Summary

  • Black House has deep connections to Stephen King's The Dark Tower, enriching its plot with characters, locations, and themes.
  • The novel intertwines Jack Sawyer's journey with the Dark Tower series, including encounters with Mr. Munshun and the Crimson King.
  • With its ties to The Dark Tower series, Black House holds potential for adaptation by renowned horror filmmaker Mike Flanagan.

In pop culture right now, the genre that seems to draw the most attention (outside superhero-related properties) is horror, and horror adjacent shows. With hit shows like FROM and the highly acclaimed return of everyone’s favorite serial killer, Dexter, there seems to be a consensus that horror-driven narratives are on the rise. That has become the case especially for properties related to the works of author Stephen King. One book in particular would fit into that mold perfectly, Black House, and it has a string of strong connections to the Dark Tower series as well.

Black House, written by Stephen King and Peter Straub, is a book that has a bit of everything, from deranged serial killers preying on the children of a small Wisconsin town, to a prolific investigator with a connection to another world, and so much more. The crux of that novel, however, is in how many of the book’s characters and plot points interweave into the fabric of Stephen King’s The Dark Tower series. WIth acclaimed horror writer and filmmaker Mike Flanagan working on bringing The Dark Tower to life, exploring how Black House would fit into that adaptation has never been more profound.

The Dark Tower How This Little-Known Stephen King Book Holds a Major Connection to The Dark Tower Series
The Dark Tower: How This Little-Known Stephen King Book Holds A Major Connection To The Dark Tower Series

A heartfelt and compelling novel shares a shocking setting with the acclaimed Stephen King series The Dark Tower.

5

What Happens In Black House?

Black House

Black House is a sequel to authors Stephen King and Peter Straub’s The Talisman. The first book’s protagonist, Jack Sawyer, is now an adult. He has made a name for himself as a prolific homicide detective, as he is able to see things at crime scenes that no one else can. After a case affects him deeply, Jack takes an early retirement and moves to a small Wisconsin town. Yet his retirement is short-lived, as he soon discovers a serial killer is on the loose in the small town.

When children begin disappearing and their bodies are found horribly mangled, the local investigators know that they have a serial killer on their hands. At first, Jack is hesitant to get involved, not wanting to put himself in a situation that could be overwhelming again. But when a young boy is taken, he feels compelled once more to investigate. In doing so, he unlocks the hidden memories of his childhood and the land he crossed to save his mother as a child, the Territories.

He meets his old friend Parkus once more in this land, and rediscovers his ability to travel between these worlds. Jack learns that the serial killer in his small town is being manipulated and controlled by an entity known as Mr. Munshun, who works for none other than The Crimson King. Tasked with finding children who have unique abilities such as ESP and telekineses, Mr. Munshun uses the serial killer to abduct children. The killer then brings them to Black House, a twisted home in the woods of the small town that harbors a portal to another world.

Gathering allies in his small town, Jack leads a party into Black House, facing unparalleled horrors to cross into the other world to face the killer and Mr. Munshun. Jack is able to take down Mr. Munshun using residual power from the Talisman he found as a boy. Together with his allies and the powerful boy they went to rescue, they destroy the facility housing hundreds of missing children, and return to Earth. Before they can officially celebrate, however, a press conference ends with Jack mortally wounded. Parkus whisks Jack back to the Territories, healing the man for future battles not yet fought and leaving his fate unknown.

The Connections Between Black House and the Dark Tower

The connections between Black House and The Dark Tower are some of the most plot-developing connections between Stephen King’s other books and the main Dark Tower series, matched only by books like The Stand and Insomnia. Black House has many features from the Dark Tower books. For example, Jack meets a woman named Sophie in a tent when he travels to The Territories, which turns out to be a tent from when Roland met the Little Sisters of Eluria.

Parkus himself also has some connections to the Gunslingers, like Roland and his father Steven. While Parkus himself claims never to have passed the test to become a gunslinger, he wields the sandalwood-gripped guns of the gunslingers, and knows the mannerisms and language of the gunslingers as well (high speech). He also knows of Roland and his allies, noting in the course of the book their movements toward the Dark Tower as he converses with Sophie and Jack.

Then there is the Crimson King, whose name in the Language of the Dead (Ram Abbalah) is first mentioned. Mr. Munshun’s lair where he holds the children he takes, the Big Combination, is in the Furnace Lands, a hellish world within End-World. In Black House, the serial killer puts a metal cap on the boy taken for his powers. This same cap is used later on in the Dark Tower series by the man in black, Randall Flagg, when facing off against Mordrid Deschain. Even the Black House itself may be a manifestation of The Dark Tower itself in Jack’s world, much like the home Jake Chambers had to traverse to reach Roland in the Dark Tower Book Three: The Wastelands.

Stephen King is nearly finished with The Talisman 3, which is said to have a lot of connections to the Dark Tower realm known as Mid-World and perhaps the Dark Tower itself. With so many connections held between Black House and The Dark Tower, it would make sense i f Black House sees a resurgence when Mike Flanagan’s Dark Tower series comes to life. Perhaps in bringing The Talisman and Black House to life on the big screen, viewers can fully appreciate just how connected The Dark Tower series is to many of Stephen King’s works.

Stephen King This Novel Deserves A Limited Series Like HBO's The Outsider
Stephen King: This Novel Deserves A Limited Series Like HBO's The Outsider

This Dark Story would perfectly fill the void left behind by the end of HBO's The Outsider miniseries.

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stephen king Cropped
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Birthdate
September 21, 1947
Birthplace
Portland, Maine
Notable Projects
The Shining, Cujo, The Shawshank Redemption, It, Carrie
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