Shining by Stephen King

Shining (The Shining)

by Stephen King

Danny is only five years old, but he is a 'shiner', aglow with psychic voltage. When his father becomes caretaker of an old hotel, his visions grow out of control. Cut off by blizzards, the hotel seems to develop an evil force, and who are the mysterious guests in the supposedly empty hotel?

Reviewed by Whitney @ First Impressions Reviews on

5 of 5 stars

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I have tried to watch Forrest Gump several times but with each attempt I fall asleep. The stretch between his college football games and saving Lieutenant Dan had me yawning. Until recently this has been my experience with The Shining. I found it slow and wasn't able to slog my way to room 217. Perhaps it was the snowy, wooded, isolated setting that I currently call home but this time I stuck with it. Perseverance payed off as The Shining is a horrific good read.

The Torrances are well established characters with an even balance of Danny (and Tony) strangely knowing more than they showed and Danny's parents mimicking Miss Clavel's something is not right.

Although it is The Overlook hotel that really shines in King's novel. Aptly named she looks over her inhabitants with eerie care.

"The Overlook faced it as it had for three-quarters of a century, its darkened windows now bearded with snow, indifferent to the fact that it was now cut off from the world. Or possibly it was pleased with the prospect. Inside its shell the three of them went about their early evening routine, like microbes trapped in the intestine of a monster."
~ Chapter 24, Page 211

It is when the hedge animals start to move that the atmosphere changes. Something wicked this way comes. Jack's sanity begins to unwind as well as any hope that this stint at The Overlook would give the Torrances the new start they had been hoping for. It is a telling scene overshadowed by sadness.

"Staring at the hedge animals, he realized something had changed while he had his hand over his eyes. The dog had moved closer."
~ Chapter 23, page 208


The climax of the film All About Eve is Margo Channing descending a staircase, with daggers in her eyes proclaiming "Fasten your seat belts, it's going to be a bumpy night". This reminded me of Wendy after barricading herself and Danny into their quarters, feeling threatened by her husband, descending the grand staircase with a butcher knife in mind. I relate these two scenes because they initiate the downfall that is to come. In The Shining, I tensed up not for the puffed up woman in a bathtub, but for a simple walk down a staircase because like Eve Harrington, Jack Torrance has an agenda.

Perhaps it is because I associate The Shining and therefore Jack Torrance with Jack Nicholson's maddening "Here's Johnny!" but I was not as terrified as I thought I would be. Instead, I viewed The Shining as a suspenseful, stay up late kind of read. Although by the end of the Torrance's nightmare I understood why it had become a classic.

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  • 9 December, 2014: Finished reading
  • 9 December, 2014: Reviewed