Stephen King/Richard Bachman – The Long Walk

Testing His Will to Survive, a Boy Embarks on the Walk of His Life

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Stephen King/Richard Bachman, The Long Walk - Signet
Stephen King/Richard Bachman, The Long Walk - Signet
The "long walk" is more than just a walk; it's a game of physical and mental endurance. There can be only one winner, and the losers must face their own mortality.

100 boys, hundreds of miles, one winner: the annual “long walk,” which begins in north Maine, seems simple, at first glance. But, with King’s characteristic disturbing plot twists, the “long walk” is deadly. While it breaks boys down to their most basic instincts and strips them bare of fruitless fantasies, the long walk also forces each boy, each emerging man, to face the meaning and value of his own life.

Stephen King, writing as Richard Bachman, stays true to his pseudonym by including dark elements and a degree of pessimism. Yet, The Long Walk follows the style of King’s less fantastical works, like Misery and Gerald’s Game. The challenge in The Long Walk is not to survive a supernatural event, but to survive one’s mind. The most frightening aspect of King’s books, especially The Long Walk, is its realism. The challenges the protagonist, Ray Garraty, and the other “long walkers” face in keeping sane are wholly realistic. The line between sanity and insanity appears to be fragile and shaky, and King knows exactly how to toe it.

A New Society and New Rules: The Makings of the U.S. in The Long Walk

The Long Walk takes place in the near future, though within a much different society. With hints from King placed throughout the book, The Long Walk is set in a post-World War II United States, one shaped by a German victory. A dictator-like character known only as “The Major” runs the long walk, and his squadrons keep each person – and walker – in check. For Ray Garraty, the squadrons represent the disappearance of his father, who was taken by soldiers after talking out against the current regime.

As society is strictly and mercilessly controlled, so is the long walk. After undergoing physical and mental examinations, 100 boys are chosen by lottery to participate in the walk. Additionally, 100 boys are chosen as alternates. Governed by rules and “hints,” the long walkers start their journey at mile one. They must not walk below 4 mph, or break any other rules; doing so will earn them one warning. After three warnings, a walker receives their ticket, a disturbing and tragic prize.

Friendship, Survival, Mortality and Death

For Ray Garraty, the long walk tests his strengths and highlights his weaknesses. He and a few of his fellow walkers bond, calling themselves the “three Musketeers.” But, as is inevitable, while Garraty begins to value his fellow walkers and friendships are formed, each walker must succumb to tickets until only one is standing.

The challenge of each walker is to come to terms with his will to survive, his own mortality and his certain death. What each walker begins to realize, despite his predetermined strategies and conceptions about the walk, is that the challenge is against his own mind and body. The Long Walk becomes a frank look at the value of life and death, when it can be both hoped for and dreaded.

Source:

  • King, Stephen/Bachman, Richard. The Long Walk. Signet Books/Penguin Press, 1999 ISBN 9780451196712
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Comments

Jul 17, 2010 3:02 PM
Guest :
Why can only males do the walk? Did Stephen King realize that males are more expendable and that society would not tolerate the death of 99 girls since it is clear that women are the superior gender? (I am not afraid as a male to admit that women are vastly superior)
Feb 13, 2011 8:50 AM
Guest :
I agree with the comment that King must have realized women are the superior gender and males are more expendable.

The only way this book could be better is if they killed any boy someone tried to help immediately and if a woman tried to help one of the boys, kill the two males closest to her and that way only males would be killed while it kept women from helping any male.
Feb 13, 2011 8:51 AM
Guest :
Did the boys have to walk naked? If not, they should have to show everyone that only males would be killed.
Aug 15, 2011 12:18 AM
Guest :
The only way this book could be better is if they killed any boy someone tried to help immediately and if a woman tried to help one of the boys, kill the two males closest to her and that way only males would be killed while it kept women from helping any male.

Ummm I love this idea about killing only males but the book could be better if all the males had to do the walk totally naked because in that way everyone would see that the only ones being killed were males

Aug 15, 2011 12:22 AM
Guest :
" Additionally, 100 boys are chosen as alternates" Did the alternates take the place of a boy that got the "ticket" If so would that not make a total of 199 males who died?
Aug 19, 2011 12:24 AM
Guest :
My brother is a shift supervisor in a large factory and he has about two dozen men and a dozen women working for him He states that the women do twice as much as the males and they do it better than the males. If he needs something done right away, he always asks one of the women to do it since he can't depend upon any of the males. If he had his way, he would never hire another male but he would only have women working for him. Other supervisors have told him that the women in their areas outperform the males too.

He now says that women are superior and of course I agree with him.
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