Not satisfied in providing a broad compendium of the many deaths and forms of dying that haunt the landscape of Stephen King’s fiction, Functions of Unnatural Death in Stephen King also reassembles the undead spirits and ghouls that refuse to remain quiescent throughout his canon. A cadaverous catalog sure to engage the King enthusiast.
— Tony Magistrale, University of Vermont
The Functions of Unnatural Death in Stephen King is a welcomed addition to the constantly growing collection of insightful analyses of “The Master of Horror.” In this book, Rebecca Frost takes us on a journey through the bulk of the Stephen King canon with an incisive focus on death that easily contradicts claims of King’s work to be contrived, or, rather, telegraphed. Indeed, Frost’s exploration reveals the depths of King’s choreographed writing, showing us the numerous and nuanced steps that comprise the “danse macabre” that charge the Constant Reader to look at death as more than happenstance or cheap fright.
— Patrick McAleer, Inver Hills Community College
Dr. Frost in her trail-blazing book intrepidly takes the reader into the most terrifying undiscovered country of all: unnatural death as depicted throughout the collective works of Stephen King. As one might expect from an author often described by critics and readers alike as the “Master of Horror,” King frequently kills off his characters in any number of violent and disturbing ways, a pattern that may at first appear random or non-sensical but in fact Dr. Frost discovers to be integral to the narrative structure and drive, suspense, and meaning of the plotlines. Through Dr. Frost’s insightful and refreshingly readable analysis, we discover that the characters who die unnatural deaths in King’s fiction indeed play a significant role in the author’s overall agenda to both support and subvert the generic conventions of horror. Monstrous serial killers, hell-raising spree and mass murderers, rabid dogs, malevolent aliens, ghosts, and all kind of supernatural beings from unseen worlds and dimensions beyond our own: all are catalogued and discussed here as the agents of unnatural death. Covering the range of King’s career from his earliest publications to his most recent, Dr. Frost’s book is an important new contribution to King scholarship.
— Philip Simpson, Eastern Florida State College