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{{work}}
{{work}}
{{Infobox book
[[File:the_stand_cover1_3754.jpg|frame]]
| title = The Stand
| image = the_stand_cover1_3754.jpg
| caption = First edition cover
| author = Stephen King
| central theme =
| elevator pitch =
| genre = Post-apocalyptic fantasy
| publication date = October 3, 1978
| wiki URL =
| wiki name =
}}
{{quote|''Graffiti written on the front of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta in red spray paint:''
{{quote|''Graffiti written on the front of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta in red spray paint:''
''"Dear Jesus. I will see you soon. Your friend, America. PS. I hope you will still have some vacancies by the end of the week."'' }}
''"Dear Jesus. I will see you soon. Your friend, America. PS. I hope you will still have some vacancies by the end of the week."''}}


One of [[Stephen King]]'s most well regarded [[Doorstopper|(and thickest)]] books, ''[[The Stand]]'' is a classic work of modern apocalyptic fiction. It is the book which introduces (and primarily describes, on Earth at least) King's most famous villain and "[[The Antichrist|antichrist]]" figure, Randall Flagg.
One of [[Stephen King]]'s most well regarded [[Doorstopper|(and thickest)]] books, ''[[The Stand]]'' is a classic work of modern apocalyptic fiction. It is the book which introduces (and primarily describes, on Earth at least) King's most famous villain and "[[The Antichrist|antichrist]]" figure, Randall Flagg.


King set out to write "An American [[Lord of the Rings]]", although he later demurred as to whether he was successful. Still, it is often rated his most popular book, and, along with ''[[IT]]'', one of the most important works of King's early period.
King set out to write "An American [[The Lord of the Rings]]", although he later demurred as to whether he was successful. Still, it is often rated his most popular book, and, along with ''[[IT]]'', one of the most important works of King's early period.


The story concerns the travels and travails of well [[Loads and Loads of Characters|over a dozen characters]] following intersecting story arcs across the [[Eagle Land|United States]] during and after an [[The Plague|apocalyptic Super-Flu]] (nicknamed ''Captain Trips'') [[Apocalypse How|kills 99.4 percent of humanity.]] The survivors are drawn into two camps on either side of the Rocky Mountains: One headed by the 108-year old, Moses-like Mother Abagail, is based in [[Hidden Elf Village|Boulder, CO]]; the other based in [[Mordor|Las Vegas]] is headed by the demonic Flagg.
The story concerns the travels and travails of well [[Loads and Loads of Characters|over a dozen characters]] following intersecting story arcs across the [[Eagle Land|United States]] during and after an [[The Plague|apocalyptic Super-Flu]] (nicknamed ''Captain Trips'') [[Apocalypse How|kills 99.4 percent of humanity.]] The survivors are drawn into two camps on either side of the Rocky Mountains: One headed by the 108-year old, Moses-like Mother Abagail, is based in [[Hidden Elf Village|Boulder, CO]]; the other based in [[Mordor|Las Vegas]] is headed by the demonic Flagg.


First published in 1978, the novel was reissued in 1990 in a "[[Limited Special Collectors Ultimate Edition|complete and uncut edition]]" containing about 400 additional pages of material from King's original manuscript.
First published in 1978, the novel was reissued in 1990 in a "[[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition|complete and uncut edition]]" containing about 400 additional pages of material from King's original manuscript.


A eight hour made-for-tv miniseries based on the novel aired for four nights on ABC in 1994. As of late 2011, a theatrical adaptation is being attempted for the second time-the first attempt was made during the 1980s and failed because of the difficulty adapting such a long novel for a big screen release, and the novel's dependence on narration to tell the story.
A eight hour made-for-TV miniseries based on the novel aired for four nights on ABC in 1994. As of late 2011, a theatrical adaptation is being attempted for the second time-the first attempt was made during the 1980s and failed because of the difficulty adapting such a long novel for a big screen release, and the novel's dependence on narration to tell the story.


Not to be confused with [[JoJo's Bizarre Adventure|the manifestations of one's inner powers]].
Not to be confused with the manifestations of one's inner powers in ''[[JoJo's Bizarre Adventure]]''.
----
=== This classic work contains examples of: ===


{{tropelist}}
* [[Abandoned Hospital]]: The Stovington hospital.
* [[Abandoned Hospital]]: The Stovington hospital.
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: The Marvel Comics adaptation. Helps that it features a lot of the darker stuff that was cut from the network TV mini-series adaptation due to content issues, as well as exploring the psyches of several characters like Harold Lauder, who were given the short shift in the TV mini-series.
* [[Actor Allusion]]: In the miniseries. [[The Brady Bunch|Mike Lookinland]], who was a cameraman, also has a cameo part as one of the Boulder residents. Stu addresses him as "Bobby" at one point.
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: The Marvel Comics adaptation. Helps that it features a lot of the darker stuff that was cut from the network TV mini-series adaptation due to content issues, as well as exploring the psyches of several characters like Harold Lauder, who were given the short shift in the tv mini-series.
* [[After the End]]: The world of The Stand goes through an apocalypse and then focuses on the struggles of the survivors against the Dark Man of the west.
* [[After the End]]: The world of The Stand goes through an apocalypse and then focuses on the struggles of the survivors against the Dark Man of the west.
* [[Alas, Poor Villain]]: In-universe, this is Stu's response to {{spoiler|Harold E Lauder}}'s death in both the book and miniseries. <!-- In-work reference, not YMMV -->
* [[Alas, Poor Villain]]: In-universe, this is Stu's response to {{spoiler|Harold E Lauder}}'s death in both the book and miniseries.
* [[All-Star Cast]]: Gary Sinise, Molly Ringwald, Rob Lowe, Laura San Giacomo, Jamey Sheridan, Miguel Ferrer, Ruby Dee, Ossie Davis, Corin Nemec, Matt Frewer, Adam Storke and Ray Walston.
* [[Anyone Can Die]]
* [[Anyone Can Die]]
* [[Apocalypse How]]: Class 1, verging on Class 2.
* [[Apocalypse How]]: Class 1, verging on Class 2.
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** A minor one, but: ''No great loss.''
** A minor one, but: ''No great loss.''
* [[Audience Surrogate]]: Frannie, Stu, Nick, and Larry, for the most part.
* [[Audience Surrogate]]: Frannie, Stu, Nick, and Larry, for the most part.
* [[Babies Ever After]]: Played with. The first baby to be born after the plague {{spoiler|is only partially immune, due to having only one immune parent, and quickly dies. The first main character's baby is likewise partially immune, but survives}}.
* [[Author On Board]]: Glen Bateman is somewhere between [[The Obi-Wan]], [[The Professor]] and [[Mr. Exposition]].
* [[Balls of Fire]]: Flagg releases an [[Energy Ball]] in the final book.
* [[Balls of Fire]]: Flagg releases an [[Energy Ball]] in the final book.
* [[Babies Ever After]]: Played with. The first baby to be born after the plague {{spoiler|is only partially immune, due to having only one immune parent, and quickly dies. The first main character's baby is likewise partially immune, but survives}}.
* [[Because Destiny Says So]]
* [[Because Destiny Says So]]
* [[Beneath the Earth]]: The Lincoln Tunnel. Also, the Eisenhower Tunnel between Boulder and Flagg's realm.
* [[Beneath the Earth]]: The Lincoln Tunnel. Also, the Eisenhower Tunnel between Boulder and Flagg's realm.
* [[Big Damn Villains]]: {{spoiler|When Flagg saves Trashy from The Kid.}} Granted, it was just to advance Flagg's plans, but it was pretty sweet when {{spoiler|Trashy walked away from the car with his new wolf friends, giving The Kid the finger}} and screaming many of the things The Kid said to him. {{spoiler|Of course, he was sexually assaulted with a handgun before he got there.}}
* [[Big Damn Villains]]: {{spoiler|When Flagg saves Trashy from The Kid.}} Granted, it was just to advance Flagg's plans, but it was pretty sweet when {{spoiler|Trashy walked away from the car with his new wolf friends, giving The Kid the finger}} and screaming many of the things The Kid said to him. {{spoiler|Of course, he was sexually assaulted with a handgun before he got there.}}
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: Arguably downgraded to [[Downer Ending]] with the addition of the coda in the expanded edition.
* [[Bittersweet Ending]]: Arguably downgraded to [[Downer Ending]] with the addition of the coda in the expanded edition.
** Debatably still [[Bittersweet Ending]]; {{spoiler|Russell Faraday is in an alternate Earth, which implies that the Earth he was in is more or less "spared" from HIS further torment. King has always used Flagg as an immortal harbringer of evil}}, so this is more of a [[Here We Go Again]]. {{spoiler|He's on another level of ''[[The Dark Tower]]''.}}
** Debatably still [[Bittersweet Ending]]; {{spoiler|Russell Faraday is in an alternate Earth, which implies that the Earth he was in is more or less "spared" from HIS further torment. King has always used Flagg as an immortal harbinger of evil}}, so this is more of a [[Here We Go Again]]. {{spoiler|He's on another level of ''[[The Dark Tower]]''.}}
* [[Black and White Morality]]: Look at that cover illustration.
* [[Black and White Morality]]: Look at that cover illustration.
* [[Boom! Headshot!]]: Flagg sends two [[Mook|Mooks]] to capture the Judge and bring back his head with the face undamaged. When one gets trigger-happy, he accidentally catches the Judge in the head, leading to the [[You Have Failed Me...]] moment.
* [[Bring News Back]]: Doubles as [[The Untwist]].
* [[Boom! Headshot!]]: Flagg sends two [[Mook|Mooks]] to capture the Judge and bring back his head with the face undamaged. When one gets trigger-happy, he accidentally catches the Judge in the head, leading to the [[You Have Failed Me]] moment.
* [[Bring Him to Me|Bring Her To Me]]: Dayna Jurgens
* [[Bring Him to Me|Bring Her To Me]]: Dayna Jurgens
* [[Bring News Back]]: Doubles as [[The Untwist]].
* [[But Thou Must!]]: Frannie doesn't buy it.
* [[But Thou Must!]]: Frannie doesn't buy it.
* [[The Call Knows Where You Live]]
* [[The Call Knows Where You Live]]
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* [[Canon Immigrant]] / [[Ensemble Darkhorse]]: Flagg became a recurring villain. In ''Eyes of the Dragon'' he's an [[Evil Chancellor]] and hinted to have been an executioner from the kingdom's dark past. In ''[[The Dark Tower]]'', he was [[Ret Canon|revealed]] to be [[The Gunslinger|Roland's]] primary nemesis. We learn he can reincarnate.
* [[Canon Immigrant]] / [[Ensemble Darkhorse]]: Flagg became a recurring villain. In ''Eyes of the Dragon'' he's an [[Evil Chancellor]] and hinted to have been an executioner from the kingdom's dark past. In ''[[The Dark Tower]]'', he was [[Ret Canon|revealed]] to be [[The Gunslinger|Roland's]] primary nemesis. We learn he can reincarnate.
* [[Canon Welding]]: ''The Stand'' became part of ''[[The Dark Tower]]'' continuity (as did most of King's work).
* [[Canon Welding]]: ''The Stand'' became part of ''[[The Dark Tower]]'' continuity (as did most of King's work).
* [[Captain Ersatz]]: The symbol of Flagg is a red Eye, which he uses to mentally scan the countryside. He's also a shapeshifter. [[The Lord of the Rings|Hmmmmm...]]
* [[Captain Ersatz]]: The symbol of Flagg is a red Eye, which he uses to mentally scan the countryside. He's also a shapeshifter. [[The Lord of the Rings|Hmmmmm...]]
** It's also hinted he's [[H.P. Lovecraft|Nyarlathotep]] [[Canon Welding|as well]].
** It's also hinted he's [[H.P. Lovecraft|Nyarlathotep]] [[Canon Welding|as well]].
* [[Catch Phrase]] - Somewhat, more in the miniseries than the book. Larry's hit song "Baby Can You Dig Your Man" is often sung by characters (ex. Trash and Glen in the movie, Joe and others in the book).
* [[Catch Phrase]] - Somewhat, more in the miniseries than the book. Larry's hit song "Baby Can You Dig Your Man" is often sung by characters (ex. Trash and Glen in the movie, Joe and others in the book).
** You come see me, ___. You and all your friends.
** You come see me, ___. You and all your friends.
* [[Chandler's Law]]: According to King, {{spoiler|Harold's bomb}} was caused by him having writer's block, and feeling the heroes were getting complacent in Boulder.
* [[Chandler's Law]]: According to King, {{spoiler|Harold's bomb}} was caused by him having writer's block, and feeling the heroes were getting complacent in Boulder.
* [[Character Development]]: Larry starts off as a [[All Take and No Give|selfish]], arrogant [[Jerkass]], but gradually grows enough to {{spoiler|become the de facto leader of the heroes after Stu gets injured en route to Las Vegas.}}
* [[Character Development]]: Larry starts off as a [[All Take and No Give|selfish]], arrogant [[Jerkass]], but gradually grows enough to {{spoiler|become the de facto leader of the heroes after Stu gets injured en route to Las Vegas.}}
* [[Chaste Hero|Chaste Character]]: Nadine, for unfortunate reasons.
* [[Chaste Hero|Chaste Character]]: Nadine, for unfortunate reasons.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: The {{spoiler|nuclear weapons}} out in the desert.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: The {{spoiler|nuclear weapons}} out in the desert.
* [[City of Gold]]: Cibola! [[wikipedia:Seven Cities of Gold (myth)|Seven-in-One]]! [[Las Vegas]] appears this way to Trash in a mirage.
* [[City of Gold]]: Cibola! [[wikipedia:Seven Cities of Gold (myth)|Seven-in-One]]! [[Las Vegas]] appears this way to Trash in a mirage.
* [[Closest Thing We Got]]: Since they are trying to rebuild society from scratch there is a lot of this going on.
* [[Closest Thing We Got]]: Since they are trying to rebuild society from scratch there is a lot of this going on.
** Stu Redman is forced to perform an appendectomy. Later on, the Free Zone is forced to rely on a veterinarian until a doctor arrives.
** Stu Redman is forced to perform an appendectomy. Later on, the Free Zone is forced to rely on a veterinarian until a doctor arrives.
* [[Composite Character]]: Nadine + Rita (miniseries).
* [[Composite Character]]: Nadine + Rita (miniseries).
** The miniseries also gave some of Nadine's sub-plots to Lucy.
** The miniseries also gave some of Nadine's sub-plots to Lucy.
* [[Cosy Catastrophe]]: Doesn't start out that way, but becomes one by novel's end.
* [[Cozy Catastrophe]]: Doesn't start out that way, but becomes one by novel's end.
** [[Your Mileage May Vary]], since civilization ended outside Boulder and [[We Are Not Going Through That Again|people started leaving]] when they started arming the [[Utopia|Free Zone]] officials. The miniseries gives off this vibe at the end, though.
** [[Your Mileage May Vary]], since civilization ended outside Boulder and [[We Are Not Going Through That Again|people started leaving]] when they started arming the [[Utopia|Free Zone]] officials. The miniseries gives off this vibe at the end, though.
* [[Covers Always Lie]]: The scene on the cover doesn't happen in the novel.
* [[Covers Always Lie]]: The scene on the cover doesn't happen in the novel.
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*** Which would make some very prime [[Fanfic Fuel|fodder]] for [[Elsewhere Fic]], to put things mildly.
*** Which would make some very prime [[Fanfic Fuel|fodder]] for [[Elsewhere Fic]], to put things mildly.
* [[Dark Is Evil]]: The Dark Man, Randall Flagg.
* [[Dark Is Evil]]: The Dark Man, Randall Flagg.
* [[Dead Ex Machina]]: {{spoiler|The spirit of Nick Andros leads Tom Cullen to save Stu's life}}.
* [[Dead Ex Machina]]: {{spoiler|The spirit of Nick Andros leads Tom Cullen to save Stu's life}}.
* [[Deadly Game]]: During the outbreak a "junta" of defected black soldiers hold a large number of regulars hostage in a game show studio, drawing their names at random from a drum and killing them one by one on camera.
* [[Deadly Game]]: During the outbreak, a "junta" of defected black soldiers hold a large number of regulars hostage in a game show studio, drawing their names at random from a drum and killing them one by one on camera.
** Leading to [[We Are Experiencing Technical Difficulties]] after another squadron of regulars force their way in and start a firefight with the hostage-takers, increasing the carnage exponentially.
** Leading to [[We Are Experiencing Technical Difficulties]] after another squadron of regulars force their way in and start a firefight with the hostage-takers, increasing the carnage exponentially.
* [[Dear Diary]]: Guess who reads Fran's [[Secret Diary]]?
* [[Dear Diary]]: Guess who reads Fran's [[Secret Diary]]?
* [[Death by Irony]]: {{spoiler|Harold}} spends at least two chapters writing and recording a Take That speech to be played by his bomb before it explodes. {{spoiler|Nick, the only deaf character,}} is the only person in the house when it detonates.
* [[Death by Irony]]: {{spoiler|Harold}} spends at least two chapters writing and recording a Take That speech to be played by his bomb before it explodes. {{spoiler|Nick, the only deaf character}}, is the only person in the house when it detonates.
* [[Depopulation Bomb]]
* [[Depopulation Bomb]]
* [[Deus Ex Machina]]
* [[Deus Ex Machina]]
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** A particularly large medical DNDTR appears in the movie, in which researchers at the isolation center in Vermont watch as a character suddenly wakes up, rips the IVs out of his arm, rips out his endotracheal tube, and suffocates to death. Not only would a patient who'd been intubated be restrained at the wrists, sedated heavily, and possibly kept chemically paralyzed, but according to descriptions of the disease itself any victim in need of a ventilator would be already be too weak to move.
** A particularly large medical DNDTR appears in the movie, in which researchers at the isolation center in Vermont watch as a character suddenly wakes up, rips the IVs out of his arm, rips out his endotracheal tube, and suffocates to death. Not only would a patient who'd been intubated be restrained at the wrists, sedated heavily, and possibly kept chemically paralyzed, but according to descriptions of the disease itself any victim in need of a ventilator would be already be too weak to move.
* [[Disaster Democracy]]: Instituted (albeit in a modified form) in Boulder.
* [[Disaster Democracy]]: Instituted (albeit in a modified form) in Boulder.
* [[The Dog Bites Back]]: {{spoiler|Trash blows up the airfield.}}
* [[Doorstopper]]: Many editions, especially foreign language ones, go so far as to split it up into multiple books (incidentally, this actually becomes a plot point in ''[[Twentieth Century Boys]]'', which is basically the Japanese version of ''[[The Stand]]'').
* [[Doomed Expedition]]: Most of the trips west to Las Vegas. The surviving protagonists discover they must [[Walk Into Mordor|walk there]] with no food or packs. When they protest and suggest stocking up on canned food and a snowmobile, Glen Bateman says "That was the old world, and the old way was a death trip."
* [[Doorstopper]]: Many editions, especially foreign language ones, go so far as to split it up into multiple books (incidentally, this actually becomes a plot point in ''[[20th Century Boys]]'', which is basically the Japanese version of ''[[The Stand]]'').
** It's longer than ''[[War and Peace]]'', ''[[Moby Dick]]'' and some editions of [[The Bible]].
** It's longer than ''[[War and Peace]]'', ''[[Moby Dick]]'' and some editions of [[The Bible]].
** The audibook on CD is over 70 discs long.
** The audibook on CD is over 70 discs long.
* [[Drama Bomb]]: Literal in this case.
* [[Dreaming of Things to Come]]
* [[Dreaming of Things to Come]]
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Rita}}, whom Larry survived {{spoiler|the Lincoln Tunnel with}}, commits suicide in his sleeping bag. Also Starkey and several others who were involved in Project Blue.
* [[Driven to Suicide]]: {{spoiler|Rita}}, whom Larry survived {{spoiler|the Lincoln Tunnel with}}, commits suicide in his sleeping bag. Also Starkey and several others who were involved in Project Blue.
* [[The Dog Bites Back]]: {{spoiler|Trash blows up the airfield.}}
* [[Doomed Expedition]]: Most of the trips west to Las Vegas. The surviving protagonists discover they must [[Walk Into Mordor|walk there]] with no food or packs. When they protest and suggest stocking up on canned food and a snowmobile, Glen Bateman says "That was the old world, and the old way was a death trip."
* [[Drama Bomb]]: Literal in this case.
* [[Due to the Dead]]: Frannie Goldsmith burying her father in his garden, told in painful and realistic detail.
* [[Due to the Dead]]: Frannie Goldsmith burying her father in his garden, told in painful and realistic detail.
** The leaders in Boulder say that this is why they created the Burial Committee which buries the victims of the Superflu. Actually, they did it for health reasons, they just don't tell it to the people becuse they don't want to cause panic.
** The leaders in Boulder say that this is why they created the Burial Committee which buries the victims of the Superflu. Actually, they did it for health reasons, they just don't tell it to the people because they don't want to cause panic.
* [[Dying Town]]: Arnette, Texas, where the novel opens, is one of these even before the Captain Trips outbreak. Of course, ''every'' city and town becomes one of these as the virus spreads.
* [[Dying Town]]: Arnette, Texas, where the novel opens, is one of these even before the Captain Trips outbreak. Of course, ''every'' city and town becomes one of these as the virus spreads.
* [[Dystopia Is Hard]]: As Flagg finds out to his everlasting annoyance.
* [[Dystopia Is Hard]]: As Flagg finds out to his everlasting annoyance.
* [[The Epic]]: National/"Biblical" variety.
* [[Emergency Presidential Address]]
* [[Emergency Presidential Address]]
* [[Empathy Doll Shot]]: In the opening credits of the miniseries.
* [[Empathy Doll Shot]]: In the opening credits of the miniseries.
* [[The End of the World as We Know It]]: Lampshaded. The characters speculate on what will happen to all those corpses, how life will never be the same, etc.
* [[The End of the World as We Know It]]: Lampshaded. The characters speculate on what will happen to all those corpses, how life will never be the same, etc.
** In the [[Made for TV Movie]], [[The Lancer|Larry Underwood]] actually plays guitar and ''sings'' Barry Mcguire's "Eve of Destruction," a song about the End Of The World, on the outskirts of Des Moines. Which was [[Incendiary Exponent|on fire]].
** In the [[Made for TV Movie]], [[The Lancer|Larry Underwood]] actually plays guitar and ''sings'' Barry Mcguire's "Eve of Destruction", a song about the End Of The World, on the outskirts of Des Moines. Which was [[Incendiary Exponent|on fire]].
* [[Ensemble Cast]]
* [[Ensemble Cast]]
* [[The Epic]]: National/"Biblical" variety.
* [[Escape From the Crazy Place]] / [[Survival Horror]]: Stovington Hospital.
* [[Escape From the Crazy Place]] / [[Survival Horror]]: Stovington Hospital.
* [[Escort Mission]]: Larry and Rita leaving New York.
* [[Escort Mission]]: Larry and Rita leaving New York.
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* [[Exact Words]] / [[The Untwist]]: Mother Abagail's final prophecy.
* [[Exact Words]] / [[The Untwist]]: Mother Abagail's final prophecy.
* [[Eye Scream]]: Ray Booth grinds his thumbs into Nick's eyes while fighting him in the Shoyo jail. Nick subsequently loses sight in one eye and spends much of the rest of the book wearing a [[Eyepatch of Power|patch]] over it.
* [[Eye Scream]]: Ray Booth grinds his thumbs into Nick's eyes while fighting him in the Shoyo jail. Nick subsequently loses sight in one eye and spends much of the rest of the book wearing a [[Eyepatch of Power|patch]] over it.
** Also {{spoiler|Dayna's [[Better to Die Than Be Killed|suicide]]}}.
** Also {{spoiler|Dayna's [[Better to Die Than Be Killed|suicide]]}}.
* [[Failsafe Failure]]
* [[Failsafe Failure]]
* [[Field Promotion]]: Several characters get one, most notably Nick.
* [[Field Promotion]]: Several characters get one, most notably Nick.
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* [[Government Conspiracy]]: The creation of the virus, and the attempt to suppress news of its outbreak, culminating in Stu's {{spoiler|[[Abandoned Hospital|abandonment and near-death]]}}, is dwelt on. Various military misadventures occur offscreen; see [[Paranoia Fuel]].
* [[Government Conspiracy]]: The creation of the virus, and the attempt to suppress news of its outbreak, culminating in Stu's {{spoiler|[[Abandoned Hospital|abandonment and near-death]]}}, is dwelt on. Various military misadventures occur offscreen; see [[Paranoia Fuel]].
* [[Green Aesop]]: Nearly everyone on the planet dies. The planet got better, however.
* [[Green Aesop]]: Nearly everyone on the planet dies. The planet got better, however.
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: The TV miniseries has a staggering amount of recognizable actors.
* [[Hidden Elf Village]]: The Boulder Free Zone. <small>Has nothing to do with [[Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies|falling rocks]].</small>
* [[Hidden Elf Village]]: The Boulder Free Zone. <small>Has nothing to do with [[Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies|falling rocks]].</small>
* [[High Fantasy]]
* [[High Fantasy]]
** [[Urban Fantasy]]
** [[Urban Fantasy]]
* [[Hit So Hard the Calendar Felt It]]: Randall Flagg tells the date as "this thirtieth day of September, the year nineteen hundred and ninety, now known as The Year One, year of the plague."
* [[Hit So Hard the Calendar Felt It]]: Randall Flagg tells the date as "this thirtieth day of September, the year nineteen hundred and ninety, now known as The Year One, year of the plague."
* [[I Just Shot Marvin in the Face]]: Several times, most notably Bobby Terry.
* [[I Just Shot Marvin in the Face]]: Several times, most notably Bobby Terry.
* [[I Want Them Alive]]: "Flagg wants them taken alive."
* [[Ill Girl|Ill Guy]]: ...everyone, really; but especially Fran's dad in the miniseries.
* [[Ill Girl|Ill Guy]]: ...everyone, really; but especially Fran's dad in the miniseries.
* [[Incurable Cough of Death]]: Played totally, totally straight. If a character coughs or sneezes, chances are they're a goner.
** So straight that when Stu fakes a coughing fit to spite his caregiver-captors in Stovington, it sends them into a complete panic until he reveals the joke.
* [[Incredibly Lame Pun]]: A truly epic one; "You might say he never ''{{spoiler|flagged}}'' in his devotion."
* [[Incredibly Lame Pun]]: A truly epic one; "You might say he never ''{{spoiler|flagged}}'' in his devotion."
* [[Incurable Cough of Death]]: Played totally, totally straight. If a character coughs or sneezes, chances are they're a goner.
** So straight that when Stu fakes a coughing fit to spite his caregiver-captors in Stovington, it sends them into a complete panic until he reveals the joke.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted, since the flu doesn't spare the children.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted, since the flu doesn't spare the children.
* [[The Infiltration]]: The Boulder leadership sends Judge Farris, Dayna Jurgens and Tom Cullen to Las Vegas to join (and spy on) Flagg's operation.
* [[The Infiltration]]: The Boulder leadership sends Judge Farris, Dayna Jurgens and Tom Cullen to Las Vegas to join (and spy on) Flagg's operation.
* [[It Got Worse]]: First a plague wipes out most of humanity. ''Then'' a demonic drifter tries to conquer what's left. Finally, the ending reveals that {{spoiler|[[The End - or Is It?|he survived a freaking nuclear weapon, and is scheming anew]]}}. Then again, after 99.7% of humanity has been destroyed, the entire Randall Flagg situation seems rather tame in comparison. Also, Flagg's empire {{spoiler|[[Dystopia Is Hard|seems well on its way of falling apart on its own]] without any action by the hero characters}} in typical Stephen King style.
* [[It Got Worse]]: First a plague wipes out most of humanity. ''Then'' a demonic drifter tries to conquer what's left. Finally, the ending reveals that {{spoiler|[[The End - or Is It?|he survived a freaking nuclear weapon, and is scheming anew]]}}. Then again, after 99.7% of humanity has been destroyed, the entire Randall Flagg situation seems rather tame in comparison. Also, Flagg's empire {{spoiler|[[Dystopia Is Hard|seems well on its way of falling apart on its own]] without any action by the hero characters}} in typical Stephen King style.
* [[I Want Them Alive]]: "Flagg wants them taken alive."
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Flagg runs into an [[Bambi|innocent fawn]]. <small>"Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub!"</small>
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Flagg runs into an [[Bambi|innocent fawn]]. <small>"Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub!"</small>
* [[Kill'Em All]] (99.4% pure example of this trope)
* [[Kill'Em All]]: 99.4% pure example of this trope.
** Even among the main characters, the death rate is pretty high.
** Even among the main characters, the death rate is pretty high.
* [[Kirk Summation]]: Whitney Horgan's [[Sedgwick Speech|speech]] is [[I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream|cut short]].
* [[Kirk Summation]]: Whitney Horgan's [[Sedgwick Speech|speech]] is [[I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream|cut short]].
* [[Large Ham]]: A few in the miniseries, notably Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man and Laura San Giacomo as Nadine.
* [[Large Ham]]: A few in the miniseries, notably Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man and Laura San Giacomo as Nadine.
* [[The Last DJ]]: Ray Flowers. ''Literally.''
* [[The Last DJ]]: Ray Flowers. ''Literally''.
* [[Limited Special Collectors Ultimate Edition]]: The 1100 page "complete and uncut" edition
* [[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition]]: The 1100 page "complete and uncut" edition.
* [[Loads and Loads of Characters]]: Ten or twenty ''main'' characters following separate arcs in disparate locales. [[The Stand/Characters|See here]].
* [[Loads and Loads of Characters]]: Ten or twenty ''main'' characters following separate arcs in disparate locales. [[The Stand/Characters|See here]].
* [[Look Behind You!]]: Stu Redman tells the "doctor" who's been sent to terminate him at the Stovington hospital that there's a huge rat behind him, then hits him over the head with a chair.
* [[Look Behind You!]]: Stu Redman tells the "doctor" who's been sent to terminate him at the Stovington hospital that there's a huge rat behind him, then hits him over the head with a chair.
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* [[Mauve Shirt]]: Many characters.
* [[Mauve Shirt]]: Many characters.
* [[May-December Romance]]: Larry and Rita.
* [[May-December Romance]]: Larry and Rita.
* [[Monochrome Casting]]: In both the book and the mini series, the only two non-caucasian characters are Abagail and the Judge. Other than that, ''every single'' character stated to be black (book version) is either dead or joined up with Flagg. In many cases in the novel, the character's race is not mentioned.
* [[Monochrome Casting]]: In both the book and the mini series, the only two non-Caucasian characters are Abagail and the Judge. Other than that, ''every single'' character stated to be black (book version) is either dead or joined up with Flagg. In many cases in the novel, the character's race is not mentioned.
** Leo is Chinese. We know this because Stephen King feels the need to describe his "queer, dark Chinese eyes" every time he looks at Larry.
** Leo is Chinese. We know this because Stephen King feels the need to describe his "queer, dark Chinese eyes" every time he looks at Larry.
* [[Mordor]]: Las Vegas. [[Truth in Television]] no less!
* [[Mordor]]: Las Vegas. [[Truth in Television]] no less!
* [[The Mountains of Illinois]]: In the TV Miniseries adaptation, Trash Can Man's arson incidents in Gary, Indiana and Des Moines, Iowa, are both shown with rugged mountains in the background, because they were filmed in New Mexico.
* [[The Mountains of Illinois]]: In the TV Miniseries adaptation, Trash Can Man's arson incidents in Gary, Indiana and Des Moines, Iowa, are both shown with rugged mountains in the background, because they were filmed in New Mexico.
* [[New Eden]]: Discussed by Glen Bateman, who suggests [[Ludd Was Right]].
* [[New Eden]]: Discussed by Glen Bateman, who suggests [[Ludd Was Right]].
* [[Next Sunday AD]]: Originally set in 1980, updated to 1990 in the expanded version. The inspiration for Flagg was [[wikipedia:Symbionese Liberation Army|Donald DeFreeze]], the Patty Hearst kidnapper. (Another inspiration was then-current cult leader [[Drinking the Kool Aid|Jim Jones]].)
* [[Next Sunday A.D.]]: Originally set in 1980, updated to 1990 in the expanded version. The inspiration for Flagg was [[wikipedia:Symbionese Liberation Army|Donald DeFreeze]], the Patty Hearst kidnapper (another inspiration was then-current cult leader [[Drinking the Kool Aid|Jim Jones]]).
** The [[Limited Special Collectors Ultimate Edition]] (book) was updated with references to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (comic only.)
** The [[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition]] (book) was updated with references to the ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'' (comic only).
*** In the original edition, Bobby Terry is reading a ''[[Howard the Duck (comics)|Howard the Duck]]'' comic shortly before the Judge comes driving by. The "remix" changes this to a [[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]] comic, King presumably worrying that his 90s readers wouldn't be so familiar with Howard.
*** In the original edition, Bobby Terry is reading a ''[[Howard the Duck (comics)|Howard the Duck]]'' comic shortly before the Judge comes driving by. The "remix" changes this to a ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'' comic, King presumably worrying that his 90s readers wouldn't be so familiar with Howard.
** ''[[The Dark Tower]]'' books explained this by saying the plague happened in different times in [[The Multiverse|alternate realities]]; we just live in one where it hasn't hit yet.
** ''[[The Dark Tower]]'' books explained this by saying the plague happened in different times in [[The Multiverse|alternate realities]]; we just live in one where it hasn't hit yet.
* [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero]]: Barry Dorgan insults Trash at the airfield, causing him to revert to his old ways.
* [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero]]: Barry Dorgan insults Trash at the airfield, causing him to revert to his old ways.
* [[No One Gets Left Behind]]: see Passing The Torch.
* [[Non-Indicative Name]]: Captain Trips.
* [[Non-Indicative Name]]: Captain Trips.
** Possibly a justified name- it's military in origin, and causes hallucinations and delusions. Though, clearly, it has more to do with Jerry Garcia.
** Possibly a justified name- it's military in origin, and causes hallucinations and delusions. Though, clearly, it has more to do with Jerry Garcia.
* [[No One Gets Left Behind]]: See [[Passing the Torch]] below.
* [[Our Nudity Is Different]]: Abagail remembers appearing on a talent show back in 1902. Before her, a woman performed a "racy French dance", showing her ankles.
* [[Our Nudity Is Different]]: Abagail remembers appearing on a talent show back in 1902. Before her, a woman performed a "racy French dance", showing her ankles.
* [[Paranoia Fuel]]: [[Discussed Trope|Extensively talked about]] by the characters themselves. One of the original "Evil US Government quarantines innocent civilians at gunpoint and leaves them to die" plots, it seemed uncharacteristically cynical (even for King) until, say 2005 (as if!) Not to mention Capt. Trips itself. <!-- This trope is referenced in-work, so it is not YMMV insofar as it applies to the characters themselves. -->
* [[Paranoia Fuel]]: [[Discussed Trope|Extensively talked about]] by the characters themselves. One of the original "Evil US Government quarantines innocent civilians at gunpoint and leaves them to die" plots, it seemed uncharacteristically cynical (even for King) until, say 2005 (as if!) Not to mention Capt. Trips itself.
* [[Passing the Torch]]: {{spoiler|to Larry.}} In their [[Walk Into Mordor|final journey]], Abagail prophesies that "one will fall by the wayside". {{spoiler|Stu}} breaks a leg and convinces the others to go on without him [[Because Destiny Says So]]. They never see him again. {{spoiler|This is because all the others die, in the end, he is fated to [[Bring News Back]]}}.
* [[Passing the Torch]]: {{spoiler|to Larry.}} In their [[Walk Into Mordor|final journey]], Abagail prophesies that "one will fall by the wayside". {{spoiler|Stu}} breaks a leg and convinces the others to go on without him [[Because Destiny Says So]]. They never see him again. {{spoiler|This is because all the others die, in the end, he is fated to [[Bring News Back]]}}.
* [[Pinball Protagonist]]: For all the emphasis put on Stu, Glen, Larry, and Ralph journeying to Vegas to confront Flagg, they don't accomplish much of anything tangible. Of course, this depends on various interpretations of the ending:
* [[Pinball Protagonist]]: For all the emphasis put on Stu, Glen, Larry, and Ralph journeying to Vegas to confront Flagg, they don't accomplish much of anything tangible. Of course, this depends on various interpretations of the ending:
** Without their [[We Need a Distraction|distraction]], {{spoiler|Trashcan Man}} would have been intercepted.
** Without their [[We Need a Distraction|distraction]], {{spoiler|Trashcan Man}} would have been intercepted.
** [[Clap Your Hands If You Believe|A sacrifice was needed]] to [[Because Destiny Says So|fulfill the prophecy]]. Alternatively, they are [[The Ishmael]].
** [[Clap Your Hands If You Believe|A sacrifice was needed]] to [[Because Destiny Says So|fulfill the prophecy]]. Alternatively, they are [[The Ishmael]].
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* [[The Power of Rock]]: In the series at least, Larry takes his guitar (and nothing else) to Las Vegas. A [[Bon Jovi|loaded six-string]] may not help with the forces of darkness...
* [[The Power of Rock]]: In the series at least, Larry takes his guitar (and nothing else) to Las Vegas. A [[Bon Jovi|loaded six-string]] may not help with the forces of darkness...
{{quote|'''Rat-Man:''' ''(smashes guitar)'' [[Deader Than Disco|Disco is]] ''dead!!''}}
{{quote|'''Rat-Man:''' ''(smashes guitar)'' [[Deader Than Disco|Disco is]] ''dead!!''}}
* [[Pragmatic Adaptation]]: The ABC tv mini-series. In order to get the mini-series greenlighted, King had to cull the darker aspects of the novel for network TV, which in turn led to some decent revisions of the story: removing the "female zoo" sequence and expanding upon Nadine and Larry's relationship as far as the two hooking up in the city rather than once Larry's former companion died. Also, while some of the casting decisions (Frannie, Harold and Randall Flagg in particular) were widely reviled, the makers of the series did shockingly well when casting the rest of the cast: Miguel Ferrer as Lloyd Henried, Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man, pre-Hollywood A-List Gary Sinise as Stu Redman, Rob Lowe as Nick Andros and Bill Faggerbakke as Tom Cullen.
* [[Pragmatic Adaptation]]: The ABC TV mini-series. In order to get the mini-series greenlighted, King had to cull the darker aspects of the novel for network TV, which in turn led to some decent revisions of the story: removing the "female zoo" sequence and expanding upon Nadine and Larry's relationship as far as the two hooking up in the city rather than once Larry's former companion died. Also, while some of the casting decisions (Frannie, Harold and Randall Flagg in particular) were widely reviled, the makers of the series did shockingly well when casting the rest of the cast: Miguel Ferrer as Lloyd Henried, Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man, pre-Hollywood A-List Gary Sinise as Stu Redman, Rob Lowe as Nick Andros and Bill Faggerbakke as Tom Cullen.
** I wouldn't say Nadine and Larry's relationship was expanded; they meet earlier in the movie, but they were still given more development in the book.
** I wouldn't say Nadine and Larry's relationship was expanded; they meet earlier in the movie, but they were still given more development in the book.
* [[Pretty Little Headshots]]: In the mini series when the Judge is shot. You can see the bullet holes, but it's nothing like the book description where there was ''nothing left of his face''. Considering the whole reason Flagg was angry at his men was that he wanted the face to be recognizable, this made the scene make a lot less sense.
* [[Pretty Little Headshots]]: In the mini series when the Judge is shot. You can see the bullet holes, but it's nothing like the book description where there was ''nothing left of his face''. Considering the whole reason Flagg was angry at his men was that he wanted the face to be recognizable, this made the scene make a lot less sense.
* [[Psychic Dreams for Everyone]]: of course.
* [[Psychic Dreams for Everyone]]: Of course.
* [[Quirky Miniboss Squad]]: Barry Dorgan's men.
* [[Quirky Miniboss Squad]]: Barry Dorgan's men.
* [[Ravens and Crows]]: Uh oh. There's a corvid perched on a fencepost [http://www.theonion.com/articles/solitary-crow-on-fence-post-portending-doom-analys,2777/ portending ill omens!]
* [[Ravens and Crows]]: Uh oh. There's a corvid perched on a fencepost [http://www.theonion.com/articles/solitary-crow-on-fence-post-portending-doom-analys,2777/ portending ill omens!]
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** Fran imagined her father's garden was part of [[The Lord of the Rings|Middle-Earth]], and compares the [[Ghibli Hills|empty countryside]] to Middle-Earth at another point. Flagg's ''sigil'' is a black stone with a red eye, among other [[Lawyer-Friendly Cameo|similarities]].
** Fran imagined her father's garden was part of [[The Lord of the Rings|Middle-Earth]], and compares the [[Ghibli Hills|empty countryside]] to Middle-Earth at another point. Flagg's ''sigil'' is a black stone with a red eye, among other [[Lawyer-Friendly Cameo|similarities]].
** Stu Redman name-checks ''[[Watership Down]]'' when describing how terrified he felt in the hospital: it made him go ''tharn''.
** Stu Redman name-checks ''[[Watership Down]]'' when describing how terrified he felt in the hospital: it made him go ''tharn''.
** Allusion to an [[ACDC]] song (which had appeared in King's ''[[Maximum Overdrive]]'' movie) in the 1990 revised and expanded edition of the novel, where a survivor of the flu pandemic changes the lyrics to "Flu made who."
** Allusion to an [[ACDC]] song (which had appeared in King's ''[[Maximum Overdrive]]'' movie) in the 1990 revised and expanded edition of the novel, where a survivor of the flu pandemic changes the lyrics to "Flu made who."
** Lest we forget, the book name-checks the works of [[H.P. Lovecraft]]...just like [[Once Per Episode|pretty much every other King work]].
** Lest we forget, the book name-checks the works of [[H.P. Lovecraft]]...just like [[Once Per Episode|pretty much every other King work]].
* [[Squick]]: In-universe: [http://www.walrusmagazine.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/stand-joint.jpg The dead body Larry finds in the lavatory] with a swollen neck the size of a tire. Larry says it had this effect on him despite everything else he'd seen.
* [[Squick]]: In-universe: [https://web.archive.org/web/20140407003031/http://www.walrusmagazine.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/stand-joint.jpg The dead body Larry finds in the lavatory] with a swollen neck the size of a tire. Larry says it had this effect on him despite everything else he'd seen.
* [[The Stinger]]: Added to the Uncut edition, to strengthen the tie with ''[[The Dark Tower]]'': {{spoiler|Randall Flagg wakes up after the nuclear blast in another universe, and begins to take over a society once again. ''Ka'' is referenced.}}
<!-- %% In-work reference to the trope. the other examples of Squick are YMMV. -->
* [[Talking in Your Dreams]]
* [[Take That]]: Several towards [[Ronald Reagan]] (in the 1990 edition). For instance, paraphrased: "<ref>who's under consideration for a member of the committee</ref> is over seventy." "[[Ronald Reagan]] was serving at older than that." "That's not exactly a great recommendation..."
* [[Take That]]: Several towards [[Ronald Reagan]] (in the 1990 edition). For instance, paraphrased: "<ref>who's under consideration for a member of the committee</ref> is over seventy." "[[Ronald Reagan]] was serving at older than that." "That's not exactly a great recommendation..."
* [[Taking You with Me]]: Once America's leadership realizes they're doomed, they deliberately infect other countries (and more importantly, continents) with Captain Trips.
* [[Taking You with Me]]: Once America's leadership realizes they're doomed, they deliberately infect other countries (and more importantly, continents) with Captain Trips.
* [[Talking in Your Dreams]]
* [[Science Is Bad|Technology Is Evil]]: Played straight. This book was written in the '70s and "back to the land" themes are prominent.
* [[Science Is Bad|Technology Is Evil]]: Played straight. This book was written in the '70s and "back to the land" themes are prominent.
** Not to mention Captain Trips is a ''scientifically engineered'' Holocaust.
** Not to mention Captain Trips is a ''scientifically engineered'' Holocaust.
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** Interestingly, the book inverts the typical "[[Magic Versus Science]]" trope: supernatural forces merely take advantage of the sudden, artificially engineered holocaust to initiate the [[Apocalypse How|Apocalypse]] more or less.
** Interestingly, the book inverts the typical "[[Magic Versus Science]]" trope: supernatural forces merely take advantage of the sudden, artificially engineered holocaust to initiate the [[Apocalypse How|Apocalypse]] more or less.
* [[Tempting Fate]]: ''[[Clifftop Caterwauling|"Piece of cake!"]].'' In the miniseries, he [[Genre Blind|says it three times]] while climbing the washout.
* [[Tempting Fate]]: ''[[Clifftop Caterwauling|"Piece of cake!"]].'' In the miniseries, he [[Genre Blind|says it three times]] while climbing the washout.
* [[The Stinger]]: Added to the Uncut edition, to strengthen the tie with ''[[The Dark Tower]]'': {{spoiler|Randall Flagg wakes up after the nuclear blast in another universe, and begins to take over a society once again. ''Ka'' is referenced.}}
* [[Throwaway Country]]: {{spoiler|A divine wind}} ensures that Los Angeles gets the short end of a {{spoiler|nuclear fallout incident}} entirely offscreen, thereby sparing the good guys. Don't even ask what happened to other countries.
* [[Throwaway Country]]: {{spoiler|A divine wind}} ensures that Los Angeles gets the short end of a {{spoiler|nuclear fallout incident}} entirely offscreen, thereby sparing the good guys. Don't even ask what happened to other countries.
* [[Title Drop]]: Abagail, during her {{spoiler|[[Final Speech]]}}. <small>"And with God's help, you will '''Stand'''..."</small>
* [[Title Drop]]: Abagail, during her {{spoiler|[[Final Speech]]}}. <small>"And with God's help, you will '''Stand'''..."</small>
* [[Too Dumb to Live]]: During the chapter where King describes all the people killed in the aftermath of the outbreak, a heroin addict injects some of the drug into his system. The highest purity he ever hit was 12%, and that put him into a comatose sleep. The stash he comes across is a fresh delivery to a dealer, and he doesn't consider that the dealer hadn't had a chance to "cut" the purity before succumbing to the super-flu, so he unwittingly injects himself with 96% pure heroin. No great loss.
* [[Too Dumb to Live]]: During the chapter where King describes all the people killed in the aftermath of the outbreak, a heroin addict injects some of the drug into his system. The highest purity he ever hit was 12%, and that put him into a comatose sleep. The stash he comes across is a fresh delivery to a dealer, and he doesn't consider that the dealer hadn't had a chance to "cut" the purity before succumbing to the super-flu, so he unwittingly injects himself with 96% pure heroin. No great loss.
* [[Totally Radical]]: Teenage characters unironically calling cops 'pigs', which even in 1980 was a rather dated insult and had become all the more so when the setting had been updated to 1990.
* [[Totally Radical]]: Teenage characters unironically calling cops 'pigs', which even in 1980 was a rather dated insult and had become all the more so when the setting had been updated to 1990.
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* [[The Unfavourite]]: Frannie seems to have been this to her mother.
* [[The Unfavourite]]: Frannie seems to have been this to her mother.
** Harold was also one of these, apparently.
** Harold was also one of these, apparently.
* [[Vagueness Is Coming]]: In the miniseries version of ''The Stand'', Mother [[Magical Negro|Abagail]] helpfully informs the heroes: ''"The Beast is loose in the fields of Bethlehem. The rats are in the corn!"'' She also says:
* [[Vagueness Is Coming]]: In the miniseries version of ''The Stand'', Mother [[Magical Negro|Abagail]] helpfully informs the heroes: ''"The Beast is loose in the fields of Bethlehem. The rats are in the corn!"'' She also says:
** [[A Storm Is Coming]]. ...'''''[[He Who Must Not Be Named|His]]''''' storm!" And "the rats are his."
** [[A Storm Is Coming]]. ...'''''[[He Who Must Not Be Named|His]]''''' storm!" And "the rats are his."
* [[Walk Into Mordor]]: The third act of the book centers on one. See above.
* [[Walk Into Mordor]]: The third act of the book centers on one. See above.
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* [[Wham! Line]]: {{spoiler|"After all, why else could he suddenly do magic?"}}
* [[Wham! Line]]: {{spoiler|"After all, why else could he suddenly do magic?"}}
* [[What a Senseless Waste of Human Life]]
* [[What a Senseless Waste of Human Life]]
* [[Who Watches the Watchmen?]]: The escape of Campion, the security guard at the research facility who spreads Captain Trips beyond hope of containment, is explained thusly:
* [[Who Watches the Watchmen?]]: The escape of Campion, the security guard at the research facility who spreads Captain Trips beyond hope of containment, is explained thusly:
{{quote|"He drove through the main gate just four minutes before the sirens started going off and we sealed off the whole base. And no one started looking for him until nearly an hour later because there are no monitors in the security posts--somewhere along the line you have to stop guarding the guardians or everyone in the world would be a goddamn turnkey...."}}
{{quote|"He drove through the main gate just four minutes before the sirens started going off and we sealed off the whole base. And no one started looking for him until nearly an hour later because there are no monitors in the security posts--somewhere along the line you have to stop guarding the guardians or everyone in the world would be a goddamn turnkey...."}}
* [[Widow Woman]]: Rita Blakemoor.
* [[Widow Woman]]: Rita Blakemoor.
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* [[A World Half Full]]: figuratively speaking!
* [[A World Half Full]]: figuratively speaking!
** Certainly at some point not too far into the story, [[Fridge Horror|literally speaking]]!
** Certainly at some point not too far into the story, [[Fridge Horror|literally speaking]]!
* [[Writer on Board]]: Glen Bateman is somewhere between [[The Obi-Wan]], [[The Professor]] and [[Mr. Exposition]].
* [[Yank the Dog's Chain]]: Barry Dorgan teases and insults Trash, making him realize that Flagg's underlings are just like the people who used to humiliate him, who Flagg promised to protect him from.
* [[Yank the Dog's Chain]]: Barry Dorgan teases and insults Trash, making him realize that Flagg's underlings are just like the people who used to humiliate him, who Flagg promised to protect him from.
* [[You Have Failed Me]]: Poor Bobby Terry.
* [[You Have Failed Me...]]: Poor Bobby Terry.
** "There were worse things than crucifixion. There were teeth."
** "There were worse things than crucifixion. There were teeth."


{{reflist}}
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{{The Big Read}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Stand, The}}

Latest revision as of 20:58, 22 August 2023

The Stand
First edition cover
Written by: Stephen King
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Genre(s): Post-apocalyptic fantasy
First published: October 3, 1978
v · d · e

Graffiti written on the front of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta in red spray paint:
"Dear Jesus. I will see you soon. Your friend, America. PS. I hope you will still have some vacancies by the end of the week."

One of Stephen King's most well regarded (and thickest) books, The Stand is a classic work of modern apocalyptic fiction. It is the book which introduces (and primarily describes, on Earth at least) King's most famous villain and "antichrist" figure, Randall Flagg.

King set out to write "An American The Lord of the Rings", although he later demurred as to whether he was successful. Still, it is often rated his most popular book, and, along with IT, one of the most important works of King's early period.

The story concerns the travels and travails of well over a dozen characters following intersecting story arcs across the United States during and after an apocalyptic Super-Flu (nicknamed Captain Trips) kills 99.4 percent of humanity. The survivors are drawn into two camps on either side of the Rocky Mountains: One headed by the 108-year old, Moses-like Mother Abagail, is based in Boulder, CO; the other based in Las Vegas is headed by the demonic Flagg.

First published in 1978, the novel was reissued in 1990 in a "complete and uncut edition" containing about 400 additional pages of material from King's original manuscript.

A eight hour made-for-TV miniseries based on the novel aired for four nights on ABC in 1994. As of late 2011, a theatrical adaptation is being attempted for the second time-the first attempt was made during the 1980s and failed because of the difficulty adapting such a long novel for a big screen release, and the novel's dependence on narration to tell the story.

Not to be confused with the manifestations of one's inner powers in JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.

Tropes used in The Stand include:
  • Abandoned Hospital: The Stovington hospital.
  • Adaptation Distillation: The Marvel Comics adaptation. Helps that it features a lot of the darker stuff that was cut from the network TV mini-series adaptation due to content issues, as well as exploring the psyches of several characters like Harold Lauder, who were given the short shift in the TV mini-series.
  • After the End: The world of The Stand goes through an apocalypse and then focuses on the struggles of the survivors against the Dark Man of the west.
  • Alas, Poor Villain: In-universe, this is Stu's response to Harold E Lauder's death in both the book and miniseries.
  • Anyone Can Die
  • Apocalypse How: Class 1, verging on Class 2.
  • Apocalyptic Log: The whole sub-plot with Cmdr. Starkey. Also, Fran's diary.
  • Arcadia: New England, Boulder.
  • Arc Words: "My life for you!" "M.O.O.N. That spells _____."
    • Crowning Moment of Funny, which is rare for King: Eventually, "M.O.O.N. and that spells moon."
    • A minor one, but: No great loss.
  • Audience Surrogate: Frannie, Stu, Nick, and Larry, for the most part.
  • Babies Ever After: Played with. The first baby to be born after the plague is only partially immune, due to having only one immune parent, and quickly dies. The first main character's baby is likewise partially immune, but survives.
  • Balls of Fire: Flagg releases an Energy Ball in the final book.
  • Because Destiny Says So
  • Beneath the Earth: The Lincoln Tunnel. Also, the Eisenhower Tunnel between Boulder and Flagg's realm.
  • Big Damn Villains: When Flagg saves Trashy from The Kid. Granted, it was just to advance Flagg's plans, but it was pretty sweet when Trashy walked away from the car with his new wolf friends, giving The Kid the finger and screaming many of the things The Kid said to him. Of course, he was sexually assaulted with a handgun before he got there.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Arguably downgraded to Downer Ending with the addition of the coda in the expanded edition.
    • Debatably still Bittersweet Ending; Russell Faraday is in an alternate Earth, which implies that the Earth he was in is more or less "spared" from HIS further torment. King has always used Flagg as an immortal harbinger of evil, so this is more of a Here We Go Again. He's on another level of The Dark Tower.
  • Black and White Morality: Look at that cover illustration.
  • Boom! Headshot!: Flagg sends two Mooks to capture the Judge and bring back his head with the face undamaged. When one gets trigger-happy, he accidentally catches the Judge in the head, leading to the You Have Failed Me... moment.
  • Bring Her To Me: Dayna Jurgens
  • Bring News Back: Doubles as The Untwist.
  • But Thou Must!: Frannie doesn't buy it.
  • The Call Knows Where You Live
  • Cameo: Several in the miniseries, including Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (as the "monster shouter"), Joe Bob Briggs, Sam Raimi, and John Landis.
  • Canon Immigrant / Ensemble Darkhorse: Flagg became a recurring villain. In Eyes of the Dragon he's an Evil Chancellor and hinted to have been an executioner from the kingdom's dark past. In The Dark Tower, he was revealed to be Roland's primary nemesis. We learn he can reincarnate.
  • Canon Welding: The Stand became part of The Dark Tower continuity (as did most of King's work).
  • Captain Ersatz: The symbol of Flagg is a red Eye, which he uses to mentally scan the countryside. He's also a shapeshifter. Hmmmmm...
  • Catch Phrase - Somewhat, more in the miniseries than the book. Larry's hit song "Baby Can You Dig Your Man" is often sung by characters (ex. Trash and Glen in the movie, Joe and others in the book).
    • You come see me, ___. You and all your friends.
  • Chandler's Law: According to King, Harold's bomb was caused by him having writer's block, and feeling the heroes were getting complacent in Boulder.
  • Character Development: Larry starts off as a selfish, arrogant Jerkass, but gradually grows enough to become the de facto leader of the heroes after Stu gets injured en route to Las Vegas.
  • Chaste Character: Nadine, for unfortunate reasons.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The nuclear weapons out in the desert.
  • City of Gold: Cibola! Seven-in-One! Las Vegas appears this way to Trash in a mirage.
  • Closest Thing We Got: Since they are trying to rebuild society from scratch there is a lot of this going on.
    • Stu Redman is forced to perform an appendectomy. Later on, the Free Zone is forced to rely on a veterinarian until a doctor arrives.
  • Composite Character: Nadine + Rita (miniseries).
    • The miniseries also gave some of Nadine's sub-plots to Lucy.
  • Cozy Catastrophe: Doesn't start out that way, but becomes one by novel's end.
  • Covers Always Lie: The scene on the cover doesn't happen in the novel.
  • Creator Provincialism: Subverted, since the action ranges across the country, not just in Maine.
    • On the other hand, King was living in Boulder at the time, and half the story is set on various carefully identified locales in that small town.
    • King has said he regretted not mentioning what happens to the rest of the world... beyond speculation that there may be rival Flaggs popping up all over the globe in an apparent violation of the villain playbook.
    • The book does make clear that the people running Project Blue deliberately spread it around the world once it's clear that there's no hope of saving America from annihilation.
  • Dark Is Evil: The Dark Man, Randall Flagg.
  • Dead Ex Machina: The spirit of Nick Andros leads Tom Cullen to save Stu's life.
  • Deadly Game: During the outbreak, a "junta" of defected black soldiers hold a large number of regulars hostage in a game show studio, drawing their names at random from a drum and killing them one by one on camera.
  • Dear Diary: Guess who reads Fran's Secret Diary?
  • Death by Irony: Harold spends at least two chapters writing and recording a Take That speech to be played by his bomb before it explodes. Nick, the only deaf character, is the only person in the house when it detonates.
  • Depopulation Bomb
  • Deus Ex Machina
  • Did Not Do the Research: The book mentions flyers being posted at the University of Kentucky Louisville Campus. No such campus has ever existed (though there is, incidentally, a University of Louisville...).
    • Chocolate still doesn't give you pimples. The chocolate Payday bars are often assumed to be this, but there *were* chocolate Paydays released several times (known as Payday Avalanche).
    • A particularly large medical DNDTR appears in the movie, in which researchers at the isolation center in Vermont watch as a character suddenly wakes up, rips the IVs out of his arm, rips out his endotracheal tube, and suffocates to death. Not only would a patient who'd been intubated be restrained at the wrists, sedated heavily, and possibly kept chemically paralyzed, but according to descriptions of the disease itself any victim in need of a ventilator would be already be too weak to move.
  • Disaster Democracy: Instituted (albeit in a modified form) in Boulder.
  • The Dog Bites Back: Trash blows up the airfield.
  • Doomed Expedition: Most of the trips west to Las Vegas. The surviving protagonists discover they must walk there with no food or packs. When they protest and suggest stocking up on canned food and a snowmobile, Glen Bateman says "That was the old world, and the old way was a death trip."
  • Doorstopper: Many editions, especially foreign language ones, go so far as to split it up into multiple books (incidentally, this actually becomes a plot point in 20th Century Boys, which is basically the Japanese version of The Stand).
  • Drama Bomb: Literal in this case.
  • Dreaming of Things to Come
  • Driven to Suicide: Rita, whom Larry survived the Lincoln Tunnel with, commits suicide in his sleeping bag. Also Starkey and several others who were involved in Project Blue.
  • Due to the Dead: Frannie Goldsmith burying her father in his garden, told in painful and realistic detail.
    • The leaders in Boulder say that this is why they created the Burial Committee which buries the victims of the Superflu. Actually, they did it for health reasons, they just don't tell it to the people because they don't want to cause panic.
  • Dying Town: Arnette, Texas, where the novel opens, is one of these even before the Captain Trips outbreak. Of course, every city and town becomes one of these as the virus spreads.
  • Dystopia Is Hard: As Flagg finds out to his everlasting annoyance.
  • Emergency Presidential Address
  • Empathy Doll Shot: In the opening credits of the miniseries.
  • The End of the World as We Know It: Lampshaded. The characters speculate on what will happen to all those corpses, how life will never be the same, etc.
    • In the Made for TV Movie, Larry Underwood actually plays guitar and sings Barry Mcguire's "Eve of Destruction", a song about the End Of The World, on the outskirts of Des Moines. Which was on fire.
  • Ensemble Cast
  • The Epic: National/"Biblical" variety.
  • Escape From the Crazy Place / Survival Horror: Stovington Hospital.
  • Escort Mission: Larry and Rita leaving New York.
  • Everybody's Dead, Dave
  • Evil Tower of Ominousness: The MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas.
  • Evil Will Fail: Randall Flagg's half of civilization begins to deteriorate when the presence of so many volatile personalities mix in one society, fear stops being as effective for control, and every minor failure makes the Big Bad himself go into fits of rage and lose his focus, causing errors in judgement.
  • Exact Words / The Untwist: Mother Abagail's final prophecy.
  • Eye Scream: Ray Booth grinds his thumbs into Nick's eyes while fighting him in the Shoyo jail. Nick subsequently loses sight in one eye and spends much of the rest of the book wearing a patch over it.
  • Failsafe Failure
  • Field Promotion: Several characters get one, most notably Nick.
  • Filk Song: "Among The Living" by the band Anthrax is a rock anthem about "The Walkin' Dude".
  • For the Evulz
  • Gender Flip: Fran's child, Peter, is Abagail in the miniseries.
    • Also the one-scene character of Ray Flowers becomes Raye Flowers.
  • Ghibli Hills: America after the plague.
  • Gone Horribly Wrong
  • Good Hurts Evil: Characters drawn to Flagg are afraid of Mother Abagail in her dreams.
  • Government Conspiracy: The creation of the virus, and the attempt to suppress news of its outbreak, culminating in Stu's abandonment and near-death, is dwelt on. Various military misadventures occur offscreen; see Paranoia Fuel.
  • Green Aesop: Nearly everyone on the planet dies. The planet got better, however.
  • Hidden Elf Village: The Boulder Free Zone. Has nothing to do with falling rocks.
  • High Fantasy
  • Hit So Hard the Calendar Felt It: Randall Flagg tells the date as "this thirtieth day of September, the year nineteen hundred and ninety, now known as The Year One, year of the plague."
  • I Just Shot Marvin in the Face: Several times, most notably Bobby Terry.
  • Ill Guy: ...everyone, really; but especially Fran's dad in the miniseries.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: A truly epic one; "You might say he never flagged in his devotion."
  • Incurable Cough of Death: Played totally, totally straight. If a character coughs or sneezes, chances are they're a goner.
    • So straight that when Stu fakes a coughing fit to spite his caregiver-captors in Stovington, it sends them into a complete panic until he reveals the joke.
  • Infant Immortality: Averted, since the flu doesn't spare the children.
  • The Infiltration: The Boulder leadership sends Judge Farris, Dayna Jurgens and Tom Cullen to Las Vegas to join (and spy on) Flagg's operation.
  • It Got Worse: First a plague wipes out most of humanity. Then a demonic drifter tries to conquer what's left. Finally, the ending reveals that he survived a freaking nuclear weapon, and is scheming anew. Then again, after 99.7% of humanity has been destroyed, the entire Randall Flagg situation seems rather tame in comparison. Also, Flagg's empire seems well on its way of falling apart on its own without any action by the hero characters in typical Stephen King style.
  • I Want Them Alive: "Flagg wants them taken alive."
  • Kick the Dog: Flagg runs into an innocent fawn. "Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub!"
  • Kill'Em All: 99.4% pure example of this trope.
    • Even among the main characters, the death rate is pretty high.
  • Kirk Summation: Whitney Horgan's speech is cut short.
  • Large Ham: A few in the miniseries, notably Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man and Laura San Giacomo as Nadine.
  • The Last DJ: Ray Flowers. Literally.
  • Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition: The 1100 page "complete and uncut" edition.
  • Loads and Loads of Characters: Ten or twenty main characters following separate arcs in disparate locales. See here.
  • Look Behind You!: Stu Redman tells the "doctor" who's been sent to terminate him at the Stovington hospital that there's a huge rat behind him, then hits him over the head with a chair.
  • Lost in Translation: The Italian title of the book is "L'Ombra dello Scorpione" ("The Shadow of the Scorpion"). There are NO SCORPIONS in the book (of any relevance to the plot, anyway), either literal or metaphorical. None at all. Anywhere. Seriously, WTF?!?
    • Its mentioned by Flagg and other characters that he (Flagg) can possess scorpions.
  • Lovecraft Country: uncharacteristically averted. New England ends up being the Arcadia that the two surviving heroes return to. Just avoid the hospitals in New England, as always.
  • Magical Negro
  • Magical Realism: It's a story about the conflict between humanity and itself. And Old Scratch.
  • Mauve Shirt: Many characters.
  • May-December Romance: Larry and Rita.
  • Monochrome Casting: In both the book and the mini series, the only two non-Caucasian characters are Abagail and the Judge. Other than that, every single character stated to be black (book version) is either dead or joined up with Flagg. In many cases in the novel, the character's race is not mentioned.
    • Leo is Chinese. We know this because Stephen King feels the need to describe his "queer, dark Chinese eyes" every time he looks at Larry.
  • Mordor: Las Vegas. Truth in Television no less!
  • The Mountains of Illinois: In the TV Miniseries adaptation, Trash Can Man's arson incidents in Gary, Indiana and Des Moines, Iowa, are both shown with rugged mountains in the background, because they were filmed in New Mexico.
  • New Eden: Discussed by Glen Bateman, who suggests Ludd Was Right.
  • Next Sunday A.D.: Originally set in 1980, updated to 1990 in the expanded version. The inspiration for Flagg was Donald DeFreeze, the Patty Hearst kidnapper (another inspiration was then-current cult leader Jim Jones).
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Barry Dorgan insults Trash at the airfield, causing him to revert to his old ways.
  • Non-Indicative Name: Captain Trips.
    • Possibly a justified name- it's military in origin, and causes hallucinations and delusions. Though, clearly, it has more to do with Jerry Garcia.
  • No One Gets Left Behind: See Passing the Torch below.
  • Our Nudity Is Different: Abagail remembers appearing on a talent show back in 1902. Before her, a woman performed a "racy French dance", showing her ankles.
  • Paranoia Fuel: Extensively talked about by the characters themselves. One of the original "Evil US Government quarantines innocent civilians at gunpoint and leaves them to die" plots, it seemed uncharacteristically cynical (even for King) until, say 2005 (as if!) Not to mention Capt. Trips itself.
  • Passing the Torch: to Larry. In their final journey, Abagail prophesies that "one will fall by the wayside". Stu breaks a leg and convinces the others to go on without him Because Destiny Says So. They never see him again. This is because all the others die, in the end, he is fated to Bring News Back.
  • Pinball Protagonist: For all the emphasis put on Stu, Glen, Larry, and Ralph journeying to Vegas to confront Flagg, they don't accomplish much of anything tangible. Of course, this depends on various interpretations of the ending:
  • A Pirate 400 Years Too Late: The Rat-Man
  • The Plague: Captain Trips, in its early stages, is indistinguishable from a common cold or a flu except by a doctor who knows what to look for.
  • Poke in the Third Eye: Tom does this to Flagg, who does it to Mother Abagail.
  • The Power of Rock: In the series at least, Larry takes his guitar (and nothing else) to Las Vegas. A loaded six-string may not help with the forces of darkness...

Rat-Man: (smashes guitar) Disco is dead!!

  • Pragmatic Adaptation: The ABC TV mini-series. In order to get the mini-series greenlighted, King had to cull the darker aspects of the novel for network TV, which in turn led to some decent revisions of the story: removing the "female zoo" sequence and expanding upon Nadine and Larry's relationship as far as the two hooking up in the city rather than once Larry's former companion died. Also, while some of the casting decisions (Frannie, Harold and Randall Flagg in particular) were widely reviled, the makers of the series did shockingly well when casting the rest of the cast: Miguel Ferrer as Lloyd Henried, Matt Frewer as Trashcan Man, pre-Hollywood A-List Gary Sinise as Stu Redman, Rob Lowe as Nick Andros and Bill Faggerbakke as Tom Cullen.
    • I wouldn't say Nadine and Larry's relationship was expanded; they meet earlier in the movie, but they were still given more development in the book.
  • Pretty Little Headshots: In the mini series when the Judge is shot. You can see the bullet holes, but it's nothing like the book description where there was nothing left of his face. Considering the whole reason Flagg was angry at his men was that he wanted the face to be recognizable, this made the scene make a lot less sense.
  • Psychic Dreams for Everyone: Of course.
  • Quirky Miniboss Squad: Barry Dorgan's men.
  • Ravens and Crows: Uh oh. There's a corvid perched on a fencepost portending ill omens!
  • Refusal of the Call: Several characters refuse to acknowledge the dreams.
  • Scenery Gorn
  • Send in the Search Team: Ignoring the dreams, Harold insists that help will be found at the Stovington Hospital where Stu was imprisoned and left to die.
  • Shoot the Shaggy Dog: A chapter is devoted to vignettes of plague survivors who succumbed to gruesome accidents because they were reckless and/or lacked the interpersonal support they could have expected from normal pre-plague society. One plague survivor is literally Stuffed Into the Fridge and dies of suffocation.
  • Shout-Out: "Captain Trips" was originally a nickname of Jerry Garcia. King had first used it much earlier, for another Superflu, in his Night Shift story "Night Surf".
  • Squick: In-universe: The dead body Larry finds in the lavatory with a swollen neck the size of a tire. Larry says it had this effect on him despite everything else he'd seen.
  • The Stinger: Added to the Uncut edition, to strengthen the tie with The Dark Tower: Randall Flagg wakes up after the nuclear blast in another universe, and begins to take over a society once again. Ka is referenced.
  • Take That: Several towards Ronald Reagan (in the 1990 edition). For instance, paraphrased: "[1] is over seventy." "Ronald Reagan was serving at older than that." "That's not exactly a great recommendation..."
  • Taking You with Me: Once America's leadership realizes they're doomed, they deliberately infect other countries (and more importantly, continents) with Captain Trips.
  • Talking in Your Dreams
  • Technology Is Evil: Played straight. This book was written in the '70s and "back to the land" themes are prominent.
    • Not to mention Captain Trips is a scientifically engineered Holocaust.
    • Flagg is described as "the last magician of rational thought." Also, Glen speculates that Flagg is drawing all the "rationalist, engineer types" who want to quickly get the old society back up and running, military and all, while Mother Abagail attracts those seeking a Hidden Elf Village or Utopia and struggles to turn on the lights. It's not suggested that Straw Atheists are attracted to Flagg, however; merely people looking for quick solutions.
    • Interestingly, the book inverts the typical "Magic Versus Science" trope: supernatural forces merely take advantage of the sudden, artificially engineered holocaust to initiate the Apocalypse more or less.
  • Tempting Fate: "Piece of cake!". In the miniseries, he says it three times while climbing the washout.
  • Throwaway Country: A divine wind ensures that Los Angeles gets the short end of a nuclear fallout incident entirely offscreen, thereby sparing the good guys. Don't even ask what happened to other countries.
  • Title Drop: Abagail, during her Final Speech. "And with God's help, you will Stand..."
  • Too Dumb to Live: During the chapter where King describes all the people killed in the aftermath of the outbreak, a heroin addict injects some of the drug into his system. The highest purity he ever hit was 12%, and that put him into a comatose sleep. The stash he comes across is a fresh delivery to a dealer, and he doesn't consider that the dealer hadn't had a chance to "cut" the purity before succumbing to the super-flu, so he unwittingly injects himself with 96% pure heroin. No great loss.
  • Totally Radical: Teenage characters unironically calling cops 'pigs', which even in 1980 was a rather dated insult and had become all the more so when the setting had been updated to 1990.
  • Trains Run On Time: Las Vegas gets the utilities running in their city much more quickly than Boulder, and discipline is harshly enforced, with crucifixion being a common punishment for crimes as petty as recreational drug use.
  • True Companions: Stu, Larry, Glen and Ralph. There's also:
    • Stu, Frannie, Harold, and Glen.
    • Larry, Nadine, Joe, and Lucy, along with Rita.
    • Nick, Tom, Ralph, and Mother Abagail.
  • Typhoid Mary: Campion; the second he and his family made it off the base and encountered other people, it was already entirely too late to contain Trips.
  • The Unfavourite: Frannie seems to have been this to her mother.
    • Harold was also one of these, apparently.
  • Vagueness Is Coming: In the miniseries version of The Stand, Mother Abagail helpfully informs the heroes: "The Beast is loose in the fields of Bethlehem. The rats are in the corn!" She also says:
  • Walk Into Mordor: The third act of the book centers on one. See above.
  • We Are Not Going Through That Again: Stu and Fran's reason for leaving Boulder.
  • Wham! Line: "After all, why else could he suddenly do magic?"
  • What a Senseless Waste of Human Life
  • Who Watches the Watchmen?: The escape of Campion, the security guard at the research facility who spreads Captain Trips beyond hope of containment, is explained thusly:

"He drove through the main gate just four minutes before the sirens started going off and we sealed off the whole base. And no one started looking for him until nearly an hour later because there are no monitors in the security posts--somewhere along the line you have to stop guarding the guardians or everyone in the world would be a goddamn turnkey...."

  1. who's under consideration for a member of the committee