View Full Version : The Long Walk
Chelle71
August 26th, 2009, 03:32 AM
Hi there,
I am new here and i could not find any discussions about the Novella The Long Walk? It surprises me asI think it is the best work Stephen King has ever written....
prettiwiccan
October 26th, 2009, 09:52 AM
I have to agree with you, I love the long walk. One of many SK stories that really stick with you after you finish reading.
plgordon
December 7th, 2009, 08:03 PM
Hey Chelle, I loved the long walk, I've never thought of raw hamburger the same since I read it. Definately my favorite Bachman Book.
catnoel
May 26th, 2010, 10:36 PM
One of my favorite books. I read it yearly as a reminder to "Keep on Walkin"!!
GLewman
June 1st, 2010, 11:48 PM
Hi Chelle...thankyou for the welcome...The Long Walk was a great story...To this day, whenever I go for a walk, I always think what it would be like to have to walk several hundred miles at 4 mph...haha...you'll have to do the metric conversion to figure out your distance and speed :)
GNTLGNT
June 3rd, 2010, 04:32 AM
Great grim story...when I was a kid, the Long Walk was from the chair to the TV to change the channel...:eek2:
Pucker
June 3rd, 2010, 08:49 PM
Great grim story...when I was a kid, the Long Walk was from the chair to the TV to change the channel...:eek2:
Having to actually get up out of your chair to change the station . . .
yeah, those were the good old days, alright.
And the choices were so much simpler then, too.
Whenever I think of The Long Walk I remember climbing Maine's Mt. Katahdin in my teens and twisting my ankle coming down off the summit. I then had to hike down from roughly 4,000 feet, dog tired, with a badly swollen ankle.
Of course, there wasn't anybody threatening to shoot me if I sat down to rest.
Good times.
Tayyab Saeed
June 4th, 2010, 11:19 AM
I love it. It's certainly one of my favorite Stephen King book and my favorite Bachman book. Hope it will be made into a great movie! And there are chances of it being great, too, because Darabont's gonna direct it! Yay!
Doc Wilson
June 4th, 2010, 11:56 AM
Brilliant work, especially given how young he was when he wrote it.
bobledrew
June 4th, 2010, 12:20 PM
Among the best of the early work, I think. Unrelentingly grim. What I've never been able to decide was whether what Stebbins told Garraty in the final chapter was true or not, or whether it was more of his games with the Walkers. The story haunts me. The bravado of the young men, how in some ways it reminds me of Lord of the Flies... The relentlessness.
Pucker
June 16th, 2010, 01:25 PM
Among the best of the early work, I think. Unrelentingly grim. What I've never been able to decide was whether what Stebbins told Garraty in the final chapter was true or not, or whether it was more of his games with the Walkers. The story haunts me. The bravado of the young men, how in some ways it reminds me of Lord of the Flies... The relentlessness.
This is actually one of my favorite aspects of the story. It's easy to think that Stebbins was having Garraty on. He was very confident throughout The Walk and might have been playing mind games, but the way we see most of the Walkers (even, ultimately, Barkovitch) drawn closer together as the true horror of what they're involved in confronts them, it's entirely possible that Stebbins was actually coming clean. We don't know, and that makes the story more -- not less -- compelling. We don't really know most of the motivations of the Walkers. Why do they want to kill themselves? We don't know if The Walk is a straight game or if the dice are loaded. Does anybody ever really win? We don't really know to any comforting degree what becomes of Garraty.
kittykiller
June 16th, 2010, 10:55 PM
I dont remember alot of it since I was like nine when i had it red to me but the part that stick out it that dreded wachine that folowed them and if the stoped or slowed down then #$&*^ you know. but will have to read agin some time to recap.
michal
June 17th, 2010, 09:35 AM
I thought it was a very special story. It didn't seem so at the time when I read it for the first time, but it was very memorable for me and I still think about it from time to time. To me it is a very lonely book, about obsession and growing up and I guess different people can read a lot of different things into that long walk taht at the ends turns out to be more important than the destination.
BeverleyMarsh
July 30th, 2010, 07:31 AM
Yeah, I always thought it would make such a good movie. I can't belive it's never been made.
CCAL
August 5th, 2010, 01:33 AM
I remember reading this a long time ago and was really impressed with it. Later on I came across it again and read it a second time. Almost immediately read it a third time just to really digest the story. Just think, if you could survive the journey, you could have anything you wanted for the rest of your life-anything! What a concept to grasp! None doubted it was true (did they??) I dont recall any doubters. The conversation of the walkers was very interesting after the walk really got going. The girls distracting the walkers and causing some to get warnings called on them was an aspect I hadnt considered but it was certainly logical once SK put it there in the book. one of those ah-ha-ofcourse moments that might have happened in real life...
krs72
March 17th, 2011, 04:41 PM
Whenever I'm takin' the dog for a walk, I'll sometimes think of The Long Walk and get lost in thought about the story. One time the leash got caught in my dogs legs and I stopped to untangle him, just them a car backfired and I thought it was a gunshot, when I looked around there was a guy in a Army uniform standing there. Man, talk about imagination!
Evil Queen
March 17th, 2011, 06:46 PM
When I'm jogging on my treadmill, I think about this story....because I try to get up to 4.0 mph, & I'm totally running at that speed. So I think, how could those boys keep up that pace for long??...or anyone for that matter?? Of course, I'm a slow jogger, so it could just be me.....This was a great story, the ending kind of left me wondering though......
fljoe0
March 18th, 2011, 08:47 AM
Yeah, I always thought it would make such a good movie. I can't belive it's never been made.
It would have to be a smaller budget independent film because if it was a Hollywood film with a decent budget, the happy ending people would be called in to make an ending for it and Garraty would have to drive off into the sunset with his girlfriend. This story would probably work well without a big budget because it wouldn't need much in the way of elaborate sets or special effects.
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