Rose Madder (novel)
1995 novel by Stephen King From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1995 novel by Stephen King From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rose Madder is a horror/fantasy novel by American writer Stephen King, published in 1995. It deals with the effects of domestic violence (which King had touched upon before in the novels It, Insomnia, Dolores Claiborne, Needful Things, and many others) and, unusually for a King novel, relies for its fantastic element on Greek mythology. In his memoir, On Writing, King states that Rose Madder and Insomnia are "stiff, trying-too-hard novels."
Author | Stephen King |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Horror/Fantasy |
Publisher | Viking |
Publication date | July 10, 1995 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 420 |
ISBN | 978-0-670-85869-9 |
In 1985, police officer Norman Daniels brutally beats his wife Rosie while she is four months pregnant, resulting in a miscarriage. Rosie considers leaving Norman, but dismisses the idea because Norman is a cop who specializes in finding missing persons and she has nowhere else to go as her family died in a car accident years earlier. The short-tempered Norman has recently been accused of raping a Black woman named Wendy Yarrow, and the subsequent lawsuit and internal affairs investigation has made him even more volatile.
Nine years later, Rosie notices a drop of blood on the couple's bedsheet and realizes that, if she stays with Norman, he will eventually kill her. Taking his credit card, Rosie departs on a bus to an unfamiliar city in the Midwest, with no clear plan of action. Once there, she meets a good-natured man named Peter Slowik, who guides her to a local women's shelter. She quickly makes new friends, including the owner of the shelter, Anna Stevenson, who helps Rosie find a small apartment and a job as a hotel maid. A few weeks later, Rosie decides to pawn her engagement ring but finds that the ring's "diamond" is fake. In the pawnshop, her attention is drawn to a painting which depicts a woman in a rose madder gown. Fascinated, she trades her ring for the painting.
On the street, Rosie is stopped by a man named Rob Lefferts, a customer at the pawnshop, who asks her to read an excerpt from a book. Rob likes her voice and offers her a job recording audiobooks. Sometime later, Bill Steiner, the pawnshop owner, asks Rosie out on a date. Rosie believes that her life is improving, and gradually notices that the painting is changing and expanding. Eventually she is able to travel through it. On the other side, she is met by Dorcas, who resembles Wendy Yarrow. She also sees the woman in the painting, whom she calls "Rose Madder" because of her dress and her apparent insanity. Rose Madder asks Rosie to rescue her baby from an underground labyrinth guarded by the blind, one-eyed bull Erinyes, who orients by smell. Dorcas leads Rosie to the temple grounds and warns her of the dangers that await. Dorcas cannot enter the labyrinth due to a mysterious illness that she and her mistress are afflicted with. Rosie ventures into the temple alone, and she ponders the reality of her situation. Rosie manages to save the child, whom she names Caroline, and Rose Madder promises “to repay”. Waking up the next morning, Rosie decides that everything that had happened was a dream.
Meanwhile, Norman conducts a search for Rosie, having resolved to kill her. He tracks down the city she is residing in and gradually loses his self-control; he begins killing people who have some connection to Rosie, including Peter and Anna. When Norman catches Rosie returning from a date with Bill, she flees from him into her apartment and lures him into the painting, where Rose Madder kills him. Rose gives Rosie some seeds and makes her promise to "remember the tree". Rosie exits Rose's world and burns the painting. Several years later, Rosie is married to Bill, with whom she has a daughter. However, she experiences outbursts of rage characteristic of Rose Madder. Rosie recalls her promise and plants a seed near a lake, and the tree that grows from it helps restrain Rosie's rage.
In 1996, HBO Pictures acquired the rights to the novel to make a television movie. This would have been the first HBO film based on a Stephen King novel, but the project never came to fruition.[1] A film adaptation of Rose Madder was in development in 2011, but the project fell apart.[2][3][4] There was an audiobook made narrated by Blair Brown.
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