Cujo used to be a big friendly dog, lovable and loyal to his trinity (THE MAN, THE WOMAN, and THE BOY) and everyone around him, and always did his best to not be a BAD DOG. But that all ends on the day this nearly two-hundred-pound Saint Bernard makes the mistake of chasing a rabbit into a hidden underground cave, setting off a tragic chain of events. Now Cujo is no longer himself as he is slowly overcome by a growing sickness, one that consumes his mind even as his once affable thoughts turn uncontrollably and inexorably to hatred and murder. Cujo is about to become the center of a horrifying vortex that will inescapably draw in everyone around him--a relentless reign of terror, fury, and madness from which no one in Castle Rock will truly be safe...
Author of HOW TO SELL A HAUNTED HOUSE, out now! Do capitalism! Buy it! 2xs! More dumb junk at https://t.co/gmdOXPjfGR
Today's the 40th anniversary of Stephen King's CUJO, but by far the most disturbing thing about it are these behind-the-scenes shots from the movie. Good god, scrub out my eyes! https://t.co/SHioAwMFTn
See the Amazon Editors' Best Books of 2023 So Far list, out now!
One day, Cujo chases a rabbit into a cave inhabited by sick bats and emerges as something new altogether. Get ready to meet the most hideous menace ever to terrorize the town of Castle Rock, Maine. "Cujo" by Stephen King #31DaysofHorrorBooks https://amzn.to/3vWeqpo https://t.co/85VknDfxGK
Dave Zirin is the sports editor for The Nation.
In celebration of Stephen King, who will be leaving this rancid platform if that apartheid wart make him pay for a blue check, top Five Books by the King: 5) Hearts In Atlantis; 4) Salem's Lot; 3) It; 2) The Shining; 1) Carrie (hon. mention to much. Except Cujo. That sucked)