Home Delivery (short story)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
"Home Delivery"
horror comedy short story
Publication
Published inBook of the Dead (1st release),
Nightmares & Dreamscapes
Publication typeAnthology
Media typePrint (Paperback)

"Home Delivery" is a short story by American writer Stephen King. It was first published in the zombie anthology Book of the Dead (1989) and later included in King's short story collection Nightmares & Dreamscapes (1993).

Plot

The protagonist of the story is Maddie Pace, a timid and indecisive young woman who lives on a small island named Gennesault (or "Jenny"), off the coast of

fishing boat
accident.

After a scattering of initial outbreaks, dead bodies all over the world begin to reanimate en masse and attack the living. The source of the phenomenon is eventually traced to "

south pole. A space shuttle under joint American-Soviet authority visits the site and promptly meets with disaster.[1] After further attempts to destroy the object fail, the zombie plague spreads and civilization collapses
.

Jenny's inhabitants gather up all the available firearms to prepare for their own attack, which all too soon erupts from the island's small cemetery. The island's men are forced to destroy their undead loved ones as they crawl out of their graves. The still-moving pieces of the reanimated corpses are then burned with kerosene and the remains plowed underground by a bulldozer. Frank Daggett, the elderly man who did most of the organizing of the successful defense, suffers a fatal heart attack and has himself blasted to pieces so he won't reanimate.

While she is hearing about the battle at the cemetery from her neighbor, Maddie recalls her own confrontation with the animated corpse of her husband, come back to get her from the bottom of the sea. She succeeds in destroying him/it and faces the future, however grim, with renewed confidence and hope.

Version changes

There are some differences between the versions published in The Book of the Dead and Nightmares and Dreamscapes, none of which are significant to the plot. For example, the space expedition in the original publication was U.S.-Soviet; it is changed to U.S.-Chinese in later publication to reflect the end of the Cold War.[2]

Adaptations

A 2005

animated short of the story was directed by Elio Quiroga and produced by Guillermo del Toro. It was screened at RiverRun International Film Festival.[3] The short is a Dollar Baby
film.

"Home Delivery" has been adapted by artist Glenn Chadbourne for the book The Secretary of Dreams, a collection of comics based on King's short fiction released by Cemetery Dance in December 2006.

In September 2009, the story was optioned as a theatrical release and was in pre-production, with John and Paul Buckholts, of Our Thing Productions, writing the screenplay and Japanese director Ryuhei Kitamu scheduled to direct.[4]

Reception

George Beahm said that the story is "quintessential King" and that King writes the characters with "considerable skill and sympathy".[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ This scenario is impossible outside of fiction; an object could not physically sit stationary above the Pole while in the type of low Earth orbit that the Space Shuttle could access.
  2. ^ "What was the Cold War—and are we headed to another one?". Culture. 2022-03-23. Archived from the original on February 18, 2021. Retrieved 2022-07-28.
  3. Internet Movie Database
    . Retrieved 2012-04-05.
  4. ^ "Ryuhei Kitamura and Stephen King Making a Home Delivery". Dread Central. 2009-09-10. Retrieved 2012-04-05.
  5. .

External links