Cell,
Stephen King's
latest novel, introduces a new twist for him–-a gay hero.
While he has had side characters in his novels who were gay
or lesbian–Dayna Jurgens in The Stand and Uncle
Tommy in The Talisman come to mind–they are usually
neither central to the plot nor drawn much beyond the more
pleasant aspects of gay stereotypes.
Enter
Tom McCourt, a gay man who happens to be walking along Boston
Common on a sunny October afternoon just as Everything Goes
Horribly Wrong.
As
Cell opens, Tom 's fellow protagonist Clay Riddell
is in line to buy some ice cream from a Mister Softee truck.
He waits behind a woman in a power suit and two pretty teenage
girls as what is later described as The Pulse is transmitted
through every cell phone.
The
Pulse erases the cell phone user's higher consciousness, leaving
behind nothing but base, animal aggression. And what happens
next is classic King horror: the woman in the power suit tries
to attack the man in the ice cream truck. She is thwarted
by one of the teenagers who rips her throat open–with her
teeth.
Tom
and Clay are understandably horrified by what they witness.
Tom is in such a state of shock he can barely move out of
the way of a lunatic charging him with a butcher knife. Thanks
to Clay's intervention, and a cop who shoots the crazy man
in the head, Tom barely escapes injury while around them Boston
descends into madness.
As
King's fans know, he loves his gore. Those who like their
horror more cerebral will get their share of that,
but the tightly edited story is also liberally laced with
the sort of violence one would expect from this sort of storyline.
In typical King fashion, the sensation of an ordinary day
becoming a horror of disorder is brilliantly conveyed.
Tom
and Clay quickly realize what is unfolding and take
cover in a nearby hotel as Boston collapses into a chaos of
car accidents, Duck Boats gone amok, crashing planes and vicious
assaults. There they are joined by Alice, a 15 year old girl
severely traumatized after watching her mother rip out a cab
driver's throat before murderously turning on her.
Only
Alice 's knowledge of martial arts saves her, and for the
first few pages of her introduction into the story, she can
barely speak. Fleeing Boston, the three journey north toward
Maine, guided both by communications in dreams and Clay's
desire to reunite with his wife and son.
Much
of Clay's distress is caused not by what he knows, but what
he fears. He has no idea if his family is alive or dead, what
they might have suffered, or even where they are. The trio
journeys first to Tom's house in Malden, where they outfit
themselves for the rest of their trip.
Next,
they go to Gaiten Academy, a prep school with just
one sane student and an elderly Dean left unaffected by The
Pulse.
It
is at Gaiten they learn disturbing news–the ‘phone people'
are flocking together, crudely using tools, and are essentially
‘rebooting' as their minds adjust to using the basest form
of group thought. It is obvious that they are up to something
that involves a bad outcome for the remaining survivors. Destroying
this flock of phone people has a bad outcome for Tom, Clay
and Alice –the war is on, and no holds are barred.
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