First of all, I hope this is the proper forum. If not, I apologize!
I've been wanting to read all of Sai King's novels for a while now. The only ones left are Roadwork, The Running Man, Eyes of the Dragon, The Regulators, The Colorado Kid and Lisey's Story. Either reviews of them have...
Haven't read this one in years but I'm embarking in a reread! Started it this morning and only read the first chapter but I'm sucked in once more. The prose is beautiful. The prose, the setting, the story is like something from a dream (which I suppose was intentional). So excited to take this...
I figured this was the best place to post this and I'm prepared to get a lot of responses like 'who cares?!' but what the hell, here's the SK dream I had last night.
I was going to a Stephen King event just hoping to catch a glimpse of him but when I got there it was just a diner. SK was just...
...two separate books. A part one and two. Yup, I saw on amazon that early next year they're dividing the whole book into two parts to be released early next year, each one a month a part. It reminds me of a serial novel divided into two instead of the usual five or six (ie The Green Mile). The...
...instead of the setting being an entire country it's one small town. That's about how I sum up the heart of this book. Obviously the disasters are entirely different (ie a devastating plague vs a supernatural impregnable dome) but the large cast of characters and human drama come crashing down...
...for me (and this may seem odd considering the other horrifying aspects) was when Trash was out in the desert looking for his toys where he finds the radiation symbol on the door. Is there nothing more chilling than a manical firebug finding a door with (an already ominious in any circumstane)...
...and I enjoyed it more this time. Don't get me wrong I liked it the first time but considering this is one of King's most panned books I was a little surprised. Having recently gone through a (somewhat) major injury I can see where King got therapeutic value out of writing. Not only that it is...
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