Stephen King’s and Toni Morrison’s
Characters With Multiple Personality
Stephen King has characters who have multiple personality, such as the novelist with multiple personality in “Secret Window, Secret Garden” (Four Past Midnight, 1990). Toni Morrison also has characters who have multiple personality, according to Diana Kindron’s “Deacon Morgan and Multiple Personality Disorder in Toni Morrison’s Paradise” (http://voices.yahoo.com/deacon-morgan-multiple-personality-disorder-in-256432.html?cat=72) (2007), although most reviews of Paradise (1997) make no mention of it.
One of the main things that gives credibility to the multiple personality of King’s novelist character is that the novelist hears several distinctive, rational voices in his head. Hearing such voices is not a well-known feature of stereotypical multiple personality, but it does happen to be clinically realistic. These voices would be from several hidden personalities, speaking from behind the scenes. However, judging from the text, it is not clear that King, himself, realized that these would be voices of other personalities, and not just the thoughts of the regular personality. So he probably did not learn about voices in multiple personality from reading a textbook. Yet, he is somehow familiar enough with the mind of a person with multiple personality to include these realistic details.
Do King and Morrison write such characters because multiple personality is an easy gimmick? No. Writing credible characters with multiple personality is not easy. So there must be another reason.
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