The Gingerbread Girl

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The Gingerbread Girl
Gingerbread Girl audiobook cover.jpg
North American CD audiobook cover
Author Stephen King
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s) Horror, Suspense
Published in Esquire ,
Just After Sunset
Publication type Periodical
Media type Magazine
Publication dateJuly 2007 (first publication)
Preceded by"Willa"
Followed by"Harvey's Dream"

The Gingerbread Girl is a novella by American writer Stephen King, originally published in the July 2007 issue of Esquire . [1] It was later included in King's Just After Sunset collection in 2008. The Gingerbread Girl was also released as an audiobook, read by Mare Winningham, by Simon & Schuster Audio on May 6, 2008. The title is an allusion to the fairy tale "The Gingerbread Boy" (also known as "The Gingerbread Man").

Contents

Plot summary

After her only daughter, Amy, suffers a crib death, Emily takes up running as a way to deal with her pain. She believes that "only fast running will do"—she pushes her body to its limits, often vomiting and sweating profusely. Her husband, Henry, finds out about this habit, and treats it as a psychological reaction to grief. Emily is hurt and runs out of the house, down to a local Holiday Inn. She contacts her father and explains her situation. After their conversation, Emily decides to stay in her father's summer home, near Naples, Florida. She also speaks with Henry, and the two agree that a trial separation is a good idea.

Emily's life becomes quite simple. She eats plain meals and runs for miles every day. As her body shrinks, she gets to know the few people that hover around the island (Vermillion Key is mostly devoid of tourists). The only person Emily visits is Deke Hollis, an old friend of her father who runs the drawbridge on the island. During a chance meeting, Hollis tells Emily that Jim Pickering, a man who owns an estate on the island, is back. He has brought along a "niece"—Hollis's polite name for the young women who Pickering lures to his home. Emily prepares to continue, but Hollis warns her that Pickering is "not a very nice man."

As Emily continues her daily run, she notices a shiny red car outside a house along the beach that she deduces belongs to Pickering. When Emily approaches the car and discovers a woman whose throat has been slashed, she is knocked unconscious. She wakes up to find herself inside Pickering's house and bound to a kitchen chair with duct tape. Emily realizes that Pickering is insane, and hints that she let someone know where she was going. When Pickering presses her for details, Emily blurts out Hollis's name; Pickering leaves, presumably to murder the old man.

Emily knows that she does not have much time, and hears her father's voice in her head, giving her advice. She uses her strong legs to splinter the duct tape and free her lower body. She looks for a knife to release her arms, but settles on the corner of the island in the middle of the kitchen. Now freed, Emily attacks Pickering when he returns. After temporarily knocking him out, Emily escapes from his house and makes it to the beach. She hears Pickering behind her and realizes, in a rather odd coincidence, that she has been "training" for this moment.

Though exhausted from her imprisonment, Emily's months of running serve her well. She keeps well ahead of Pickering, who has armed himself with a pair of scissors. Emily encounters a young Latino man on the beach and begs for help, but he doesn't understand her cries. Pickering appears and tries to use Spanish to convince the man that Emily is with him, but Emily's fearful expression convinces the young man otherwise. Enraged, Pickering brutally slaughters the man with his scissors.

Emily, tiring quickly, runs into the ocean. Pickering follows her, but begins to flounder. Emily gasps as she figures out what is happening—Pickering cannot swim. Emily manages to escape him, and sits on the shoreline to watch as Pickering drowns. When he finally goes under, Emily tells herself that a shark or some other creature attacked him. She wonders why, and guesses that it is a part of the human condition. Her long ordeal over, Emily stands and shouts at the birds flying about, and prepares to go home.

Critical reception

A review in The Observer says the story is "reminiscent of Misery ". [2] A review in the San Francisco Chronicle calls it "a harrowing almost-novella, [which] anchors the book and bridges the inner-psyche thrillers of King's 1990s work with his more recent stories. A story of abuse, psychosis and loneliness, it is physically exhausting to read — an astounding thing to say for a short work of fiction." [3] A Toronto Star reviewer calls it "a flat-out suspense novella that could have been penned by Richard Bachman, King's literary alter ego ...[in which] bloody chaos ensues." [4]

Connection to King's other works

A man named Charlie Pickering, a relative of Jim Pickering, appears as a minor antagonist in King's 1994 novel Insomnia . [5]

A brief reference is made to The Gingerbread Girl in Gerald's Game , where Jessie shows signs of physical abuse from her brother's friend and talks about sexual abuse from her brother. [6]

Film adaptation

In May 2018, it was announced that Brainstorm Media would produce a film adaptation. Craig R. Baxley is set to direct, with the screenplay being written by Baxley and Stephen King. [7]

See also

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References

  1. "New Stephen King thriller coming to Esquire". Today.com. June 11, 2007.
  2. Louise France (November 16, 2008). "Horror lurks in the humdrum". The Observer.
  3. Ted Anthony (November 14, 2008). "Latest King stories about twilight, not darkness". San Francisco Chronicle.
  4. James Grainger (November 30, 2008). "Still one of the most readable: Stephen King is in his best short story form in decades". Toronto Star.
  5. King, Stephen (1994). Insomnia . Viking. ISBN   978-0-670-85503-2.
  6. King, Stephen (1992). Gerald's Game . Viking. ISBN   978-0-670-84650-4.
  7. Wiseman, Andreas (2018-05-12). "Stephen King Novella 'The Gingerbread Girl' Gets Movie Deal With Brainstorm Media; Radiant Sells In Cannes". Deadline. Retrieved 2020-02-24.