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      A Letter From Stephen: 
       
          For those of you out  there in Constant Reader Land who are feeling miffed because the TV version of Under the Dome varies considerably from  the book version, here’s a little story. 
         
            Near the end of his life,  and long after his greatest novels were written, James M. Cain agreed to be  interviewed by a student reporter who covered culture and the arts for his  college newspaper. This young man began his time with Cain by bemoaning how  Hollywood had changed books such as The  Postman Always Rings Twice and Double  Indemnity. Before he could properly get into his rant, the old man  interrupted him by pointing to a shelf of books behind his desk. “The movies  didn’t change them a bit, son,” he said. “They’re all right up there. Every  word is the same as when I wrote them.” 
         
            I feel the same way about  Under the Dome. If you loved the book  when you first read it, it’s still there for your perusal. But that doesn’t  mean the TV series is bad, because it’s not. In fact, it’s very good. And, if  you look closely, you’ll see that most of my characters are still there,  although some have been combined and others have changed jobs. That’s also true  of the big stuff, like the supermarket riot, the reason for all that propane  storage, and the book’s thematic concerns with diminishing resources. 
         
            Many of the changes  wrought by Brian K. Vaughan and his team of writers have been of necessity, and  I approved of them wholeheartedly. Some have been occasioned by their plan to  keep the Dome in place over Chester’s Mill for months instead of little more  than a week, as is the case in the book. Other story modifications are slotting  into place because the writers have completely re-imagined the source of the Dome. 
         
            That such a re-imagining  had to take place was my only serious concern when the series was still in the  planning stages, and that concern was purely practical. If the solution to the  mystery were the same on TV as in the book, everyone would know it in short  order, which would spoil a lot of the fun (besides, plenty of readers didn’t like  my solution, anyway). By the same  token, it would spoil things if you guys knew the arcs of the characters in  advance. Some who die in the book—Angie, for instance—live in the TV version of  Chester’s Mill…at least for a while. And some who live in the book may not be as  lucky during the run of the show. Just sayin’. 
         
          Listen, I’ve always been  a situational writer. My idea of what to do with a plot is to shoot it before  it can breed. It’s true that when I start a story, I usually have a general  idea of where it’s going to finish up, but in many cases I end up in a  different place entirely (for instance, I fully expected Ben Mears to die at  the end of ’Salem’s Lot, and Susannah  Dean was supposed to pop off at the end of Song  of Susannah). “The book is the boss,” Alfred Bester used to say, and what  that means to me is the situation is  the boss. If you play fair with the characters—and let them play their parts  according to their strengths and weaknesses—you can never go wrong. It’s  impossible. 
          There’s only one element  of my novel that absolutely had to be  the same in the novel and the show, and that’s the Dome itself. It’s best to  think of that novel and what you’re seeing week-to-week on CBS as a case of  fraternal twins. Both started in the same creative womb, but you will be able to tell them apart. Or, if  you’re of a sci-fi bent, think of them as alternate versions of the same  reality. 
         
            As for me, I’m enjoying  the chance to watch that alternate reality play out; I still think there’s no  place like Dome. 
         
          As for you, Constant Reader, feel free to take  the original down from your bookshelf anytime you want. Nothing between the  covers has changed a bit. 
      
        Stephen King 
          June 27th, 2013
         
          
          
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