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Just After Sunset

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Plot Summary

Just After Sunset

Stephen King

Fiction | Short Story Collection | Adult | Published in 2008

Plot Summary





Stephen King's fifth collection of short stories, Just After Sunset (2008), contains twelve previously-published stories and one previously-unpublished story called "N."

The first story is called "Willa," and it concerns a man who is dazed following an apparent train wreck. His wife, Willa, is nowhere to be found. The man decides to take a dangerous three-mile hike through terrain populated with wolves and other killer wild animals in hopes that she might have walked to one of her favorite nearby towns. After finding Willa at a small honky-town bar, they realize the wreck happened twenty years ago and that they both died in the wreck. They return to the train station where the other victims of the train wreck refuse to believe their fate. In the end, Willa and the narrator set off into the unknown, leaving behind the rest of the passengers in the station which is scheduled to be demolished.



The second story is called "The Gingerbread Girl," at it concerns a woman named Emily who starts jogging as a way to deal with the trauma of having her baby daughter Amy die of crib death. Emily gets caught up in a mystery after discovered a woman who's been gruesomely murdered in the car belonging to a psychotic serial killer named Pickering. Pickering attacks Emily and ties her up in his basement. She manages to escape, but Pickering is in close pursuit on foot. Emily runs into the ocean and Pickering follows, but Pickering can't swim and so he drowns.

The third story is called "Harvey's Dream" and it concerns a middle-aged couple named Harvey and Janet. Harvey has a nightmare about his daughter's death. It turns out that everything in his dream really happened, but no one--not even himself--believes it's true because Harvey suffers from early on-set dementia.

The fourth story is called "Rest Stop," and it concerns a mystery writer named Dykstra who, while sleeping off a bender at a rest stop parking lot, is overtaken by an alter-ego named Hardin in order to protect a woman from domestic abuse.



The fifth story is called "Stationary Bike," and it concerns a widower named Richard Sifkitz who sets up a stationary bike after his doctor tells him he needs to exercise more or else suffer an early death. Sifkitz begins to lose touch with reality, becoming immersed in various dangerous scenes involving a mural he painted which he looks at while using the stationary bike.

The sixth story is called "The Things They Left Behind," and it concerns a man named Scott Staley who suffers from survivor's guilt after surviving the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center. He begins to see the personal belongings of his coworkers who died in the attack appearing all over his apartment.

The seventh story is called "N." which refers to the pseudonym of a patient suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder who is suspected of causing the suicide of his psychiatrist, John. John's sister, Sheila, kills herself by jumping off a bridge, just like her brother did, after reading his manuscript describing N.'s condition.



The eighth story is called "Graduation Afternoon." In it, a woman witnesses the destruction of Manhattan by atomic bomb from a suburban graduation party in Connecticut.

The ninth story is called "The Cat From Hell," and it concerns a hit man named Halston who is offered $12,000 to assassinate a cat. In the end, the cat manages to crawl inside Halston's body and kill him from inside, before going after Halston's employer.

The tenth story is called "The New York Times at Special Bargain Rates," and it concerns a husband who calls his widow two days after his own death to warn her of her own impending death, which she is able to successfully avoid thanks to her dead husband's interceding from the afterlife.



The eleventh story is called "Mute," and it concerns a traveling salesman named Monette who confesses to a priest that a hitchhiker he picked up murdered Monette's wife and lover, after Monette complained of her affair to the hitchhiker.

The twelfth story is called "Ayana," and it concerns a seven-year-old blind girl who teaches the narrator how to bring about miracles and save the lives of those who are terminally ill, including his own father who suffered from pancreatic cancer.

The thirteenth and last story is called "A Very Tight Place," and it concerns a man named Curtis Johnson who, after having a dispute with his neighbor, Tim, is locked inside a knocked-over porta-potty by Tim and left to die in the hot Florida summer sun while covered in fecal matter. Curtis manages to escape and threatens to kill Tim. But in the end, Tim kills himself.





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