Quote Originally Posted by TheHMC View Post
I haven't read most of the comments because I keep wanting to click on spoilers and have a hard time resisting that temptation, so I'm just going to answer.

I was young when I read Cujo and when

the son dies
I had a real hard time with it. I haven't re-read it as an adult yet, but am planning on it soon. I know it will be rough because I'm a parent now and wasn't when I read it the first time. Pet Sematary, too with all of

the Gage stuff
. Sad, sad, sad.

So many parts of The Stand. I was proud of Glen

near his end and then sad once he was gone
. There was also one short part in there where it talks about a

5 year old boy that is left alone after his family dies and then he fell down a well(I think it was a well) and broke both legs and then died awhile later. That one part just REALLY got to me and a few tears did fall. Thinking of what that poor boy went through, so young and so alone.
I know he wasn't real, but dang...haha that whole passage just got to me. I was reading it thinking "No. Oh God. Nooo. Oh my God." I remember thinking right after that "Why, Stephen? Why did you have to do that to that poor little boy?" ahahahahah! Again, he wasn't real, but that's how the King Man does it, right? Sucks you in so much you feel like you're reading a true story.

Although I didn't love Cell, I was very sad when

Alice died .
I didn't much see the point of her for the first part of the book and then I grew to like her more. I had that familiar sense of dread reading up to

her death and when she was hit with the rock
my heart sunk so far down in my gut I thought I would puke. That was one part of that book that I...well, I didn't enjoy it..but I did...but..well..I think that's about all the explanation I can give for it. Poor, poor .
In my opinion the most disturbing passage in "The Stand" was where Lloyd was talking about his experience with his rabbit. It didn't make me tear up, but disturbed me greatly. I personally enjoyed Cell! But I can understand why people don't. It was my first Stephen King book I ever read so I'm partial to it.