This article is about the novel. For the film see, Pet Sematary (film) or Pet Sematary (2019 film)
"Sometimes, dead is better." |
Pet Sematary is the 17th book published by Stephen King; it was his 14th novel, and the tenth novel under his own name. The book was released by Doubleday on 14 November 1983. King calls it one of his darkest novels.
Plot[]
Louis Creed, a doctor from Chicago, moves to Ludlow, Maine with his family: wife Rachel; their two young children, Eileen ("Ellie") and Gage; and Ellie's cat, Winston Churchill (Church). Their new house is just outside Ludlow. Their neighbor, an elderly man named Jud Crandall, warns Louis and Rachel about the highway that runs past their house; it is used by semi-trucks that come mostly from a nearby chemical plant that often pass by at high speeds.
Jud and Louis become friends. Since Louis's father died when he was three, his relationship with Jud takes on a father-son dimension. A few weeks after the Creeds move in, Jud takes the family on a walk in the woods behind their home. A well-tended path leads to a pet cemetery (the sign above it is misspelled "Pet Sematary") where the children of the town bury their deceased animals, most of them pet dogs and cats killed by the trucks on the road. A heated argument erupts between Louis and Rachel the next day: Rachel disapproves of discussing death and she worries about how Ellie may be affected by what she saw at the cemetery. It is later explained that Rachel was traumatized by the early death of her sister, Zelda, from spinal meningitis—as her sister grew more deformed and mentally unstable from the disease, she began to lash out at her family, eventually dying in the back bedroom of their home. (Louis notes that Rachel's parents had never thought to hire a professional nurse to tend to Zelda, perhaps because they didn't want to spend the money or had been too proud or ashamed of their stricken daughter to do so.) Rachel had been left alone by her parents to take care of her unstable sister the night that Zelda died and the experience scarred her for life. Louis himself (who's own relationship with his in-laws is already very strained) is furious at the thought of Rachel's parents' neglect and promises to have a better understanding of Rachel's attitude toward death.
Louis has a traumatic experience on his first day as director of the University of Maine's campus health service. A student, Victor Pascow, suffers a fatal head injury after being struck by an automobile. Though he expires in Louis' examination room, he addresses his dying words personally to Louis by name even though they have never met. On the night following Pascow's death, Louis is visited by the student's walking, conscious corpse, which leads him to the cemetery and refers specifically to the "deadfall", a dangerous pile of tree and brush limbs that form a barrier at the back. Pascow warns Louis not to "go beyond, no matter how much you feel you need to." Louis wakes up in bed the next morning convinced it was a dream, but discovers his feet and the bedsheets covered with dried mud and pine needles. Louis dismisses the episode as a result of stress caused by Pascow's death coupled with his wife's anxieties about death. He accepts the situation as a bout of sleep walking.
At Halloween, when Jud's wife, Norma, suffers a near-fatal heart attack and thanks to Louis' quick intervention, Norma recovers. Jud is grateful for Louis' help. At Thanksgiving Church is found dead on Jud's lawn, presumably struck by a passing vehicle. Rachel and the children are visiting her parents in Chicago, and Louis frets over breaking the news to Ellie. Jud takes him to the pet cemetery, supposedly to bury Church. Instead, Jud leads Louis a few miles beyond the deadfall (with specific instructions not to stop or look down while they walk over the hazardous pile) to "the real cemetery": an ancient burial ground that was once used by the Mi'kmaqs, a local Native American tribe. The burial ground lies on top of a rock hill that the Micmacs had chiseled and sanded down and has a number of cairns, small piles of stones shaped like cones. Following Jud's meticulous instructions, Louis buries the cat and constructs a cairn built only from stones he took out of the hole he'd dug.
The next afternoon, Church returns home. However, while he used to be vibrant and lively, he now acts strangely and "a little dead," in Louis' words. Church hunts for mice and birds much more often, but rips them apart without eating them. The cat also gives off an unpleasant odor. Louis is disturbed by Church's resurrection and begins to regret his decision. Jud tells Louis about his dog Spot, who was brought back to life in the same manner when Jud was twelve. Louis asks if a person was ever buried in the Micmac grounds, to which a suddenly startled Jud answers vehemently no.
Several months later, Gage, who had just learned to walk, is run over on the road by a speeding truck. Both Rachel and Ellie sink into deep depression. At Gage's wake, Rachel's father, Irwin, who never respected Louis or his daughter's decision to marry him, berates Louis harshly, blaming Louis for the boy's death. The two fight in the funeral home's viewing room and upset the casket; Rachel witnesses the fight and becomes hysterical.
Overcome with grief and despair, Louis considers bringing his son back to life with the power of the burial ground. Jud, guessing what Louis is planning, attempts to dissuade him by telling him another story of the burial ground, that of Timmy Baterman, a young man from Ludlow who was killed charging a machine gun nest on the road to Rome during World War II. His father, Bill Baterman, stole his son's body and buried it in the Micmac ground, returning him to life. He is seen by terrified townsfolk soon thereafter. Jud describes Timmy's behavior; he'd acted much like Church had, wandering listlessly along the road near his and his father's home, unable to speak and having a haunted look on his face.
Jud and three of his friends went to the Baterman house to confront the pair, but Timmy, speaking for the first time since his resurrection, confronted each of them with indiscretions they had committed—incidents Timmy couldn't possibly have any knowledge of—thus giving the impression that the resurrected Timmy was actually some sort of demon who had possessed Timmy's body. Jud and his friends fled the house horrified and Bill shot his son and burned his house to the ground, killing himself.
Jud concludes that Gage died because he showed Louis the burial ground. There are hints that at some point the burial ground was used for victims of cannibalism and that it became the haunt of the Wendigo , a terrible creature of the forest, whose mere presence gives men a taste for the flesh of their own kind. In Jud's words the "ground had gone sour" and now corrupts any animal or person buried there.
Despite Jud's warning and his own reservations, Louis' grief and guilt spur him to carry out his plan. Louis has Rachel and Ellie visit her parents in Chicago again, not telling them his intentions: Louis will bury Gage and then spend a couple of days with him in private to 'diagnose' his son's behavior. If Gage acts like Timmy Baterman has, Louis will euthanize his son. Louis exhumes his Gage's body and takes him to the burial site. Along the trail, the Wendigo nearly frightens him away but Louis' determination, combined with the power of the burial site, keeps him moving.
Ellie has a nightmare featuring Victor Pascow on the flight to Chicago. Ellie specifically mentions Victor Pascow (mispronouncing his name "Paxcow") and how he confided his warning to Louis before his soul discorporated. Because of Ellie's near hysteria, and an agreement between Rachel and her daughter as to Louis' behavior, Rachel attempts to fly back to Maine, but misses her connecting flight at Boston and decides to drive the rest of the distance.
Louis buries Gage at the burial ground. Gage returns as a demonic shadow of his former self, able to talk like an adult. He sneaks into his old home and steals a scalpel from Louis' medical bag—Louis, in a deep sleep after returning from the burial ground, is repulsed by Gage's foul odor while unconscious but does not wake up.
Gage sneaks into Jud's house and taunts Jud about his wife's implied infidelity, then kills Jud with Louis' scalpel. When Rachel arrives at Jud's house, Gage kills her also (and, it is implied, partially eats her corpse). Louis kills Church and Gage with fatal doses of morphine, and then grieves for his son for an unknown amount of time while sitting in the corner of the hallway.
Louis, pushed to the edge of sanity and having prematurely aged with shockingly white hair, burns down Jud's house, then carries Rachel's body to the burial ground, saying that he "waited too long" with Gage but is confident that Rachel will come back the same as before. After being questioned by investigators about the fire and revealing nothing about his involvement, Louis waits until nightfall for Rachel to return. Playing solitaire, he hears his resurrected wife walk into the house. A hand falls on his shoulder and his wife greets him with "Darling..." but she speaks as if her mouth is full of gravel and dirt.
Adaptation[]
The story was adapted into a film in 1989 that followed the originally story quite closely—the screenplay was written by King himself and he makes a cameo appearance in the film as a priest at a funeral service. The critically acclaimed movie adaptation did far worse that expected in the box office, some thought due to the sheer darkness of some of the scenes featuring the "living dead" that are a result of the location of burial. A few alterations were made to the story, most importantly that Jud's wife, Norma, is not present and a substitute character, Missy Dandridge, who does housekeeping for the Creeds, commits suicide. The character's actions are used to explain Rachel's aversion to death.
The story was re-adapted into a new film in 2019. A prequel, Pet Sematary: Bloodlines, based on untold chapter from the novel was released in 2023.
Audiobook[]
There are three audiobook versions of Pet Sematary. One version, which is abridged, is read by a full ensemble cast. Another version, which is unabridged, is read by Merwin Smith. The third is also unabridged, and is read by Michael C. Hall, star of the television series Dexter.
"The soil of a man's heart is stonier." |