Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook

1996 Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook read by Frank Muller

The Green Mile Audiobook Free
Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook

 

The Two Dead Girls:

The Mouse on the Mile:

Coffey’s Hands:

The Bad Death of Eduard Delacroix:

Night Journey:

Coffey on the Mile:

 

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In November, 1995, it was announced that Stephen King wouldn’t just release 1 book in 1996, he would release eight. Comparisons to Charles Dickens abounded, booksellers concerned about what could occur if people lost interest after the first volume (not to stress–at one point, all six novels were concurrently on the New York Times bestseller list), Pocket Books stole the concept of all the VC Andrews series, John Saul swiped the idea due to his Blackstone Chronicles, and also the eventual 1999 film adaptation remains the highest-grossing Stephen King adaptation of all time, earning nearly twice as much as the runner-up.
But even though it’s lumped in together with his critically-acclaimed realistic novels like The Body, Hearts in Atlantis, and Misery, The Green Mile is usually considered second – tier. Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook. It is too sentimental, its symbolism is overly on-the-nose, it has got a Magical Negro at the center, and any way you slice it, a book put in 1932 featuring a smart mouse, a huge kindly black guy with magical abilities, and a nice prison warden seems like Stephen King performing Walt Disney. But reading this book again it felt much more hard-edged than I recalled. And that Magical Negro?
GM1King states it was his foreign rights agent, Ralph Vicinanza, who asked if he would do a serialized story, prompting King to fuse two thoughts he’d been toying with: a narrative about an electric chair, and a first-person story told by a death row trusty who conducts a bite cart about an enormous captive who makes himself vanish right before his scheduled execution. It took Stephen King 16 weeks to compose The Green Mile, a remarkably long time to get a guy who once stated that if he can not complete a first draft in 3 months it is a sign something is wrong. Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook Free.
I had a story that has been sort of struggling for air, King said in an interview with Neil Gaiman. This was The Green Mile. And I knew if I did this I had to lock myself in it. King claims that while writing the story he experienced a sort of serendipity, it was just there for me. You just take it. Everything just fits together like it existed earlier. From the time the initial chapbook was prepared to be released on March 25, he had finished the next two and was composing the fourth, staying comfortably ahead of schedule throughout.
Paul Edgecomb is 104 years old, and the book is his account of the time as manager of death row at Cold Mountain Penitentiary back in 1932. Nicknamed The Green Mile, due to the green linoleum floor that contributes to the electric chair, Edgecomb runs his death house using a light touch, thinking that maintaining his team respectful towards the convicts will prevent trouble. The Green Mile Audiobook Online. When a giant black man, John Coffey, is convicted of killing two white girls, he is sent into the Green Mile where he treats Edgecomb’s urinary tract infection with his charming touch, attracts the following inmate’s trained mouse (Mr. Jingles) back to life, also, after Paul divides him from prison one night he cures the warden’s wife of her brain tumor by sucking it into himself.
GM2Line online, The Green Mile is beautifully composed. Even an off-the-shelf moment in which Paul talks about shackling convict’s legs into the electric chair and watching with the standard cold dismay in their eyes as they realize they’re going to die is abruptly elevated by King’s workmanship: The understanding came then… that their own legs had completed their professions. The blood still ran in them, the muscles were strong, but they had been completed all the same. Old Sparky’s customers came to a knowledge of the deaths from the ankles up. It is an off-kilter, unexpected way of introducing a shopworn concept, using an almost hardboiled twist in the end. Rose Madder wants it was composed with this kind of elegance.
However, even though the writing doesn’t have any generic phrases, the exact same can not be said for the primary characters. The Green Mile Audiobook Download. Paul Edgecomb is an old guy who’s essentially Ralph Roberts from Insomnia, down to his cantankerous older lady sidekick. King just writes one older guy at this stage in his career, and he is a man who likes slow candy lovemaking with his age-appropriate spouse, he is adequate, his beliefs are generally liberal, and he is open-minded. We do not know which way Paul votes, if he likes cats, cats, or dogs, or monkeys. We don’t even know what he likes to drink or what his favorite dessert is. His voice is enjoyable to hear, but this is not the spiky, hard Glen Bateman of The Stand that wanted to argue and pontificate. That is Captain Generica.
GM3Then there’s John Coffey. This black man just does not want anything. He comes into prison and is fine to be there. He is sentenced to death and he’s okay with that, also. People ask him what he wants for supper and he doesn’t want anything in particular. Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook. Worse, Coffey has an effect on people that makes them kind of go together with the plot. Whenever King approaches a part of the publication that promises to be awkward, ” Coffey simply generates his effect and everyone falls into line. When King should get Edgecomb into Coffey’s cell so Coffey can heal his UTI, thereby demonstrating his healing abilities, Edgecomb just strolls on in as well as his inner monologue strengthens that this makes zero sense: I was planning to open this black giant’s cell, go in, and sit with him, Edgecomb thinks to himself. When I had been found, I might well lose my job much if he didn’t do anything crazy, but I was going to get it done, just the same.
Afterwards, Coffey is busted out of prison by Edgecomb and the other guards to cure the warden’s wife. They show up at the warden’s house unannounced at the middle of evening. As they approached I had been thinking, How on earth are they likely to find the warden to let them? And braced myself for some unexpected twist. That is it. As King says in On Writing, A few critics accused me of being symbolically simplistic. The Green Mile Audiobook Stephen King. And I’m like, ‘What is that, rocket science?’ Coffey is childlike (he is fearful of the dark), he wants nothing more than to cure white people’s problems (their deaths, their urinary tract ailments, their pets, their brain tumors), and he is always known as a present from God. It doesn’t help that when Paul talks about a spirit in John Coffey that opposes a black shadow he describes it because it had been that other soul–something white, that’s the way I think about it, as something white.
However, if we ignore Coffey’s literary circumstance, along with the picture of Michael Clarke Duncan’s crying face at the function, and concentrate solely on what is on the page, he’s a really different character. He doesn’t die to save white characters. He is not Jesus, whose death redeems the sins of all others. If he cures the warden’s wife, he sucks her passing in to him, then returns to prison and adopts Wild Bill Wharton, another convicted murderer who killed the little girls that Coffey has been accused of murdering. Coffey breathes departure into Wharton and murders him dispensing the justice that the white legal system was overly abrasive to dispense.
GM5When Coffey begs Paul to let him die in the electric chair, he is not being a saint. I am rightly tired of this pain I hear and feel, boss, he says. Not havin no buddy to continue with or inform me where we’s comin out of or goin to or why. The Green Mile Audio Book Free. I’m tired of individuals bein ugly to one another. It seems like pieces of glass in my head. Dialect aside, that could be any number of blue collar black men living in the Jim Crow South. Coffey doesn’t want to die to save the planet, he wants to die because the entire world is ill and he is sick of it. His last prayer is his own, offering no bias to his executioners, supplied with no intercession of a priest.
Coffey’s death does not save the souls of the white people around him, it damns them. As the switch is pulled, King deploys an astonishing literary apparatus: everyone in the area dies except Coffey. Rather, Edgecomb names everybody in the room and informs the reader how each and each of them will perish. Some died months after, some died years later, but at the death chamber it’s their deaths which are lingered over, not Coffey’s.
King has written plenty of Negros before. Mother Abigail in The Stand is just one, Dick Hallorann at The Shining is another. Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook. But I’m not sure John Coffey is one. He does have an immediate relation to the supernatural, and can be situated as being nearer to God than the white characters in the novel, but King doesn’t state which God he’s near. Since King has gotten old, his perspective of God has gotten more tough-minded and from the time of The Green Mile he is no longer discussing the New Testament God of flowers and forgiveness, but a punitive Old Testament God. As Edgecomb says:
I recall how the preachers used to say that God’s eye is on the sparrow, he sees and marks even the smallest of His creations. While I think of Mr. Jingles, and the very small bits of wood we found in that gap in the beam, I believe that is so. Yet this exact same God sacrificed John Coffey who attempted only to do good in his blind manner, as savagely as any Old Testament prophet ever sacrificed a defenseless lamb…I think of John saying that Wharton killed the Detterick twins using their love for each other, and that it occurs every day, all over the world. If it happens, God allows it to happen, and when we say ‘I do not know,’ God answers. Stephen King – The Green Mile Audiobook.
One of the final things Coffey does is transfer some of his power into Edgecomb, letting him outlive everyone in his life and reach the ripe old age of 104. However, this isn’t a gift, it’s damnation. By the time we reach the end of the book he is begging for departure, as desperate as John Coffey to be free of this fallen world. He also understands that, thanks to John Coffey, it’s not coming anytime soon.