The Carrie reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Carrie

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In 1952, a film of Theodore Dreiser's novel Sister Carrie was made under the title Carrie; for that film, see: Sister Carrie

Table of contents
1 Carrie (novel)
2 ISBN numbers
3 External links
4 Carrie (digital library)

Carrie (novel)

Carrie (1974) was Stephen King's first published novel. The book uses false documents to frame the story of Carrie, a high school girl who after years of being bullied at both home and school discovers she has telekinetic powers.

Carrie draws strong parallels between the onset of the title character's adolesence, especially her menstruation and sexuality, and her psychic powers.

Brian de Palma directed a film version of Carrie in 1976 with Sissy Spacek as Carrie. A much-belated sequel appeared in 1999, and a TV movie remake in 2002.

A 1988 Broadway musical, starring Betty Buckley, closed after only five performances and 16 previews. One of the many problems plaguing the show was a bucket of pig blood which was replaced by people dabbing red paint on the actress' face, as actually pouring stage blood on the actress would have interfered with her body microphone. The show was such a notorious turkey it provided the title to Ken Mandelbaum's survey of theatrical disasters, Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops.

ISBN numbers

External links


Carrie (digital library)

Carrie is an online digital library project based at the University of Kansas and containing full text books and documents.

See: List of digital library projects