Carrie (book)

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Carrie
Author
Stephen King
Publisher
Doubleday
Publish Date
1974
0385086954

Carrie is a horror novel written by Stephen King in 1974. It is tells the story of Carrie White, a mousy misfit in her school, who is picked on mercilessly by classmates and ostracized for her eccentric background (her mother is a religious fanatic). Some of the students are punished, and one shows her sympathy, asking her boyfriend to take her to the prom instead, but some want revenge and hatch an evil plan to humiliate her. What none of the students realize is that Carrie has the power of telekinesis. When she gets mad, she transforms from an innocent girl into a rage-filled monster, making it a prom no one will forget.

The book in hands of an Other  ("A Tale of Two Cities")
The book in hands of an Other ("A Tale of Two Cities")

In Lost

  • Members of the Others' book club were sitting around discussing the novel when the plane crashed. ("A Tale of Two Cities")
    • Juliet states it as her "all-time favorite book."
    • Another member of the club, Adam, disagrees, saying that it was "by-the-numbers religious hokum-pokum" and that Ben didn't like it.
  • A different edition of the book (not the same cover) is seen in Juliet's flashback, on Rachel's nightstand. ("Not in Portland") See the image here.
  • Ben reads Carrie in his library for the forthcoming book club discussion, and complains that he finds it depressing. ("One of Us") This is again a different edition, the paperback edition.

Trivia

  • Carrie White, the eponymous heroine, attends Ewen High School. The principal of that school is named Henry Grayle (similar name to Henry Gale).
  • In the made-for-television version of Carrie, the role of villainess Chris Hargensen was played by Emilie de Ravin, who plays Claire in Lost.
  • There is another smaller connection between this book and Juliet other than it being her favorite. The title character's father is killed by a falling girder while working on a housing project in Portland. Juliet was, of course, led to believe that Mittelos was located in Portland.

See also

Wikipedia has information related to:


Books
(Theories about books)
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Literary References After All These YearsAre You There, God? It's Me, MargaretThe BibleA Brief History of TimeThe Brothers KaramazovCarrieCatch-22Dirty WorkThe Epic of GilgameshEvil Under the SunHindsightLancelotLaughter in the DarkLord of the FliesAn Occurrence at Owl Creek BridgeThe OdysseyThe Mysterious IslandOf Mice and MenOur Mutual FriendRainbow SixThe Shape of Things to ComeStranger in a Strange LandThe Third PolicemanTo Kill a MockingbirdThe Turn of the ScrewVALISWatership DownThe Wonderful Wizard of OzA Wrinkle in TimeAlice's Adventures in Wonderland
Spin-Off Novels Bad TwinEndangered SpeciesSecret IdentitySigns of LifeThe Valenzetti Equation
Confirmed Influence The Illuminatus! TrilogyThe StandWatchmen
Reference Finding Lost: The Unofficial GuideFinding Lost-Season Three: The Unofficial GuideGetting Lost: Survival, Baggage, and Starting Over in J. J. Abrams' LostLost's Buried TreasuresThe Lost Chronicles: The Official Companion BookUnlocking the Meaning of Lost: An Unauthorized GuideLiving LostLost and Philosophy: The Island Has Its Reasons