Welcome to 1408, room service is suspended. So join us as we pay a visit to the Dolphin Hotel, home to the most evil hotel room in the world and the crucible which will either destroy Mike Enslin, or rebuild him. Stephen King has survived stays in Hotel Horror before with two versions of The Shining and last year returned to the field again, when Lasse Hafstrom adapted his short story, 1408. From the hotel in The Shining to the Bates Motel in Psycho and the snuff palace in the recent Vacancy, hotels have provided fertile ground for horror writers for years and one in particular. They’re also prime horror real estate, this very transience allowing for the things on the other side of the door, the wet things, the singing things with impossible claws and the voices of children to break through. They are, in essence, neutral spaces, transient environments which are defined, which exist, only for as long as it takes you to check out. It was first read by King for his 1999 audiobook collection Blood and Smoke the first few pages were later included in King's 2000 non-fiction book On Writing as an example of how a story changes from draft to draft, and the story was again included in his 2002 collection Everything's Eventual. They exist in that same curious hinterland as the departure lounge at airports, not quite in one country and yet not quite at the destination. ' 1408 ' is a short story written by Stephen King. Hotel rooms are, in essence, purgatory charged at a nightly rate.
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