Atwood, two of my favorite writers (I'm partial to Atwood's poetry). King is so under-rated for his language.

Ever read his 'On Writing?" Phenomenal.

Dana
Mamalogues.com
In the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Pop Mama
Since Eve

 

On Writing

I haven't. But it's on the top of my list of books to buy as soon as I move. (I'm trying not to buy anything I'd have to pack at this point...lol).

Sassymonkey and Sassymonkey Reads.

 

Jealous here too

I love reading Stephen King and would love to have been there. I find him an amazing writer. I own most if not all of his books. Glad you enjoyed it.

 

Nuts!

They had free posters. I should have gotten you one Em.

Sassymonkey and Sassymonkey Reads.

 

Jealousy times three...

Great post, Sassy, thanks!

My older sister was always the huge King fan while I was more of a Koontz-lover, but, I did read many of his books, and Dana is right, the language is what makes it a pleasure for me. I like reading his books more for how he says things than for his plots (I'm with you on reading IT at too young of an age ;) ).

I'm going to have to show this post to my sis when she comes over next, she'll love it. Thanks for the great quotes, too... lol.

Melanie Perry
***not all who wander are lost***
Mistress of the Dorkness

 

I knew I wasn't the only one

I'm sure I would still find clowns creepy without It but it made me wayyyyy paranoid about them.

I've never read Koontz. I keep meaning to.

Sassymonkey and Sassymonkey Reads.

 

great convo

I talked my sister into heading over to see me yesterday and while we were out we were talking about this... and we did totally delve into the 'why weren't our book choices looked over!'. lol. Seriously, we were reading authors we probably shouldn't have at a very young age... of course, we didn't think so at the time.

I love koontz because I've got a short attention span.

:-/

:-D

Seriously, he's written in just about every genre... mostly identifiable characters... whether it's a sort of murder mystery, a story of government intrigue or a supernatural thriller screwball comedy romance. :-)
I love his work. I pass books around after I'm done with them, share the love and all... but, not my koontz collection. I keep them and reread them.
I'm currently working through 'The Good Guy' his most recent book and I'm totally hooked (but, I limit my reading to bedtime otherwise I'd get NOTHING done! lol).

Melanie Perry
***not all who wander are lost***
Mistress of the Dorkness

 

If you're going to read

If you're going to read Koontz, let me know. I'd suggest the Odd Thomas Series.

Jagged Edge of Em's Anxiety

 

the odd thomas series

You know... while I love Koontz, and I enjoyed this series... all of my friends have RAVED out it... I wasn't that thrilled. While Odd is a likeable character and I'll someday reread those books to enjoy him again; they just didn't have the same type of emotional impact on me as say 'Dark Rivers of the Heart', 'Lighting', 'Watchers', 'From the Corner of His Eye', 'Strangers' or 'By the Light of the Moon' (just a *couple* of my Koontz faves). But, they were the same friends who adored Icebound (originally Prison of Ice) that I was only sort of so-so on.

He's got stories for nearly every genre, though, so all of us with differing tastes can enjoy his skills. :-)

Melanie Perry
***not all who wander are lost***
Mistress of the Dorkness