(I had to fight with chat gpt to even get this response):
Yes, in Stephen King's "It," there is a scene where the children engage in sexual acts during a pivotal moment meant to symbolize their bond and shared trauma. This scene has been widely criticized and is considered controversial due to its implications and portrayal of childhood. The depiction raises significant concerns and has sparked extensive debate among readers and critics regarding its appropriateness and meaning within the broader context of the story.
Steven King is a manufactured literary figure. Ive read some of his books. They are boring as fuck with the endings contrived and unsatisfactory. Neil Gaiman, another propped up hack, is now facing dozens of sexual abuse allegations as the scifi/fantasy community circles the wagons in his defense. George RR Martin is another hack that wrote himself into such a circle he couldnt finish his own work. After watching nothing but faggots and dicks through the episodes of GoT I watched, I am sure he too is a pedo.
wtf?! That explains a LOT.
(I had to fight with chat gpt to even get this response):
Steven King is a manufactured literary figure. Ive read some of his books. They are boring as fuck with the endings contrived and unsatisfactory. Neil Gaiman, another propped up hack, is now facing dozens of sexual abuse allegations as the scifi/fantasy community circles the wagons in his defense. George RR Martin is another hack that wrote himself into such a circle he couldnt finish his own work. After watching nothing but faggots and dicks through the episodes of GoT I watched, I am sure he too is a pedo.
I notice a pattern here.
The scifi/fantasy genre has serious problems.
The next Stephen King novel worth reading will be the first.