![]() ![]() Her love of the author and part-time Sarasota resident began with the 1983 horror classic “Pet Sematary” (DiPino devoured it while curled in a chair, afraid to let her feet touch the ground). “It’s funny, I do get up early, but I am more of a night owl,” said.ĭiPino, as it so happens, is a huge Stephen King fan. She was in early and picked up the phone, something Sarasota’s real police chief says would depend on the day. She’s the Sarasota Chief of Police,” Jamieson told a small-town sheriff during his job interview. He had been drinking and there was a lawsuit. The novel opens with Tim Jamieson, the ex-cop, who, after losing his job in Sarasota, wanders north to South Carolina, where he takes a gig as a semi-official night patrolman.Ī year before, Jamieson’s career with the Sarasota Police Department ended after he fired a warning shot to break up a fight at Westfield Mall, a potential reference to the company’s two malls in Sarasota. ![]() ![]() It has no evil cats, dogs or toys, no metamorphosing diabolical entities or invaders from other dimensions intent on tormenting innocent children.īut it does have Sarasota Police Chief Bernadette DiPino and a fictional ex-cop who was forced to resign from the department after an episode described as a “Rube Goldberg” bungle. ![]() SARASOTA - Stephen King’s newest science fiction thriller “The Institute” has no possessed cars. ![]()
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May 2023
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