This is an abridged version of the Stephen King review of this audio cassette (September 19, 2003, publication of this article in ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY):
"My gig at EW isn't writing book reviews, but I can still state with a fair degree of certainty that Ron McLarty's THE MEMORY OF RUNNING is the best novel you won't read this year. but you can experience it, and I'm all but positive that you'll thank me for the tip if you do.
"MEMORY is the story of 279-pound Smithson Ide, a smokes-too-much, drinks-too-much, eats-too-much haert attack waiting to happen. I mean, this gy is a mess -- a lovely, addled, mess. And then one day, Smithy finds himself riding across American with his 'fat ass' handing over the seat of his boyhood bycycle. He's on his way from Rhode Island [Ron graduated from Rhode Island College's theatre department!] to LA -- where he aims to retrieve his sister's body from the couty morgue -- and along hte road he meets a parade of colorful characters. Unlike Huck Finn's adventures, Smithy's don't amount to literature, but they are always entertaining and sometimes wildly funny. . . .
[Ron McLarty, "an actor, playwright, and chronic insomniac who scribbled the tale of Smithy Ide in the wee hours of the morning, on a succession of yellow legal pads," could not get his novel published, but, because he worked as a narrator at Recorded Books, he was able to make an audio cassette of his novel, which King read during his long convalescence after he was hit by a car. He is so impressed with this novel that he wrote this essay. He admits, the first couple of chapters drag, but -- with wise editing -- it will definitely improve. To continue King's essay:]
"That THE MEMORY OF RUNNING has found its own little performance stage is a miracle. I hope it won't be a wasted miracle. What I hope is that you'll order a copy and experience it for yourself; I hope, in fact, that EW readers will inundate Recorded Books with orders for Smithy (Smithie?) Ide's adventures. Let's make a little history here, what do you say? If that happens, the book probably will be published. . . . No, it's hot literature (please remember I said that), but it's bighearted and as satisfying as one of your mom's home-cooked Sunday dinners.
"So why not ride across America with Smithy and root for him as he loses weight, falls in love, and rediscovers life? You'll be striking a low for the good old American novel. More important, you'll do the stuff good novels are supposed to make you do -- laugh a little, cry a little, maybe ride (or jog) an extra time around the block in order to find out what happens next. You'll also discover a fine American voice . . . and actually get to hear it talking.
"Do I want some of the credit if this nice thing happens?
"You know I do.
"Tell 'em Steve sent you."
Just after this article was published, on October 6, 2003, on the online version of VARIETY magainze (the entertainment industry's professional magazine), this was published:
"Warner Bros. will pay high six against seven figures for screen rights to the Ron McLarty novel 'The Memory of Running.' Two weeks ago the book received a column endorsement from Stephen King, leading to a $2 million Viking Penguin deal. McLarty will write the script.
"All this for a book McLarty wrote in 1988 about a 43-year-old, 279-pound assembly line supervisor who grieves the car crash death of his parents by getting on a Raleigh bicycle in his funeral suit and pedaling cross-country."
Thanks, Steve. Ya done good!