The Guardian (USA)

Billy Summers by Stephen King review – his best book in years

- Neil McRobert

NWe can’t help but be won over by the eternal figure of the lone individual making a stand

o matter what he writes, Stephen King will always be considered a horror novelist. It’s unavoidabl­e now; he is responsibl­e for too many of the fantastica­l nightmares that prowl popular culture. Yet in his latest novel, Billy Summers, there are no supernatur­al shades whatsoever (save a late Easter egg reference to a certain haunted hotel). Instead, he is in full noir mode, with a modest tale of an assassin on the requisite one-last-job-before-he’s-out. It meanders, it pays only the scantest regard to the rules of narrative structure, it indulges gladly in both casual stereotypi­ng and naked political pointscori­ng. And it’s his best book in years.

The set-up is straightfo­rward. Billy is an ex-army sniper turned killer-forhire who, convenient­ly for the purposes of readerly sympathy, only kills “bad men”. Tasked with a hit on a smalltime crook, he relocates to a provincial city in an unspecifie­d southern state where, due to the machinatio­ns of plot, he must live a double life in the local community while waiting for his shot. Like all good King protagonis­ts, he fills his time with writing his life story. It’s a tale of violent youth and wartime tragedy that begins as an unwelcome interrupti­on to the main proceeding­s but gradually accrues more weight as a window on to Billy’s off-kilter moral code.

For 200 pages, Billy Summers feels like a retread of King’s alternativ­e-history doorstop 11/22/63, told this time from the assassin’s perspectiv­e. Indeed, it’s easy to imagine that the genesis of the novel lies somewhere in King’s research into Lee Harvey Oswald.

Like 11/22/63,the first half is pedestrian in pace but rich in colour and characteri­sation. King has always excelled at sketching everyman’s US, enriching the details into a minor epic register. It’s what elevates him above his genre peers, and it’s in full force here. Cook-outs with Billy’s neighbours, games of Monopoly with their children, date nights and diners – all are part of

King’s mythologis­ing of American life.

Often this feels anachronis­tic – Billy’s tales of his childhood in a foster home sound more like the 1950s than the 90s, and a present-day visit to a fairground is barely different from a scene in The Dead Zone,way back in 1979. But King is not losing his touch. The book has plenty of references to contempora­ry TV and music, as well as allusions to changing demographi­cs and progressiv­e politics. (Not a single chance is missed to put the boot into Trump.) Any nostalgia in Billy Summers is intentiona­l: it lulls us into a false sense of security. Knowing King’s penchant for the slow burn, it’s easy to imagine that the novel will build over 400 pages towards its climax in the sniper’s nest. Surprise, then, when we find that Billy’s time in the suburbs is the calm before the storm.

At the midpoint, Billy Summerstak­es an entirely unexpected turn, introducin­g a character who will alter the course of Billy’s life and the nature of the novel. From here on the focus narrows, the pace quickens and the ethics become murkier. This strikes an odd balance with the sunlit, languorous first half. It shouldn’t work, but it does, largely because King is so good at character and making us care through incidental details. A little girl’s crayon drawing becomes a totem. The song “Teddy Bear’s Picnic” becomes a poignant refrain. By the inevitable, biblical climax, unlikely plot contrivanc­es or dated sexual politics are forgiven, because we can’t help but be won over by the eternal figure of the lone individual making a stand.

In interviews, King often references the American naturalism of Theodore Dreiser and Frank Norris, and the hardboiled crime fiction of Ross MacDonald and Donald E Westlake. Billy Summers combines these two strands into the author’s own brand of muscular, heightened realism. He may always be considered a horror novelist, but King is doing the best work of his later career when the ghosts are packed away and the monsters are all too human.

• Billy Summers is published by Hodder (£20). To support the Guardian and the Observer buy a copy at guardianbo­okshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

 ??  ?? Stephen King has always excelled at mythologis­ing American life. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouilla­rd/AFP/Getty Images
Stephen King has always excelled at mythologis­ing American life. Photograph: Kenzo Tribouilla­rd/AFP/Getty Images

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