Stephen King's "Cell"
Sep. 22nd, 2006 01:35 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Three ideas stemming from my being upset over the ending, and the love of the relationship between Clayton and Tom.
One of these ideas is slash. This makes me happy.
Warning: Thar be spoilers for the end.
1) Clayton and his son, Johnny-Gee, following the marks left by Tom and the gang to a winter cabin. Elements to include: the commng winter, Johnny's mental state, the wreckage and the thinning of the phoners ranks.
2) At the cabin, Denise gives birth and the survivors get to feel like a family. The illusion of normalcy given by living apart from the world in their cabin broken by wandering phoners. Clay starts drawing again.
3) Tom and Clay get it on. Heavy on their getting to terms with the recent events, their current situation, the possibilities of the future (particualrly the imminent Canadian winter), and the psychological scars their experiences have wrecked.
The ideas run a bit more like 3 acts in one story.
My gods, these ideas sound so introspective. And a hell of a lot more mature in their subject matter than earlier ideas.
One of these ideas is slash. This makes me happy.
Warning: Thar be spoilers for the end.
1) Clayton and his son, Johnny-Gee, following the marks left by Tom and the gang to a winter cabin. Elements to include: the commng winter, Johnny's mental state, the wreckage and the thinning of the phoners ranks.
2) At the cabin, Denise gives birth and the survivors get to feel like a family. The illusion of normalcy given by living apart from the world in their cabin broken by wandering phoners. Clay starts drawing again.
3) Tom and Clay get it on. Heavy on their getting to terms with the recent events, their current situation, the possibilities of the future (particualrly the imminent Canadian winter), and the psychological scars their experiences have wrecked.
The ideas run a bit more like 3 acts in one story.
My gods, these ideas sound so introspective. And a hell of a lot more mature in their subject matter than earlier ideas.