
Good news! The best man doesn't run for president in our 2025 either!¹
If you asked Stephen King what his favorite genre of book to write was and I was standing nearby to hear the question, I would push Stephen King out of the way³ and answer, "He loves to write dystopian futures with deadly game shows!" You might follow up that question with, "Mr. King, are you okay?!" Or, if you're a good interviewer, you'd ignore King fumbling to get up and ask me, "Why would you suggest that when only two of his novels are about deadly game shows?" Then I'd scream, "This interview is over!", while everybody standing nearby would cheer and applaud as I ran off into the bushes.
Okay, so maybe Stephen King didn't continue to write about dystopian futures where everything has become Wonder bread and Barnum & Bailey. But Richard Bachman did! I'd suggest even Thinner is basically a terrible game show! Rage certainly is. And Roadwork. Not as literally as The Running Man and The Long Walk but if you squint your brain just right, you'll see how they are. Maybe you had to grow up in the '70s as a kid who constantly convinced his grandmother to let him stay home so he could watch The Match Game and Whew! with her. In the middle of the 20th Century, everything was game shows to such an extent that you could understand how all of Stephen King's visions of the future were just government game shows with loads and loads of death and misery.
Maybe instead of saying, "Stephen King loves to write about deadly game shows," perhaps it's less fun and fanciful to say, "Richard Bachman loves to write stories about the underdog facing up to authority before dying miserably." Like Rage (if I'm remembering it correctly since it's out of print and my copy is in my childhood home) and Roadwork and The Long Walk and this book and, um, Thinner? Does Thinner count? Was the old, um, G-word woman who cursed him "The Authority" the protagonist was fighting back against? Or was "The Authority" he was really battling his wife who wasn't cursed even though wasn't it really her fault that the man ran down that, um, G-word? I mean, who gives a guy a blow job while they're driving! That's completely irresponsible!
I'm curious as to why Stephen King asked to take Rage out of print because of Columbine and other school shootings but he didn't ask to take The Running Man out of print because of 9/11. What is he? A terrorist lover? Does Stephen King think it's a good thing to fly planes into buildings to solve the world's problems? Not that any problems were actually solved by the ending of The Running Man. Which makes sense because no problems were solved by 9/11 either! Except for the problem that the government couldn't get all up in our business easily. It kind of solved that problem. Hmm. I wonder if 9/11 was an inside job?!
America (especially current America) treats politics and diplomacy like a game so I suspect The Running Man is prescient in that aspect. Also in the aspect of environmental collapse thanks to corporations manipulating the government into destroying regulations because Conservative talking heads have so oft repeated the lie that regulations are nonsense hampering advancement that loads and loads of soft-brained people now believe that's true and they're all, "Yeah! Why should the government make rules that corporations have to follow?! I like my peanut butter to be at least 3% exhausted factory worker who fell into the nut smasher!" Nearly all government regulations have been put into place because people died so rolling back regulations just means that we're going to remember why they were put in place when more people die. If we're even allowed to hear about people dying due to poor safety regulations ever again!
The Running Man should be one of my all-time favorite books because my top ten list of books mostly contains stories where the protagonist realizes that they can't fight against The System and so they simply escape from The System instead. Books like Catch-22 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and, in some ways although this is more like The Running Man — except the plane flying into a building is implied to happen later when Tom Joad can get his hands on an aircraft — The Grapes of Wrath. The Running Man is about a man who understands the system is shit and that he has no options to help his family so he takes the one bullshit option open to him: get maimed (or die) on national television for Big Bucks. As he "runs", he encounters an underground group of rebels who educate him on some of the really bad shit that's going down which the government's covering up and so Richards (the protagonist) decides to take up their cause and fight back. But he soon realizes that he holds no fucking cards and can't fight back. He has no power. And the propaganda machine has been set in place for far too long and is way too powerful. So in the end, he flies a plane into a building and kills some rich bastards but changes nothing. King doesn't even imply that somehow things might change somewhere along the way. Maybe Amelia survives being ejected out of the airplane while wearing a parachute she's unfamiliar with and goes on to lead some kind of rebellion that brings down the Fascist Game Show Network. But I doubt it. She probably cries all the way down until her head explodes against the earth with a loud KA-SPLAT!
Maybe I'm too cynical. Should I be more hopeful? I bet when I first read this at fifteen, I was all, "Things will work out! People have gotten enough glimpses of the truth! It's going to all fall apart now!" But I'm 54 now and if I have any earnestness, optimism, or hope left in my body, I've ejected it into space where it's fallen upon the sand dunes of Tatooine and been stolen by Jawas for parts. Too many people in this world are full of fear and hate and endless stupidity. Which is why I have chosen to spend my time with people I love whose hearts are full of compassion instead of fear; people who understand community rather than rant about individuality; people who would rather die fighting for the greater good than surround their house with barbed wire and fill their garage with oil barrels full of guns and ammo.
Did that have anything to do with the book? I don't know. Maybe part of the point of the novel was that people were too separated by their pain and suffering. The kid, Bradley, whom Richards runs into who's in a gang that visits the library and learns about the state of the environment seemed the most put together person in the book. He had friends, he had knowledge, he had family, he had compassion, and he hated the fucking cops. Just an all around great kid, you know? And his friend, the fat kid in Maine, says at one point that Bradley was his only friend. And that kid gives his life to help the cause. Was Bradley the hero? Is he the one we're staking our hopes on by the end of the book? Did he escape the Game Show Fascists chasing him to Cleveland?! I guess we'll never know because Stephen King didn't decide to make this world the world he cared about. He saved that one for that cool motherfucker Roland Deschain.
The only part of this book I didn't like was when Richards was trying to get to the front of the plane with his guts hanging out and then he steps on his guts and they pull at his insides and oh god I'm going to be sick. This review is over!
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¹ This is both a joke about how 2025 isn't a year that somebody would run for president and how our president is actually the worst man in the history of men².
² Although — let's face it — men aren't actually out there being stellar, for the most part.
³ Being careful not to shove him in front of another van because I don't need to read a new and updated edition of The Dark Tower which includes me.
Okay, so maybe Stephen King didn't continue to write about dystopian futures where everything has become Wonder bread and Barnum & Bailey. But Richard Bachman did! I'd suggest even Thinner is basically a terrible game show! Rage certainly is. And Roadwork. Not as literally as The Running Man and The Long Walk but if you squint your brain just right, you'll see how they are. Maybe you had to grow up in the '70s as a kid who constantly convinced his grandmother to let him stay home so he could watch The Match Game and Whew! with her. In the middle of the 20th Century, everything was game shows to such an extent that you could understand how all of Stephen King's visions of the future were just government game shows with loads and loads of death and misery.
Maybe instead of saying, "Stephen King loves to write about deadly game shows," perhaps it's less fun and fanciful to say, "Richard Bachman loves to write stories about the underdog facing up to authority before dying miserably." Like Rage (if I'm remembering it correctly since it's out of print and my copy is in my childhood home) and Roadwork and The Long Walk and this book and, um, Thinner? Does Thinner count? Was the old, um, G-word woman who cursed him "The Authority" the protagonist was fighting back against? Or was "The Authority" he was really battling his wife who wasn't cursed even though wasn't it really her fault that the man ran down that, um, G-word? I mean, who gives a guy a blow job while they're driving! That's completely irresponsible!
I'm curious as to why Stephen King asked to take Rage out of print because of Columbine and other school shootings but he didn't ask to take The Running Man out of print because of 9/11. What is he? A terrorist lover? Does Stephen King think it's a good thing to fly planes into buildings to solve the world's problems? Not that any problems were actually solved by the ending of The Running Man. Which makes sense because no problems were solved by 9/11 either! Except for the problem that the government couldn't get all up in our business easily. It kind of solved that problem. Hmm. I wonder if 9/11 was an inside job?!
America (especially current America) treats politics and diplomacy like a game so I suspect The Running Man is prescient in that aspect. Also in the aspect of environmental collapse thanks to corporations manipulating the government into destroying regulations because Conservative talking heads have so oft repeated the lie that regulations are nonsense hampering advancement that loads and loads of soft-brained people now believe that's true and they're all, "Yeah! Why should the government make rules that corporations have to follow?! I like my peanut butter to be at least 3% exhausted factory worker who fell into the nut smasher!" Nearly all government regulations have been put into place because people died so rolling back regulations just means that we're going to remember why they were put in place when more people die. If we're even allowed to hear about people dying due to poor safety regulations ever again!
The Running Man should be one of my all-time favorite books because my top ten list of books mostly contains stories where the protagonist realizes that they can't fight against The System and so they simply escape from The System instead. Books like Catch-22 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and, in some ways although this is more like The Running Man — except the plane flying into a building is implied to happen later when Tom Joad can get his hands on an aircraft — The Grapes of Wrath. The Running Man is about a man who understands the system is shit and that he has no options to help his family so he takes the one bullshit option open to him: get maimed (or die) on national television for Big Bucks. As he "runs", he encounters an underground group of rebels who educate him on some of the really bad shit that's going down which the government's covering up and so Richards (the protagonist) decides to take up their cause and fight back. But he soon realizes that he holds no fucking cards and can't fight back. He has no power. And the propaganda machine has been set in place for far too long and is way too powerful. So in the end, he flies a plane into a building and kills some rich bastards but changes nothing. King doesn't even imply that somehow things might change somewhere along the way. Maybe Amelia survives being ejected out of the airplane while wearing a parachute she's unfamiliar with and goes on to lead some kind of rebellion that brings down the Fascist Game Show Network. But I doubt it. She probably cries all the way down until her head explodes against the earth with a loud KA-SPLAT!
Maybe I'm too cynical. Should I be more hopeful? I bet when I first read this at fifteen, I was all, "Things will work out! People have gotten enough glimpses of the truth! It's going to all fall apart now!" But I'm 54 now and if I have any earnestness, optimism, or hope left in my body, I've ejected it into space where it's fallen upon the sand dunes of Tatooine and been stolen by Jawas for parts. Too many people in this world are full of fear and hate and endless stupidity. Which is why I have chosen to spend my time with people I love whose hearts are full of compassion instead of fear; people who understand community rather than rant about individuality; people who would rather die fighting for the greater good than surround their house with barbed wire and fill their garage with oil barrels full of guns and ammo.
Did that have anything to do with the book? I don't know. Maybe part of the point of the novel was that people were too separated by their pain and suffering. The kid, Bradley, whom Richards runs into who's in a gang that visits the library and learns about the state of the environment seemed the most put together person in the book. He had friends, he had knowledge, he had family, he had compassion, and he hated the fucking cops. Just an all around great kid, you know? And his friend, the fat kid in Maine, says at one point that Bradley was his only friend. And that kid gives his life to help the cause. Was Bradley the hero? Is he the one we're staking our hopes on by the end of the book? Did he escape the Game Show Fascists chasing him to Cleveland?! I guess we'll never know because Stephen King didn't decide to make this world the world he cared about. He saved that one for that cool motherfucker Roland Deschain.
The only part of this book I didn't like was when Richards was trying to get to the front of the plane with his guts hanging out and then he steps on his guts and they pull at his insides and oh god I'm going to be sick. This review is over!
__________________________________________________________________________________
¹ This is both a joke about how 2025 isn't a year that somebody would run for president and how our president is actually the worst man in the history of men².
² Although — let's face it — men aren't actually out there being stellar, for the most part.
³ Being careful not to shove him in front of another van because I don't need to read a new and updated edition of The Dark Tower which includes me.





























