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4[[quoteright:251:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/darkhalf1.png]]
5[[caption-width-right:251:The sparrows are flying again…]]
6
7''The Dark Half'' is a 1989 novel by Creator/StephenKing.
8
9Thad Beaumont is a [[MostWritersAreWriters novelist]] who writes gory crime thrillers under the pseudonym of George Stark. Following an unsuccessful blackmail attempt, Thad resolves to put the pseudonym to rest, going so far as to hold a symbolic funeral and erect a headstone for the late Stark. Not long afterwards, someone with Thad's fingerprints and going by the name of George Stark starts killing people...
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11Was made into a feature-length film in 1993, directed by Creator/GeorgeARomero and starring Creator/TimothyHutton as Thad and Creator/MichaelRooker as Sheriff Alan Pangborn.
12----
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14!!''The Dark Half'' provides examples of:
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16* AdaptationalVillainy: Steve Brown, who discovered in real life that "Richard Bachman" was Stephen King, was just an innocent store clerk who happened to notice writing similarities and, using the Library of Congress, determined that Bachman was King's pen name. King's response was to phone him, suggest he write an article on how he learned the truth, and agreed to an on-the-spot interview. Fred Clawson, Brown's expy, instead decides to try and blackmail Thad when he learns the truth about him being George Stark. Thad, like King, had kept it a secret mostly to preserve the mystery, and thus Clawson's plan failed. Brown didn't even try to blackmail King; he just wrote to King's publishers and asked what to do.
17* TheAlcoholic: Thad. He's on the wagon through the book (it's mentioned that even cooking items and mouthwash in the Beaumont household are of the alcohol-free variety). When he's mentioned in ''Literature/NeedfulThings'', he's relapsed.
18* AnimalMotif: Sparrows.
19* ArcWords: "The sparrows are flying again."
20* AssholeVictim: Not many people will feel sorry for Fred Clawson when Stark kills him, considering he was a blackmailer.
21* AuthorAvatar: Thad Beaumont, to an extent. Stephen King has written (and still does, occasionally) under the pseudonym of Richard Bachman, and he treats Bachman like a separate person, even giving him a separate biography in Bachman novels. He wrote ''The Dark Half'' partly to explore that idea in a literal sense.
22* BigBad: George Stark, Thad Beaumont’s EvilTwin and pen-name who died in utero but was resurrected when Thad revealed his identity and killed him off. He seeks revenge on the people who caused his death and makes Thad write a novel with him to allow him to live again.
23* BlackmailBackfire: The whole plot is kicked off when a man named Fred Clawson discovers the link between Beaumont and Stark, then tries to blackmail him, threatening to reveal to the media that Beaumont and Stark are the same person. However, Beaumont was already considering giving up his pseudonym, and this blackmail attempt is the final push he needs to reveal his secret to the media and officially declare Stark dead, leaving Clawson with nothing. As if that wasn't bad enough for the unsuccessful blackmailer, it gets worse when "Stark" comes to life as a separate entity and begins a murder spree to hunt for Beaumont. One of his first victims is Clawson since it was his blackmail attempt that drove Beaumont to kill off Stark in the first place.
24* BittersweetEnding: Stark is destroyed, but it's [[ContinuityNod revealed]] in ''Literature/NeedfulThings'' and ''Literature/BagOfBones'' that [[spoiler: the psychological scars left by the ordeal drove Thad to [[OffTheWagon drink]] and ruined his marriage, and eventually he killed himself.]]
25* BodyHorror: Stark's body as he "loses cohesion" starts to decay and rot.
26* CanAlwaysSpotACop: After one of his murders, Stark is hiding near the scene when a black man dressed in ridiculously stereotypical 80s clothing goes running by to check out the scene. Stark is amused and thinks to himself about how cops just can't seem to stop themselves from going over the top when dressing "undercover". He thinks the guy might as well be carrying around a giant sign saying "I am a police officer" in bold letters.
27* CoolOldGuy: Homer Gamache, a friendly old man and war hero who lost an arm serving in the Korean War.
28* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Stark's specialty, with a special mention to Fred Clawson and Homer Gamache’s deaths.
29* CluelessDeputy: Norris Ridgewick.
30* CompositeCharacter: In the film, Homer Gamache is given the role of Phyllis Myers as the photographer who suggests making the mock grave for Stark, but keeps his prosthetic limb and the dubious honor of being Stark's first victim.
31* {{Dedication}}: The book is dedicated to the late Richard Bachman.
32* DraggedOffToHell: [[spoiler: Stark is carried off back to the afterlife by tens of thousands of sparrows.]]
33* DrivenToSuicide: ''Literature/BagOfBones'' reveals that [[spoiler: following the events of this novel, the traumatized Thad saw his marriage disintegrate and eventually killed himself.]]
34* EnemyWithout: This should be self-explanatory.
35* EvilSmellsBad: A policeman inspecting the car George Stark had used earlier notes that it smells hostile and animalistic. Stark also falls into this trope later in the book, being followed by the stench of his own decaying body.
36* EvilTwin: If Stark was really Thad's vanished twin, he could be considered this.
37* EyeScream: During Thad's childhood his fetal twin begins to regrow ''in his brain'' including an eyeball and several teeth. A surgeon lances the eyeball and extracts it. Cut to the future where Thad is an author writing crime fiction about a character who -- you guessed it -- lances someone's eyeball with a paperclip.
38** Stark shoots Phyllis Myers right in the eye.
39* FauxAffablyEvil: Stark is perfectly genial to Liz, and the twins adore him, but he never lets her forget he's willing to kill any of them if they don't behave.
40* FictionalDocument: Thad's novels. The book uses "excerpts" from them as epigraphs.
41* {{Giallo}}: Obviously not fully, but the film has a killer wearing black leather gloves who slashes people to death with a straight razor. This is very in line with a giallo killer.
42* GenderFlip: In the novel, Rawlie is an old man. In the film, Rawlie is an old woman.
43* {{Gorn}}: This is definitely one of King’s bloodier novels.
44* ImpaledPalm: Stark at one point makes Thad stab himself through the hand with a pencil. See PokeInTheThirdEye.
45* GraveHumor: Stark's headstone reads [[{{Understatement}} "Not a Very Nice Guy"]].
46* GroinAttack: George Stark combines a old-fashioned straight razor, an upward slashing attack, and the groin of an unfortunate cop. All are described with typical King [[{{Squick}} skill]]. Did you just wince? Imagine reading it.
47** Stark also cuts Fred Clawson’s penis and tongue off, then stuffs his penis inside his mouth.
48* ItsForABook: Thad uses this excuse when asking his coworker Rawlie [=DeLesseps=] if sparrows play a role in any kind of American folklore. He even lampshades that one of the benefits of being a professional writer is that you can always rely on this excuse if people want to know why you want certain information.
49* KickTheDog: Stark brutally kills Homer Gamache, a CoolOldGuy who had nothing to do with Stark’s “death”, simply to steal his truck.
50* KilledByRequest: An InUniverse example. When Thad hates writing the books by George Stark, he chooses to kill the pseudonym persona, with a funeral and everything.
51* KillingYourAlternateSelf: Stark's ultimate goal, and what [[spoiler:Thad ends up doing to him instead. With the help of some murderous sparrows.]]
52* MadnessMantra: "The sparrows are flying again."
53* MostWritersAreWriters: Thad Beaumont, like many of King's protagonists, is a novelist.
54* NiceGuy: Sheriff Alan Pangborn.
55* ObfuscatingStupidity: Thad's colleague, Rawlie [=DeLesseps=], at first appears to be nothing more than an absent-minded professor. Actually, he is very knowledgeable about folklore and literature and helps Thad to uncover the mystery behind the phrase, "The sparrows are flying again."
56* PaintingTheMedium: Like a few other of King's books, some parts appear as actual handwriting instead of the typed font.
57* PokeInTheThirdEye: Thad has a telepathic link to Stark, and in one scene he tries using it to get information from him. [[ImpaledPalm It doesn't end well]].
58* {{Psychopomp}}: The sparrows, mentioned by name.
59* RealAwardFictionalCharacter: Thad's first novel, ''The Sudden Dancers'' was nominated for the National Book Award.
60* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Sheriff Pangborn. After Stark leaves a bloody fingerprint perfectly matching Thad's at a crime scene, Pangborn arrives to arrest Thad. But when Thad produces an ironclad alibi, Pangborn believes him and does all he can to help catch Stark.
61* RiseFromYourGrave: Stark manifests himself by digging out of his fake grave.
62* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: After Stark is "killed", he begins to exact revenge on everyone he views as being responsible for his death.
63* SerialKiller: Alexis Machine, the arch-villain of George Stark's crime novels, is one of these.
64* ShootTheShaggyDog: Some see the story as this in light of what happens to Thad afterwards (See BittersweetEnding).
65* SplitPersonality: George Stark started out as this.
66* SlashedThroat: Stark uses a straight razor to slash his victims' throats.
67* SlasherMovie: Stark murders 8 people in the film, and possibly more in the novel.
68* SympatheticMurderer: One of the few murderers Sheriff Pangborn arrested during his career was a wife who beat her abusive husband to death. He thinks the woman didn't get what she really deserved for her crime: a medal.
69* ThatManIsDead: Played with and subverted when Thad has a mock photo shoot in front of Stark's grave.
70* TwinTelepathy: A plot point.
71* ViewersAreGeniuses: An in-universe example. The protagonist has written several highly intellectual novels with great reviews and poor sales. In the meantime, he has also written under Stark's name intentionally trashy books that engorge themselves on sex and violence which have gone on to become bestsellers. King wrote the book in part as a response to his own pen name Richard Bachman becoming public knowledge. The stories he wrote under the pen name in turn tended to be less psychological than those with his own name on them.
72* TheVillainKnowsMoment: Elizabeth Beaumont, confronted by the physical manifestation of her husband's pseudonym, George Stark, is abducted, along with their twin children, by the dark reflection of her husband. She manages to conceal a pair of scissors in her panties with an eye to stabbing Stark if the opportunity presented itself. Once they reach their destination, an occasion arises where Stark needs the scissors, and reaches into Elizabeth's undergarments to retrieve them. She is both alarmed and astonished that he knew they were there.
73* VillainProtagonist: Alexis Machine in Stark's books.
74* VomitingCop: When Norris Ridgewick finds one of Stark's victims (an old man beaten to death with his own prosthetic arm), he throws up, but manages to avoid the corpse.
75* WouldHurtAChild: After Stark fails to write himself back to life, he tries to shoot Thad's children, but Thad stops him by knocking his aim off balance with a typewriter.
76* YouDoNotWantToKnow: One of George Stark's murders is so gruesome that King leaves it ''completely'' to our imagination (when Liz is asked if she wants to know how the victim met her end, she immediately says "No").
77* ZergRush: Stark meets his end when he is ambushed by thousands of sparrows.
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