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6[[quoteright:315:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/thestandcover1.jpg]]
7[[caption-width-right:315:''[[Music/BlueOysterCult ♫ C'mon, baby, don't fear the reaper... ♫]]'']]
8
9->''Graffiti written on the front of the First Baptist Church of Atlanta in red spray paint:\
10"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."''
11
12One of Creator/StephenKing's best-regarded ([[{{Doorstopper}} and thickest]]) novels, ''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 "[[TheAntichrist antichrist]]" figure, Randall Flagg.
13
14King set out to write "an American ''[[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings 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 ''Literature/{{IT}}'', one of the most important works of King's early period.
15
16The story concerns the travels and travails of well over a dozen characters following intersecting story arcs across the [[{{Eagleland}} United States]] during and after an [[ThePlague apocalyptic Super-Flu]] nicknamed ''Captain Trips'' [[ApocalypseHow kills 99.4 percent of humanity.]] The survivors are left to cope with their loss and stay alive, until everyone starts having dreams that signal the arrival of an even darker menace...
17
18First published in 1978, the novel was reissued in 1990 in a "[[LimitedSpecialCollectorsUltimateEdition complete and uncut edition]]" containing about 400 additional pages of material from King's original manuscript.
19
20In the 1980s, a film adaptation was planned, but ultimately was not made due to the length of the book and issues with adapting the narrative. However, an eight hour made-for-tv MiniSeries based on the novel, ''Series/TheStand1994'', aired for four nights on [[Creator/AmericanBroadcastingCompany ABC]] in 1994 instead.
21
22In December 2020 Creator/ParamountPlus premiered a 9-episode series adaptation[[note]]It was originally 10 but was reduced to 9 due to production issues mostly caused by the 2020 Covid-19 global pandemic.[[/note]], ''Series/TheStand2020''.
23
24----
25!!The novel contains examples of:
26
27* AbandonedHospital: The Project Blue underground laboratory, and later, the Stovington Plague Center. Both are medical facilities where all occupants have succumbed to Captain Trips and died.
28* AbusiveParents: A few examples are seen here and there, two of the most obvious being Frannie's mother (who has an entire chapter devoted to showing how selfish and unreasonable she was with Frannie over the years) and Trashcan Man's biological father (who got drunk one night and shot the whole family, save for the five-year-old Trashy and his mother). In a sadly ironic but perhaps understandable twist, Trashy identifies with his father and hates his stepfather, "the father-killing sheriff," who shot his father in the line of duty and later married his mother. [[UnreliableExpositor From what the reader can tell]], the sheriff was a pretty stand-up guy who did his best by Trash, but eventually could no longer cover for the kid's unstable behavior and habit of arson and has to have him committed.
29* AdamAndEvePlot: A rare animal version: Dayna Jurgens finds a female puppy in a storm drain and the residents of Boulder celebrate her and Kojak as the "canine Adam and Eve".
30* AdaptationDistillation: 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 short shrift in the [=TV=] mini-series.
31* AfterTheEnd: The world of ''The Stand'' goes through an apocalypse and then focuses on the struggles of the survivors.
32* AlasPoorVillain:
33** [[spoiler:Harold Lauder]] realizes that he was the only one to blame for his own fall. If he had just gotten over his petty grudge, he would have become a valued part of the community. It merely saddens him to realize this as he lies dying.
34** Trashcan Man is a true pyromaniac, and while he loves setting fires, he feels horribly guilty for the consequences of them. He can't control his own behavior, and actively hallucinates persecutors to voice his guilt when everyone dies out. He loves Flagg solely due to Flagg's manipulation of him, but can't even hold to that. Trash is ultimately just a very sick and dangerous man.
35* AnyoneCanDie: It ''starts'' with a super plague that kills 99% of the entire world, and after that there's a fairly high mortality rate among the survivors.
36* ApocalypseAnarchy: As the superflu grows out of control, society begins to increasingly break down. Things turn really bad when information leaks to the public that not only is the U.S military using lethal violence to supress protests and cover up just how bad the outbreak is, the government created the superflu in the first place and the entire disaster is their fault. Desertion becomes rampant as soldiers turn on their officers, civilians form into mobs, there's widespread looting, rape and murder everywhere and a series of executions are broadcast on television. The only reason things aren't even worse is because the flu kills almost everyone.
37* ApocalypseHow: Class 1, verging on Class 2. The planet itself is okay, but 99.4% of the human race is exterminated by Captain Trips.
38* ApocalypticLog: The whole sub-plot with General Starkey. [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Fran's diary]].
39* {{Arcadia}}: The narration gives a great deal of emphasis to the natural beauty of New England and Boulder after the plague.
40* ArcWords: "No great loss."
41** "You ain't no nice guy" for Larry.
42** "My life for you!" for those who worship Flagg.
43* ArmiesAreEvil: The US military is portrayed as being willing to gun down civilians with no compunction. In the last days of the plague it degenerates into bands of mutineers, rioters and looters. Stu's group encounters one such band on the road, who have devolved into a rape gang. There's also the fact that they deliberately spread Captain Trips to other countries out of sheer spite once they realize things are out of their control.
44* ArtisticLicense: Early on in the 1990 version, Larry sees a slasher flick in the theater, and assumes there will be another one next year, because the title has a [[NumberedSequels Roman numeral]] at the end of it. The problem? King happened to choose [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet the one franchise that used Arabic numerals, not Roman]].
45* ArtisticLicenseBiology: During a short section from Kojak's point of view, it's said that all animals have some telepathy with others of the same kind. It's also said that Kojak would go on to live for 16 more years, although in real life anything longer than 16 years would be an exceptionally long lifespan for a dog.
46* AteHisGun: General Starkey and Harold Lauder. Starkey kills himself after it becomes clear that there is no stopping Captain Trips and the whole human race is doomed. Harold kills himself after he's stranded in the desert with a broken leg, abandoned by Nadine, Flagg having decided that Harold has outlived his usefulness.
47* AsTheGoodBookSays: Glen, Stu, Larry and Ralph all quote "I will fear no evil" from Psalm 23.
48%%* AudienceSurrogate: Frannie, Stu, Nick, and Larry, for the most part.
49* BabiesEverAfter: 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]].
50%%* BecauseDestinySaysSo
51%%* BeneathTheEarth: The Lincoln Tunnel. The Eisenhower Tunnel between Boulder and UsefulNotes/LasVegas.
52* BerserkButton: Trashcan Man does NOT deal well with being made fun of for his pyromania. [[spoiler:When some of the Las Vegas boys tease him about it, he responds by single-handedly blowing up several vehicles and essentially crippling Flagg's military.]]
53* BigBad: Randall Flagg, who would go on to become King's "ubervillain" via CanonWelding.
54* TheBigRottenApple: Discussed (sort of) by Rita and Larry. Rita says "the Big Apple is baked," while they're discussing leaving New York City after most of the population is dead.
55* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler:Stu and Fran are reunited, but most of the main characters die at God's behest. Humanity is on the path to recovery at the end, but Flagg is still alive (in the expanded edition).]]
56* BlackAndWhiteMorality: Becomes a big trend in Stephen King's work. With Mother Abagail's faction being unambiguously good, and Flagg's faction being satanically evil. It becomes more complicated with individual characters such as Harold Lauder, who is drawn to Mother Abagail but ultimately goes over to Flagg's side out of romantic jealousy, as well as the Trashcan Man, who can't really be called evil despite his destructive urges because he's severely mentally ill.
57* BOOMHeadshot: Poke Freeman gets a good chunk of his head blown off in the botched robbery that gets his partner in crime Lloyd sent to prison. [[spoiler:The Judge and Glen Bateman also die this way.]]
58* BornAfterTheEnd: In the final chapters, Frannie (who was pregnant when TheVirus killed over 99% of humanity) gives birth. Her son is the first known baby who is born after the super flu and survives the delivery (two other babies were stillborn in an earlier chapter), revealing that the next unborn and yet-to-be-born generation will inherit their parents’ genetic disposition toward surviving the virus.
59* BringHimToMe: [[spoiler:Dayna Jurgens]] is discovered while acting as a spy in Vegas on behalf of the Free Zone and taken before Flagg for interrogation.
60%%* BringNewsBack: Doubles as TheUntwist.
61* BuryYourGays: While it's certain that AnyoneCanDie in the apocalypse, the story spends a fair amount of time on the deaths of the gay/bi characters, including Kit Bradenton, The Kid, Trash, and Dayna.
62* TheCallKnowsWhereYouLive: Via PsychicDreamsForEveryone, ''all'' the survivors find themselves leaving their point of origin and journeying towards either Mother Abigail or Randall Flagg.
63* CanonImmigrant: Flagg has since become one of King's most popular villains, and has made numerous reappearances in other books.
64* CanonWelding: ''The Stand'' became part of ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' continuity (as did most of King's work).
65* CaptainErsatz: It's hinted Flagg is [[Creator/HPLovecraft Nyarlathotep]].
66* CatchPhrase:
67** Mother Abagail: You come see me, ___. You and all your friends.
68** The Trashcan Man has "My life for you!" as his mantra and battle cry once he starts worshipping Flagg.
69** Tom Cullen's speech pattern includes repeated usage of the phrases "M-O-O-N, that spells (random word)" and "Laws yes!"
70** The Kid’s “that happy crappy” and “don’t tell me, I’ll tell you.”
71* CensorshipBySpelling: Campion uses it when he says that everybody died in the research facility in front of his little daughter.
72* ChandlersLaw: According to King, [[spoiler:Harold's bomb was caused by him having writer's block, and feeling the heroes were getting complacent in Boulder]].
73* CharacterDevelopment: Larry starts off as a [[AllTakeAndNoGive selfish]], arrogant {{Jerkass}}, but gradually grows enough to [[spoiler:become the de facto leader of the heroes after Stu gets injured en route to UsefulNotes/LasVegas.]]
74* CharactersDroppingLikeFlies: All over the place, even before the narrative as such really picks up steam. In one particularly vicious chapter, darkly titled "No Great Loss", King introduces — and then [[WeHardlyKnewYe immediately kills off]] — more than a dozen characters, not even from Captain Trips but from disturbingly plausible and mundane accidents.
75* ChekhovsGun:
76** The [[spoiler:nuclear weapons]] out in the desert. [[spoiler:The Trashcan Man transports one to Las Vegas, thinking it would please Flagg, but it gets detonated by Randall's energy ball, killing everyone in the city]].
77** One random scene in the first part of the novel, when society is collapsing as the superflu runs wild, described the panicked flight of the citizens of Boulder, Colorado. The people of Boulder left the town en masse after a false rumor that the plague started at the Boulder Air Test Center. Much later, when survivors begin concentrating in Boulder, they find the town largely free of corpses.
78* ChekhovsGunman:[[spoiler:Julie Lawry. After being run off by Nick and Tom early in the second part of the book, she joins the Vegas group in the third part of the book and recognizes Tom undercover as a spy, and gives Lloyd and Flagg the information they need to realize Tom is the third spy. Ultimately subverted, however: by the time they come to this realization, Tom has already left Vegas and is able to slip past the guards Flagg sets up at the Utah-Nevada border.]]
79* CityOfGold: Cibola! [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Cities_of_Gold_%28myth%29 Seven-in-One]]! UsefulNotes/LasVegas appears this way to Trash in a mirage.
80* ClosestThingWeGot: [[spoiler:Stu Redman is forced to perform an appendectomy, though the guy dies as he's doing it. Later on, the Free Zone is forced to rely on a veterinarian until a doctor arrives, and even then the doctor tells the vet that he needs to train him to be better able to take care of humans, especially as the doctor is rather old.]]
81* CodeEmergency: "Tell him 'Rome Falls'." It meant everything was screwed and it was time to put the plan to infect the rest of the world in motion.
82* CollegeWidow: Rita Blakemoor's husband died two years before the story begins, thus she's the first eligible woman Larry meets.
83%%* ConsummateProfessional: Doctor Elder.
84* CorpseLand: All of the cities, especially New York, are completely littered with dead bodies after the plague hits. This is likely why the survivors are guided to Boulder, as a false rumor that the plague started there caused a mass exodus while the population was still healthy enough to travel.
85* CoversAlwaysLie:
86** The classic cover (currently the page image) features a white-clad warrior with a sword battling a black-clad monster with a scythe and the head of a crow, which symbolically represents the book's good vs. evil narrative, but can leave new readers pretty confused since it seems to hint at some sort of medieval HighFantasy rather than a modern post-apocalyptic story. A more recent cover features a man holding a bullet between his teeth which really just has nothing to do with the story at all, even on a symbolic level.
87** Another cover features the head of a crow. This refers to how Flagg can turn into a crow, but is still confusing.
88** The more recent cover of the expanded edition features a foggy road strewn with corpses, which fits the story better than either of the aforementioned covers.
89** The older edition of the Swedish translation features a man who is presumably meant to be Randall Flagg considering he wears Flagg's iconic buttons, but whoever illustrated the cover appears to have taken Flagg's title as "the dark man" literally, as he's been drawn as a heavyset african-american man with a buzzcut and a moustache, which doesn't match his description in the book at all. A newer edition instead shows a gas mask lying in the middle of a graveyard in an abandoned city, with a crow sitting on it.
90* CreatorProvincialism:
91** Though the action ranges across the country, quite a lot of it takes place in Maine (which is a frequent King locale) and Boulder (where he was living at the time of writing, and of which he is apparently quite fond).
92** 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 [[NoPlansNoPrototypeNoBackup apparent violation]] of the [[EvilOverlordList 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.
93* CrisisPointHospital: Larry takes his mother to a hospital which is overflowing with Superflu patients; many of the staff are themselves infected. When his mother dies and he can't get anyone's attention, he writes her name and age on a piece of paper, pins it to her clothes, and then leaves the hospital.
94* DarkIsEvil: The Dark Man, Randall Flagg, [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast if his name wasn't enough of a indication.]] He often takes the form of a [[FeatheredFiend raven]] when traveling and even transforms into a black cat-like creature right before he's defeated. Additionally, he builds his empire in the dark, seedy Las Vegas in comparison to Mother Abagail's wholesome, farm-filled Boulder.
95* DeadlyGame: The incident with black soldiers in a game show studio. They take the game show set over and start executing people.
96* DeathByIrony: [[spoiler:Harold]] spends at least two chapters writing and recording a TakeThat 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.
97* DeathOfAChild: There's a sequence about a third of the way through the book that touches upon the stories of several isolated survivors, all of whom die from accidents, injuries, or misadventure in the days or weeks immediately following the plague. It's very difficult for parents to read. One story is about a five-year-old who accidentally falls down a dry well, breaks both legs, and dies several hours later. Another is about a Catholic man who loses his entire family to Captain Trips, throws all his energy into running in an attempt to find an outlet for his grief, and proceeds to overexert himself to the point of having a heart attack.
98* ADeathInTheLimelight: One whole chapter of the book is dedicated to recounting the deaths of characters who had not appeared at all before that chapter. All are plague survivors; the chapter illustrates the secondary mortality rate of scattered survivors in an AfterTheEnd world.
99* DepopulationBomb: [[spoiler:Two of them.]] First there's Captain Trips, which wipes out 99% of the human race. Then there's the DeusExNukina that detonates in Las Vegas and wipes out Flagg and his followers.
100* DeusExMachina: [[spoiler:Literally, DeusExNukina. The actual ''Hand of God'' appears from heaven and detonates Trashcan Man's nuke, destroying Las Vegas and Flagg]].
101* DidYouJustFlipOffCthulhu: Glen, upon meeting Flagg. He laughs with derision, whereupon Flagg has him shot.
102* DisasterDemocracy: Instituted (albeit in a modified form) in Boulder.
103* DisproportionateRetribution: When Trashcan Man shows off some new toys he found in the desert (incendiary grenades), some of Flagg's goons tease him about his obsession with fire; unfortunately, they don't realize how personally he takes it until he rigs several vehicles with the grenades, blowing them up and killing a half dozen men.
104* DistractAndDisarm: Stu disarms the guard sent to kill him by yelling that there's a rat off to the side. When the guy turns to look, Stu clobbers him with a chair. It stuns him long enough for Stu to struggle with him and eventually get the gun away before the guy can use it.
105* {{Doorstopper}}:
106** 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 ''Manga/TwentiethCenturyBoys'', which heavily alludes to ''The Stand'').
107** It's longer than ''Literature/WarAndPeace'', ''Literature/MobyDick'' and some editions of Literature/TheBible.
108** The audiobook on CD is 37 discs long.
109** The Audible.com version is 47hrs and 52min.
110* DreamingOfThingsToCome: The good people in the story (Stu, Frannie, Nick, Larry, and the like) dream of Mother Abagail and her farm. The bad people (Harold, Nadine, Trash, and others) dream of Randall Flagg and Las Vegas.
111* DrivenToSuicide: Many examples.
112** Several people involved with Project Blue are stated to have committed suicide after seeing the destruction it unleashed.
113** [[spoiler:Starkey]] shoots himself after being relieved of his duty at [[spoiler:Project Blue]].
114** [[spoiler:Rita Blakemoor]] can't handle the shock and stress of the post-plague world, and overdoses on sleeping pills.
115** [[spoiler:Dayna rams her head through a window and then slashes her neck with the broken glass]] to avoid being interrogated by Flagg.
116** [[spoiler:Harold]] ultimately shoots himself, though it's more like a self-MercyKill because he's already dying miserably by then.
117** [[spoiler:Nadine]] [[SuicideByCop goads Flagg into killing her]].
118%%* DoomedExpedition
119%%* DramaBomb
120* DueToTheDead:
121** Starkey spends a great deal of time watching the monitor depicting Private Bruce face down in a bowl of soup. [[spoiler:After he's relieved of command, he enters the quarantined area and makes a point to remove Bruce's face from the bowl (and clean it up) before killing himself]].
122** Frannie Goldsmith burying [[spoiler:her father]] in his garden, told in painful and realistic detail.
123** Nick Andros, in preparing [[spoiler:Jane Baker]] for her burial.
124--->He knew what came next and didn't want to do it. It wasn’t fair, part of him cried out. It wasn’t his responsibility. But since there was no one else here—maybe no one else well for miles around—he would have to shoulder it. Either that or leave her here to rot, and he couldn't do that.
125** The claimed reason behind the creation of the Boulder Burial Committee. The real one being for health concerns.
126* DyingTown: Arnette, Texas, where the novel opens, is one of these even before the Captain Trips outbreak. ''Every'' city and town becomes one of these as the virus spreads.
127* DystopiaIsHard: The theme behind the Vegas plotline. The book doesn't shy away from showing how harsh life is under Flagg's iron rule.
128* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler:In spite of the hardships it faces, things end on a high note for the Free Zone and its denizens. Stu survives his voyage over the mountains, Fran has her baby, the Zone finds prosperity and humanity is safe from Flagg... for the time being.]]
129* ElvisLives: Stu notes to Fran that before the apocalypse, when his friend who ran his town's gas station had given him the graveyard shift job as a favor, that he met a long-haired driver with a beard that he fully believed was Jim Morrison.
130* EmergencyPresidentialAddress: The unnamed president gives one full of ImplausibleDeniability. While American society is falling apart due to the superflu, he still insists that the disease is not deadly. The speech is interrupted several times by the President's coughing fits.
131* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Lampshaded. The characters speculate on what will happen to all those corpses, how life will never be the same, etc.
132* EnergyBall: [[spoiler:Flagg releases one at the climax.]]
133* EnsembleCast: There's no real main protagonist to be found.
134%%* TheEpic: National/"Biblical" variety.
135* EscapeFromTheCrazyPlace: Stovington Hospital. Stu is the only one left alive in the place and spends an entire chapter going through it, encountering dead or nearly dying people. [[NotQuiteDead The doctor that wanted to exterminate him]] even tries to kill him one last time before expiring himself.
136* EverybodysDeadDave: Many of the characters in the immediate post-plague chapters are left wandering in shock at how deserted the world is now.
137* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Flagg's callous nature and personal obsessions are part of what makes Vegas fall. Glen easily manipulates him because of this.
138* EvilTowerOfOminousness: The MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas serves as Flagg's residence.
139* EvilWillFail: [[spoiler: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.]]
140%%* ExactWords: [[spoiler:Mother Abagail's final prophecy.]]
141* EyeScream:
142** Poke Freeman, whose eye and half of his face are mangled by the bullet of a .45 revolver.
143** Nick, who in the expanded novel suffers an eye gouge during his scuffle with Ray Booth in the Shoyo jail.
144* FaceplantingIntoFood: A scientist at Project Blue dies in the cafeteria with his face in a bowl of soup, which Starkey finds a very undignified way to spend eternity.
145* FailsafeFailure: One guard manages to escape the facility housing Captain Trips with his family before the base goes into lockdown, dooming most of the human race.
146* FakeOrgasm: In Vegas, [[spoiler:Dayna becomes Lloyd's mistress in order to get information from him]]. She fakes an orgasm while they are having sex and thinks about how she would like to put his penis through a meat grinder.
147* FantasyAmericana: A seminal example. King said his goal was to write an American ''Lord of the Rings''.
148* FeedbackRule: Stu deals with this during his speech at the first public Free Zone meeting. He says they have to get used to technology again (most of Boulder still had no power but they had a generator set up for the meeting). Plus, Stu was also [[UnaccustomedAsIAmToPublicSpeaking nervous]].
149%%* FieldPromotion: Several characters get one, most notably Nick.
150* {{Foreshadowing}}: All over the place; some examples more subtle than others. A very subtle example when Glen Bateman and Stu Redman have this exchange shortly after meeting:
151--> '''Stu:''' I like to listen.
152--> '''Glen:''' Then you are one of God's chosen.
153* ForTheEvulz: The only reason Flagg does anything. Justified in that he's a Satan analogue.
154* FreudianExcuse: Trashcan Man did ''not'' have a happy childhood, which prompted him to light fires as a sort of coping mechanism. This only gave his bullies more excuses to hurl taunts and insults at him, which only gave ''him'' more reason to light fires... and it went downhill from there.
155* FromBadToWorse: First the plague hits, then Randall Flagg appears and starts gathering an army to slaughter the survivors.
156* GhibliHills: [[AfterTheEnd After the plague]], the sudden cessation of commuting and industrial activity results in green areas across America being much more vibrant.
157* GasolineLastsForever: At the very end of the extended version, Stu and Fran are casually driving across the country together, many months after any gasoline was being refined.
158* GoMadFromTheIsolation: As deaths from Captain Trips begin to taper off, many people who survived the virus but are left completely alone begin to suffer from this trope, leading to a "second epidemic" of deaths from accidents or suicides.
159* GoneHorriblyRight: The superflu that the U.S. military cooked up has a 99.4% death rate... but it's loose on American soil. And, thanks to a mean-spirited effort by the military, starts to spread to other countries as well.
160* GoodHurtsEvil: Characters drawn to Flagg are afraid of Mother Abagail in their dreams.
161* GovernmentConspiracy: The creation of the virus, the attempt to suppress news of its outbreak, and the [[TakingYouWithMe deliberate spreading of the virus to other countries]] to ensure the U.S. doesn't go down alone, is dwelt on. It's noted that some people are so obsessed with secrecy that they will continue trying to kill witnesses like Stu, even when there's hardly anyone left for him to tell, and no one really cares any more.
162* GreenAesop: The condition of the natural environment visibly improves in the months after the plague.
163* GrinOfRage: "HEY BOBBY TERRY, YOU SCROOOOWED IT UP!"
164* TheHandIsGod: At the end Randall Flagg tortures one of his men with a ball of electricity he'd conjured. At this point, there is a huge distraction and Flagg loses concentration on the ball and it flutters away. The distraction was the Trashcan Man, who'd found a nuclear bomb and towed it all the way back to Las Vegas. Flagg panics and tries to tell Trashcan to get rid of it. Then one of the men who'd been sent to challenge Flagg screams "The Hand Of God!" and points. The ball of electricity had grown to an enormous size, it was heading straight for the nuclear bomb, ''and it looked just like a hand.'' You only get one guess as to what happened when it reached the bomb...
165* HereWeGoAgain: In the Extended Cut, [[spoiler:Randall Flagg wakes up on a small island after the events of the climax. He introduces himself to the cowering natives and starts manipulating them with his charisma and charm.]]
166* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler:Dayna Jurgens]] commits suicide so Flagg won't be able to torture her until she reveals [[spoiler:the identity of the third spy (Tom Cullen)]]. Her sacrifice is a large contribution to his eventual downfall.
167%%* HiddenElfVillage: The Boulder Free Zone.
168* HitSoHardTheCalendarFeltIt: "... this thirtieth day of September, the year nineteen hundred and ninety, now known as The Year One, year of the plague."
169* HonorableMarriageProposal: When Fran is impregnated by her boyfriend, his idea of "taking responsibility" is to offer to either marry her or pay for an abortion, her choice. She [[TakeAThirdOption refuses both]] and decides to raise the baby herself, later accepting the help of new beau Stu Redman.
170* HopeSpot: A few characters are shown to live through the severe fever that usually ends up killing the victims of the superflu and seem to be recovering, only to die about a day later as the other symptoms finish them off. If you get sick, you die, there's no way to recover from it, and only the immune are safe.
171* HumanoidAbomination: Randall Flagg visually resembles a normal man, but anyone who spends more than a few seconds in his company quickly comes to view him as an EldritchAbomination. Dayna subtly notes he lacks wrinkles on his hands, and [[spoiler:Nadine is driven insane when she has sex with him]].
172* IncrediblyInconvenientDeity: God is this for Mother Abagail. As she tells Nick: "'Abby,' the Lord says to me, 'there’s work for you far up ahead. So I'll let you live an live, until your flesh is bitter on your bones. I'll let you see all your children die ahead of you and still you'll walk the earth. I'll let you see your daddy's land taken away piece by piece. And in the end, your reward will be to go away with strangers from all the things you love best and you'll die in a strange land with the work not yet finished. That's My will, Abby,' says He, and 'Yes, Lord,' says I. 'Thy will be done,' and in my heart I curse Him and ask, 'Why, why, why?' and the only answer I get is 'Where were you when I made the world?'"
173* IdiotBall: The nurse at the CDC who ''knows'' there's a deadly virus around, who passes right by signs saying ''any'' odd symptoms should be reported immediately but thinks there's simply no way her sneeze could ''possibly'' be connected to all that...and thus infects the entire CDC and takes out the only people who could have found a vaccine.
174* IJustShotMarvinInTheFace: Bobby Terry shooting [[spoiler:the Judge]] is technically an example of this; he ''is'' trying to kill him, but he had [[OhCrap explicit orders]] from Flagg not to damage the target's head. He also entirely accidentally [[spoiler:shoots his own partner through the throat and kills him]] while attempting to aim at his actual target.
175* TheImmune: Roughly 1% of humanity are completely immune to Captain Trips for unknown reasons, as the testing Stu underwent by the CDC only revealed that his body completely destroyed the virus before it could infect him, but the staff died too quickly to figure out why. This applies to all the survivors with the exception of Flagg, who isn't human at all, and possibly Mother Abagail, who is protected by God.
176* IndividualismVsCollectivism: Zigzagged between the Boulder Free Zone and Flagg's empire in Las Vegas: While the Free Zone has a rudimentary government and elects Stu sheriff, everyone is still free to live and do however they like (so long as no one is harmed). Las Vegas quickly becomes a fascist society, where everyone is assigned a job and crimes as small as drug use are punishable by torture and death. Yet because of their discipline, Vegas has electricity and supplies while the Free Zone struggles to even turn the lights on. In the end, as the Zone becomes closer to a pre-plague society, Stu notes that it's probably best for everyone to go their separate ways.
177* IResembleThatRemark: When Stu tells the doctor to take Geraldo, the guinea pig who's been breathing his air, he says, "Don't forget your guinea pig." He really means the ''other'' guinea pig.
178* IWantThemAlive: When Lloyd belatedly learns about [[spoiler:Tom being a spy]], he sends security forces to collect him, explicitly saying this. (Though of course it's very obvious to everyone that it's ''Flagg'' who would want him alive, so ''don't screw it up''.)
179* IncurableCoughOfDeath:
180** If a character coughs or sneezes, chances are they're a goner. Justified in that ThePlague is an "on steroids" version of the flu, for which coughing is a typical symptom.
181** Subverted when Stu fakes a coughing fit to spite his caregiver-captors in Stovington, sending them into a complete panic until he reveals the joke.
182* TheInfiltration: [[spoiler:The Boulder leadership sends Judge Farris, Dayna Jurgens and Tom Cullen to Las Vegas to join (and spy on) Flagg's operation. It goes horribly wrong, with the first two suffering tragic deaths, and the third returning only days after Las Vegas had already been destroyed by the Hand of God]].
183* JustBeforeTheEnd: The story opens just a few minutes after the plague is released and begins infecting people.
184* JustFollowingOrders: Elder, the military doctor who comes into Stu's room with the intention of killing him after society has collapsed, is just following his orders, but he'll do so with absolutely no hesitation. Stu thinks that it makes absolutely no sense for the guy to kill him -- civilization is in ruins, there are no more secrets to keep or people to keep secrets from, and Elder is himself sick and dying from the superflu. But he also knows that this is the kind of man to whom it would never in a million years occur to disobey an order, no matter how ridiculous or out-of-date, and he would kill Stu with a smile on his face and without a second thought.
185** Addressed throughout the book, where the military executes a brutal plan to try and contain the virus, and, when that fails, follows up with an equally brutal and entirely senseless plan to deliberately spread it across the world while suppressing any public dissent at home. A lot of soldiers just follow their orders and kill civilians when told to do so, but others don't, often getting into firefights with the first group.
186* KickTheDog: Flagg runs into an innocent fawn. [-"Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub!"-]
187* KirkSummation: Whitney Horgan's [[SedgwickSpeech speech]] is [[AndIMustScream cut short]].
188* TheLastDJ: Ray Flowers. ''Literally.'' As the government desperately tries to suppress news of the unfolding disaster, Ray takes the microphone in his studio and talks about all the horrifying news for a while. Until the army barges in and shoots him.
189* LastRequest: Stuart Redman's nurse Vic in the Stovington Plague Center, dying of [[ThePlague Captain Trips]], asks Stuart to kill him with the pistol he's carrying.
190* LookBehindYou: 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. Lampshaded when Stu is so surprised it works as well as it does that he almost fails to follow up on his own distraction.
191* LoopholeAbuse: A Catholic survivor of the plague, who lost his wife and all of his children, literally runs himself to death while out jogging in order to circumvent his moral and religious compunctions about suicide.
192* LousyLoversAreLosers: Dayna [[spoiler:sleeps with Lloyd in Vegas to gain information from him but she doesn't enjoy it and fakes her orgasms. After her cover is blown, she tells him that he was the worst lover she ever had.]]
193* MagicalNegro: Mother Abagail is the daughter of two freed slaves and has psychic and prophetic powers which she believes are the result of her becoming "God's will".
194%%* MagicalRealism: It's a story about the conflict between humanity and itself. And Old Scratch.
195%%* MagpiesAsPortents: 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!]]
196* MakeItLookLikeAStruggle: In Lloyd and Poke's backstory, they helped a gun/drug-runner called Gorgeous George double-cross the Mafia on a drug shipment so they could split the profits themselves, and tied him up and gave him some token bruises at his request. It's quickly and horrifyingly subverted when Poke wonders if George can keep a secret, and decides to [[DeadlyEuphemism pokerize]] him just to be on the safe side. This is how their murder spree kicks off.
197%%* MauveShirt: Many characters.
198* MayDecemberRomance:
199** Larry hooks up with Rita, who's old enough to be his mother, shortly after the plague.
200** Stu and Fran have a considerable age gap; he's around 30 and she's a college student.
201** At Flagg's behest, the thirty-seven-year-old Nadine takes up with Harold, who's seventeen.
202** A few other examples occur among the minor characters, and it's noted that age gaps don't really matter as much in the post-plague world.
203* MissionFromGod: [[spoiler:Mother Abagail tells Stu, Larry, Glen and Ralph that God wants them to go west and make a stand before Flagg.]]
204-->'''Mother Abagail:''' [[spoiler:I don’t know if it's God's will for you to ever see Boulder again. Those things are not for me to see. But he is in Las Vegas, and you must go there, and it is there that you will make your [[TitleDrop stand.]] You will go, and you will not falter, because you will have the Everlasting Arm of the Lord God of Hosts to lean on. Yes. With God’s help you will stand.]]
205* MonochromeCasting: In both the book and the mini series, the only non-Caucasian characters are Abagail, the Rat Man, Leo (though he has blonde hair and light-colored eyes) and the Judge (only in the series, in the book it's never specified), not counting the group of black people who execute the soldiers in a television studio. In many cases in the novel, the character's race is not mentioned.
206* {{Mordor}}: The entire U.S. west of the Rockies is shadowed by Flagg's evil presence, but his power and followers are largely concentrated in Las Vegas.
207* MotivationalKiss: Stu gives Dayna Jurgens two kisses for luck when she's about to go away on a dangerous mission.
208* {{Mundanger}}:
209** While Captain Trips and Randall Flagg are the main threats to the survivors and both are magical in nature, many minor antagonists are just regular humans who happen to be violent (Ray Booth) or self-centered (Julie Lawry).
210** All of [[spoiler:Harold]]'s more heinous actions are done of his own choice. Flagg merely lets him know that he exists, but doesn't magically interfere with his life in any way, shape or form.
211* MythologyGag: The extended edition features a reference to the Music/{{ACDC}} song "Who Made Who," which was used as the theme song of the King-directed adaptation ''Film/MaximumOverdrive''.
212* NarrativeFiligree: This was a point of dispute between King and his publishers when the novel was first published. The publishers succeeded in getting the first edition edited down but King released an extended edition later. Much of the additional material is basically filigree that doesn't particularly advance the plot. Trashcan's Man terrifying adventure with the psychotic rapist The Kid, which was cut from the first edition of the novel, is a good example.
213* NationalAnthem: A virus wipes out 99% of the population of America (and presumably the rest of the world). The survivors group in Boulder and try to form a state. At the end of their first meeting, they sing "The Star-Spangled Banner", which leaves half of the people in tears, since America is no more.
214%%* NewEden: Discussed by Glen Bateman, who suggests LuddWasRight.
215* NextSundayAD:
216** Originally set in 1980, updated to 1990 in the expanded version. The inspiration for Flagg was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbionese_Liberation_Army Donald DeFreeze]], the Patty Hearst kidnapper. (Another inspiration was then-current cult leader UsefulNotes/JimJones.)
217** The [[invoked]]LimitedSpecialCollectorsUltimateEdition (book) was updated with references to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (comic only.)
218** In the original edition, Bobby Terry is reading a ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'' comic shortly before the Judge comes driving by. The "remix" changes this to a ''Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'' comic, King presumably worrying that his 90s readers wouldn't be so familiar with Howard.
219** ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'' books explained this by saying the plague happened in different times in [[TheMultiverse alternate realities]]; we just live in one where it hasn't hit yet. The version of Topeka, Kansas that Roland and his ka-tet visit in ''Literature/TheWasteLands'' had its plague occur in 1986.
220* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Barry Dorgan insults [[spoiler:Trash at the airfield, causing him to revert to his old ways.]]
221%%* NoOneGetsLeftBehind: see Passing The Torch.
222* NotTooDeadToSaveTheDay: [[spoiler:The spirit of Nick Andros leads Tom Cullen to save Stu's life.]]
223* NothingIsScarier: What exactly Stu encounters in the dark stairwell on his way out of the hospital is never revealed.
224* OhAndXDies:
225** When [[spoiler:Dayna leaves Boulder, the narration states: "no one in the Zone ever saw Dayna Jurgens again". Indeed, she dies in Las Vegas.]]
226** When [[spoiler:Larry, Glen and Ralph have to leave Stu behind, it's similarly stated that "they never saw Stu Redman again." However, Stu survives; it's the other three who don't.]]
227** While telling the story of what happened to Kojak in Nebraska, King parenthetically throws in: [[spoiler:"Kojak lived another sixteen years, long after Glen Bateman died."]]
228* OhCrap:
229** Bobby Terry after [[spoiler:shooting the Judge in the face]] in direct contradiction to Flagg's orders. His panic is very quickly proven to be justified.
230** [[spoiler:Pretty much everyone in Las Vegas when The Trashcan Man returns bearing his last gift for Flagg.]]
231--->'''Lloyd Henreid''': [[spoiler:Oh, shit, we're all fucked!]]
232* OldTimeyAnkleTaboo: 108-year-old Abagail Freemantle recalls appearing on a talent show back in 1902. Before her, a woman performed a "racy French dance", showing her ankles "to the raucous whistles, cheers, and stamping feet of the men in the audience."
233* OppressiveStatesOfAmerica: The federal goverment resorts to very draconian measures in an attempt to contain Captain Trips, instituting lockdowns of infected towns, censoring reports of the true magnitude of the epidemic, and executing anyone who tries to reveal the truth. In the end, their efforts are for naught.
234* ParanoiaFuel: In-universe, and [[DiscussedTrope 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!) Capt. Trips itself.
235* PassingTheTorch: Stu breaks his leg during [[spoiler:the mission to Vegas, leaving Larry to lead the others in their confrontation with Flagg]].
236* PatientZero: 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.
237* ThePlague: 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.
238%%* PokeInTheThirdEye: [[spoiler:Flagg to Abagail, Tom to Flagg.]]
239* PostApocalypticTrafficJam: A few of these are described: Stu and Tom look through one to find a stick shift car that Stu can drive with his injured leg since Tom can't drive. Later, on the way back to Boulder, they're in an area of deep snow and Stu finds that they're actually on top of one of these, which is buried under the snow. There's also the massive traffic jam inside the Lincoln Tunnel, which is also full of corpses of civilians the military massacred when they tried to flee the city.
240* PsychicDreamsForEveryone: The survivors receive prophetic dreams from both Mother Abagail and Randall Flagg.
241%%* QuirkyMinibossSquad: Barry Dorgan's men.
242* RealMenTakeItBlack:
243** Nick Andros, a young and skinny but tough and resourceful deaf-mute drifter, takes his coffee black. {{Lampshade}}d by Sheriff Baker: "Take it like a man, do you?"
244** Larry doesn't like getting Rita's cream-and-sugar-laced coffee. He "subscribed to the truckers' credo of 'if you wanted a cup of cream and sugar, why'd ya ask for coffee?'"
245* RealitySubtext: The scene early in the novel when a group of students riots and is shot by the military is based, according to King, on the real life massacre at Kent State in 1970. For bonus points, the in-universe riot is set at Kent State.
246* RecklessGunUsage: One survivor of Captain Trips is so afraid of being raped that she gets her father's World War II-era pistol out of storage for protection. It hasn't been cleaned or oiled in decades, and the ammunition is old and tarnished, but she still loads it and keeps it handy. The first time she tries to shoot someone, it explodes in her hand and kills her.
247* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Lloyd Henreid is in prison when the super-flu hits, awaiting trial for armed robbery and murder, and finds himself to be the only survivor. He would have starved to death in his cell if the AntiChrist Randall Flagg hadn't rescued him. Because of this, he remains Flagg's most loyal follower.
248* RefugeInTheWest: The main characters travel from the east coast to Nebraska and eventually to Colorado to find refuge there.
249* RefusalOfTheCall: Several characters refuse to acknowledge the dreams of Abigail or the Dark Man.
250* RepressiveButEfficient: 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.
251* ResidualEvilEntity: Randall Flagg, the dark man, vanishes in the nuclear destruction of Las Vegas, ending his fledgeling evil empire... until he wakes up on an island surrounded by natives, introducing himself as Russell Faraday and claiming he's come to [[HereWeGoAgain teach them how to be civilized]].
252* RoadTripPlot:
253** The first arc revolves around Stu, Nick and Larry's road trips, as they are drawn to Boulder.
254** The novel's final chapters are centered around Stu, Ralph, Larry and Glen as they make their way to Las Vegas.
255* SceneryGorn: The book is filled with vivid descriptions of cities left abandoned and falling into ruin from the plague.
256* ScienceIsBad:
257** This book was written in the '70s and "back to the land" themes are prominent.
258** Captain Trips is a ''scientifically engineered'' Holocaust.
259** Flagg is described as "the last magician of rational thought." 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 HiddenElfVillage or {{Utopia}} and struggles to turn on the lights. It's not suggested that {{Straw Atheist}}s are attracted to Flagg, however; merely people looking for quick solutions.
260** Interestingly, the book inverts the typical "MagicVersusScience" trope: supernatural forces merely take advantage of the sudden, artificially engineered holocaust to initiate the [[ApocalypseHow Apocalypse]] more or less.
261* SecondPersonNarration: Fran recalls that Harold used to publish short stories in the high school's literary magazine that were written in present tense or second person or both. "You come down the delirious corridor and shoulder your way through the splintered door and look at the racetrack stars — that was Harold’s style."
262* SendInTheSearchTeam: Harold suggests help will be found at the [[AbandonedHospital Stovington plague facility]] that Stu managed to escape from; despite Stu telling them the place is dead, the other characters go in and confirm this fact for themselves.
263* SharedDream: All of the Superflu survivors have recurring dreams of Mother Abagail and Randall Flagg beckoning them to come to either Boulder, Colorado or Las Vegas.
264* ShootTheShaggyDog: In-universe. 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 becomes a BodyInAbreadbox with the corpses of her husband and infant son and dies of starvation.
265* ShoutOut:
266** "Captain Trips" was originally a nickname of [[Music/TheGratefulDead Jerry Garcia]]. King had first used it much earlier, for ''another'' Superflu, in his ''Literature/NightShift'' story "Night Surf".
267** One of the initial Trips carriers is a vacationing police detective from the Literature/EightySeventhPrecinct.
268** Larry goes to see a [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy Krueger movie]] early in the "uncut" version, and much later Stu and Tom watch a (fictitious) ''Franchise/{{Rambo}}'' installment.
269** When Flagg introduces himself to Lloyd, he says "[[Music/TheRollingStonesBand Pleased to meet you, hope you guess my name.]]"
270** Fran imagined her father's garden was part of [[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings Middle-Earth]], and compares the [[GhibliHills empty countryside]] to Middle-Earth at another point. Flagg's ''sigil'' is a black stone with a red eye, among other [[LawyerFriendlyCameo similarities]]. Mother Abagail and other characters often describe Flagg as a red eye in the far off darkness, searching for them.
271** Stu Redman name-checks ''Literature/WatershipDown'' when describing how terrified he felt in the hospital: it made him go ''tharn''.
272** Allusion to an [[Music/{{ACDC}} AC/DC]] song (which had appeared in King's ''Film/MaximumOverdrive'' 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."
273** Lest we forget, the book name-checks the works of Creator/HPLovecraft...just like [[OncePerEpisode every other King work]].
274** "I will place you high in my councils, Trash, and [[Music/TheCrazyWorldOfArthurBrown I will set you...to burn]]."
275** The Kid tells Trash that they "[[Music/TheDoors ain't gonna eat no pork and beans]]. We're gonna eat more chicken than any man ever seen."
276** Mother Abagail mentions that her grandmother used to describe her psychic powers as "[[Literature/TheShining the shining lamp of God, sometimes just the shine]]".
277** When [[spoiler:Flagg is reborn in the epilogue]], the narration notes [[Music/TheDoors "He awoke before dawn. He put his boots on."]]
278** King also shows off his love of poetry — [[Creator/WilliamButlerYeats W. B. Yeats]]'s "Literature/TheSecondComing" and Creator/TSEliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" are both quoted, and Creator/EECummings is name-checked.
279** A lynched man with a LOOTER placard is one of many influences from George R. Stewart's ''Literature/EarthAbides''.
280* ShownTheirWork: King lived in Boulder for a time, so all the street names and places referenced in the book are real. As one example, the Mormon church where Harold helps remove about 70 bodies and has an epiphany about his character, is, as of 2019, still in the location where King described it.
281* SlidingScaleOfFreeWillVsFate: A running theme through the book is that God always gives you a choice (however much it might suck), and all the people who go over to Flagg's side do it of their own free will; they may go because they're scared spitless, but they aren't mind-controlled zombies. Interestingly, the book also hints that ''Flagg'' may be the one character who has no control over his own destiny.
282* SoleSurvivor: The superflu immunity didn't appear along family lines, meaning that if any of the survivors had family, they quickly lost every one of their loved ones. The immunity was so rare that most survivors weren't just the last of their family, they were the last living soul in their entire ''town''. Fran and Harold are the only characters in the novel who are mentioned as having a previous relationship with another survivor at all.
283* SpySpeak: The Captain Trips situation goes from ''Flowerpot'' to ''[[TroubleEntendre Troy]]'', and finally ''[[DeadlyEuphemism Rome Falls]]''.
284* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: They get to Boulder, they get the electrical system ready to go again, they throw the switch to turn the power back on... and it immediately shuts back down again, because every light, every television, every space heater, ''every'' electrical device that was on when people died ''is still on'', and they were not bringing the system back up at full capacity. So before they try again, they have to go around and turn everything not being used ''off''.
285** After Captain Trips has run its course, there follows a second wave of deaths caused by accidents and other illnesses. Even though the victims are immune, they end up dying due to the inability to get medical attention or to not having someone to look after them. One chapter focuses exclusively on several such people:
286*** A boy who falls down a dry well while picking blackberries and breaks both legs.
287*** A woman who tries to defend herself against a man she thinks is going to rape her, using her father's rusty old pistol and ammo, only for it to backfire and explode.
288*** A man who suffers a heart attack while jogging.
289*** A woman who gets drunk and falls asleep after lighting a cigarette, burning down her house and most of the town she lives in.
290*** A man who tries to amputate his own foot after stepping on a rusty nail and developing an infection.
291*** A girl who suffers a skull fracture after falling off her bike.
292*** A man who is bitten by a rattlesnake.
293*** A teenage girl who becomes trapped in a meat locker with the bodies of her husband and son.
294*** A man who hooks his house up to a gas-powered electric generator and electrocutes himself trying to start it.
295*** A heroin addict who inadvertently overdoses on his dealer's supply, unaware that its purity is eight times higher than anything he's ever used.
296* SqueamishAboutSlaughter: When Mother Abagail needs to feed a large group of survivors, she asks two of the men to take her to a neighboring farm that has a fattened pig. They help her butcher it, but are too disturbed by what they witnesses to eat dinner.
297* {{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.
298%% In-work reference to the trope. the other examples of Squick are YMMV.
299* TheStinger: Added to the Uncut edition, to strengthen the tie with ''Franchise/TheDarkTower'': [[spoiler:Randall Flagg wakes up after the nuclear blast on an island somewhere and possibly even another reality (or level of the Dark Tower), and begins to take over a society once again. ''Ka'' is referenced.]]
300* SuicideByPills: [[spoiler:Rita Blakemoor can't handle the shock and stress of the post-plague world and uses sleeping pills to overdose and kill herself.]]
301%%* TalkingInYourDreams
302* TakeThat: Several towards UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan (in the 1990 edition). For instance:
303-->'''Larry:''' He [The Judge] is only seventy, for the record. Ronald Reagan was serving as President at an older age than that.”
304-->'''Fran:''' That's not what I'd call a very strong recommendation.
305* TakingYouWithMe: Once America's leadership realizes they're doomed, they deliberately infect the rest of the world with Captain Trips to ensure no country can rise to fill the power vacuum.
306* TelevisionGeography: The town of Arnette is said to be in East Texas, but is described as having West Texas’s wide-open, arid landscape, and later East Texas native Stu is surprised by the green vegetation of the eastern states. East Texas is dominated by pine forest to the north and swampy, dense wetland forest to the south. Moving west, the landscape gives way to lush, wet grassland. There are no dry prairies for a couple of hundred miles.
307* ThrowAwayCountry: [[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.
308* TitleDrop: Abagail, during her [[spoiler:FinalSpeech]].
309--> "And with God's help, you will ''stand''..."
310* TotallyRadical: 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.
311* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Harold frequently munches on chocolate Paydays, though he gives them up during the journey to Boulder. By the time Larry's caught up with him, having figured out trail-of-breadcrumbs-style that they ''were'' Harold's favorite food and thus brought some as a gift, Harold politely declines them.
312%%* TrueCompanions: Stu, Larry, Glen and Ralph. There's also:
313%%** Stu, Frannie, Harold, and Glen.
314%%** Larry, Nadine, Joe, and Lucy, along with Rita.
315%%** Nick, Tom, Ralph, and Mother Abagail.
316* TunelessSongOfMadness:
317** Having been jailed just prior to the apocalypse, Lloyd Henreid ends up trapped when the virus wipes out everyone else at the prison, eventually finding himself trying to pick meat off the arm of the prisoner in the neighboring cell, all while continuously singing the nonsense chorus lyrics from "Camptown Races."
318** Quoth the Trashcan Man, "Ci-a-bo-la, bumpty-bumpty-''bump!''", to the tune of Tower of Power's "Down to the Nightclub", as he makes his way to Las Vegas to meet the Dark Man.
319* UpdatedRerelease: Two updates of the novel were done. The mid-1980s one just tweaked a few cultural references. The Complete Uncut restored much of what King was forced to cut, either because it made the book too long or because it would have offended too many back in the 70s.
320* VillainousRescue: [[spoiler:Flagg sends wolves]] to save Trashcan Man from The Kid.
321* WalkIntoMordor: The third act of the book centers on one, as Stu, Ralph, Larry and Glen start the journey to confront Flagg in Las Vegas.
322%%* WeAreNotGoingThroughThatAgain: [[spoiler:Stu and Fran's reason for leaving Boulder]].
323* WhamLine: Not a spoken line, but a thought that Flagg has early in the novel, as he gleefully realizes that some vast change is coming to the world: [[spoiler:"After all, why else could he suddenly do magic?"]]
324* WanderingWalkOfMadness: One chapter discusses the fact that many survivors of the superflu end up dying anyway due to "those ole emergency room blues" — in other words, bad luck. One, a man in his fifties, used to jog for the sake of his health prior to the plague; however, now that the plague has killed off all his friends and family, he's ultimately reduced to jogging obsessively around his neighbourhood — partly as a coping strategy but mostly because he has absolutely nothing else to do. By the end, his demons have gotten the better of him and he is now running in a blind, obsessive panic, until at last his heart gives out after nearly six hours of non-stop running; to his immense relief, he drops dead on the spot.
325* WhatASenselessWasteOfHumanLife: Many characters express these sentiments when they stumble upon particularly terrible scenes of death. Averted with the narrator, as he has this to say when describing a chapter of survivor's demises from various accidents:
326--> ''No great loss.''
327* WhatIsThisFeeling: When Trashcan Man arrives in Las Vegas and interacts with other of Flagg's followers, he realizes he is feeling happy.
328* WhoWatchesTheWatchmen: The escape of Campion, the security guard at the research facility who spreads Captain Trips beyond hope of containment, is explained thusly:
329-->"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..."
330** Also crops up when the Boulder committee start thinking about law and order and the enforcement thereof. They look to Mother Abagail for guidance... But later they wonder the implications of their various rules, for example, whether restoring electrical power would lead to restoring the electric chair. They avert this trope somewhat by consciously making their society and committee status democratic.
331* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Major Len Creighton has a fairly substantial role in the first section of the book as General Starkey's second in command in Project Blue, and after Starkey's suicide becomes the head of the military coverup. He's last "seen" on-page talking over the radio to one of his officers in LA during the last days of the plague. It is very possible he died of the superflu but notably he gives ''no'' indications of being sick even at this very late stage, leaving his fate a mystery.
332* WildChild: Joe/Leo is reduced to this by the trauma of his family dying in the plague and nearly dying himself of an infected animal bite.
333* WinsByDoingAbsolutelyNothing: A common criticism is that the protagonists don't really ''do'' much against TheEmpire created by [[SatanicArchetype Randall Flagg]]. His people are already [[EvilWillFail losing faith in his infallibility]] by the time Our Heroes show up to make their titular stand, and desertions have become common. Then [[spoiler:one of his [[TragicVillain tragically]] [[PyroManiac crazy]] henchmen shows up with a nuke in tow, which is detonated by DeusExMachina]]. The heroes don't do much besides watch. [[spoiler:And die.]]
334* WorthlessCurrency: With so few plague survivors and so many goods free for the taking, money becomes meaningless. An early scene with a survivor depicts him (futilely) attempting to buy someone's help with a suitcase full of looted cash. Later, in Vegas, even using cash for high-stakes poker only provides a short-lived thrill.
335%%* WriterOnBoard: Glen Bateman is somewhere between TheProfessor and MrExposition.
336* {{Xenofiction}}: Parts of the book are told from the perspective of Kojak, the dog.
337%%* YankTheDogsChain
338* YouHaveFailedMe: After Bobby Terry winds up [[spoiler:shooting the Judge's face to pieces rather than keeping it whole]] per Flagg's explicit orders, Randall personally appears to savagely tear Bobby apart.
339--> "There were worse things than crucifixion. There were teeth."
340----

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