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The Glass Floor

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"The Glass Floor"
Short story by Stephen King
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Horror short story
Publication
Published inStartling Mystery Stories
PublisherHealth Knowledge, Inc.
Media typePrint
Publication date1967
Chronology
 
The 43rd Dream
 
Cain Rose Up

"The Glass Floor" is a short story by Stephen King, first published in the autumn 1967 issue of Startling Mystery Stories.[1] It was King's first professional sale.[2][3][4]

Plot summary

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Charles Wharton visits Anthony Reynard, the recently widowed husband of Wharton's sister Janine, in his Victorian mansion, the appearance of which unsettles Wharton. Reynard tells Wharton that Janine died by falling off a ladder while dusting the mansion's East Room, breaking her neck. When Wharton asks to see the room, Reynard refuses, telling him the door to the room has been plastered over. When Wharton protests, Reynard's elderly housekeeper Louise explains that the East Room – which has a floor made entirely out of mirror glass – is regarded as "dangerous".

At Wharton's insistence, Reynard gives him a trowel and allows him to reopen the East Room, refusing to watch. Upon entering the room, Wharton is quickly disoriented by the mirrored floor; fancying that he is standing in mid-air, he panics and calls for help. Reynard finds Wharton's body lying in the middle of the room; he removes it using a pole hook, leaving a small pool of blood on both the floor and ceiling. As he prepares to once again plaster the East Room shut, Reynard wonders "if there was really a mirror there at all".[2]

Publication

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King wrote "The Glass Floor" in the summer of 1967 at the age of 19.[2][5] King was inspired to write the story when "...for no reason at all I began to wonder what it would be like to stand in a room whose floor was a mirror. The image was so intriguing that writing the story became a necessity."[6] It was the first of several submissions over the course of two years to magazine editor Robert A. W. Lowndes to be accepted for publication. King earned $35 (equivalent to $320 in 2023) for the story, marking his first professional earnings from writing.[2][5] "The Glass Floor" was first published in the autumn 1967 issue of Startling Mystery Stories. It was later republished (with some minor amendments) in issue #298 of Weird Tales in autumn 1990 and in issue #68 of Cemetery Dance in December 2012.[1][5][6] In 2020, it was published as part of the trade hardcover Best of Cemetery Dance 2.[7] It has never been collected in a work by King.[3]

Reception

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Michael R. Collings described "The Glass Floor" as "derivative, depending upon Poe and Lovecraft for its situational and atmospheric horror", while regarding it as an improvement on the "workaday prose" of King's earlier work. Reviewing King's second published story, "The Reaper's Image", he noted that King "allow[ed] the mystery of the Delver mirror to develop its own power rather than imposing a mystery upon the characters, as he had done in 'The Glass Floor'."[8] Collings and David Engebretson suggested that "the reader can see reflected the potential Stephen King was about to fulfill".[4] Darrell Schweitzer described "The Reaper's Image" as "quite similar to 'The Glass Floor', but [...] told more skilfully".[9] Joseph Maddrey described the story as "an Edgar Allan Poe pastiche".[10] George Beahm also regarded "The Glass Floor" as "derivative", but judged it to be "a first effort that requires no apology".[11]

Revisiting the story after 23 years in 1990, King described the first several pages as "clumsy and badly written - clearly the product of an unformed story-teller's mind" but judged the climax to be "better than I remembered" with "a genuine frisson".[2]

Rocky Wood notes two seeming factual errors in the story: Reynard's mansion bears the date 1770 but is contrastingly described as "Victorian" (1770 being part of the Georgian era) and "Revolutionary War vintage" (the American Revolutionary War lasting from 1775 to 1783).[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b "The Glass Floor". StephenKing.com. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e King, Stephen (Autumn 1990). Scithers, George H.; Schweitzer, Darrell; Betancourt, John Gregory (eds.). "The Glass Floor". Weird Tales. No. 298. Wildside Press. pp. 36–42. ISBN 978-0-8095-3214-8.
  3. ^ a b c Wood, Rocky; King, Stephen (2012). Stephen King: Uncollected, Unpublished. Overlook Connection Press. p. 169-171. ISBN 978-1-892950-59-8.
  4. ^ a b Collings, Michael R.; Engebretson, David (1985). The Shorter Works of Stephen King. Starmont House. p. 8, 14-16. ISBN 978-0-930261-03-0.
  5. ^ a b c Vincent, Bev (2022). Stephen King: A Complete Exploration of His Work, Life, and Influences. becker&mayer!. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-7603-7681-2.
  6. ^ a b Wood, Rocky (2017). Stephen King: A Literary Companion. McFarland & Company. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-7864-8546-8.
  7. ^ Chizmar, Richard (2019). The Best of Cemetery Dance II. Cemetery Dance Publications. ISBN 978-1-58767-081-7.
  8. ^ Collings, Michael R. (2008). The Many Facets of Stephen King. Wildside Press. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-89370-923-5.
  9. ^ Schweitzer, Darrell (1985). Discovering Stephen King. Starmont House. p. 49. ISBN 9780930261061.
  10. ^ Maddrey, Joseph (2003). Adapting Stephen King. Vol. 2. McFarland & Company. p. 7. ISBN 9781476648217.
  11. ^ Beahm, George (1998). Stephen King from A to Z: An Encyclopedia of His Life and Work. Andrews McMeel Publishing. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-0-8362-6914-7.

See also

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