It was published in 2013 as part of the anthology work Hard Listening: The Greatest Rock Band Ever (of Authors) Tells All.
Gooch shows King various artist's impressions of the theme park, which is to feature dioramas portraying locations relating to rock and roll songs about death.
These are to include the "Honey House" (from Bobby Goldsboro's "Honey"), the "Eddie Cochrane Memorial Highway, leading straight to Dead Man's Curve" (from Jan and Dean's "Dead Man's Curve"), the "Dickey Lee Go-Kart Arena" (from Ray Peterson's "Tell Laura I Love Her"), "Big John's Mine of Doom" (from The Buoys' "Timothy"), and the "Tallahatchie Bridge" (from Bobbie Gentry's "Ode to Billie Joe") over the "Moody River" (from Pat Boone's "Moody River").
[2][3][4] Hard Listening was presented as a history of the Rock Bottom Remainders, a charity supergroup made up of King and other writers.
[6] (The three other "King-esque" stories were written by other members of the Rock Bottom Remainders who attempted to "out-Steve Steve".