Book News and Views: Special Stephen King Edition

November 13, 2009 at 2:09 pm | In Authors, On the Web | Leave a Comment
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Stephen King

Stephen King via last.fm

I am still eagerly waiting for my copy of Under the Dome, otherwise known as the door stopper, to arrive from Amazon.com (purchased for only $9.00 in their stupid under-bidding war with Wal-Mart). In the meantime, here are some juicy Stephen King links to keep us all busy.

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Book News and Views

November 5, 2009 at 2:59 pm | In Authors, On the Web | Leave a Comment
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Cover of "Under the Dome: A Novel"

Cover of Under the Dome: A Novel

I have a ton of links saved up, so let’s get right to them!

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Book News and Views

October 24, 2009 at 1:44 pm | In Genres, Writing | Leave a Comment
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Once again, I present a bevy of reading- and writing-related links for your weekend perusing pleasure.

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Book News and Views

October 8, 2009 at 1:01 pm | In Books, On the Web | 2 Comments
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Yay! Here is another super list of book-related links for your perusing pleasure.

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The Dark Tower Series: From Start to Finish

July 21, 2009 at 11:56 am | In Books, Reviews | 12 Comments
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Cover of "The Dark Tower (The Dark Tower,...

Cover of The Dark Tower (The Dark Tower, Book 7)

The Dark Tower Series Books 1-7 by Stephen King

If you didn’t read the Dark Tower books as they came out, entering the series now can seem daunting. While the first book in the series, The Gunslinger, is relatively slim, the books just keep getting thicker and thicker — and there are seven of them to get through. But I think the journey through King’s epic is well worth your time, especially if you enjoy novels that mix genres (science fiction, fantasy, western, horror), present a new spin on old tropes (the quest story, parallel worlds), and even experiment with metafiction. The Dark Tower is the pinnacle of King’s writing career, and I think the series incorporate the best of his ideas and themes (as well as some failures). Here is my guide to the series.

The Gunslinger was first published in 1982, but a revised and expanded edition was released in 2003 that restores a few cut scenes, adds some important foreshadowing and cleans up some inconsistencies with the later novels. The slimmest volume in the series, and the best written, The Gunslinger has one of the truly great opening lines:

The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed.

In The Gunslinger, we meet Roland, King’s antihero, and enter his world, a “world that has moved on.” We also learn of his quest to reach the Dark Tower, Roland’s obsessive goal that drives the entire series. The book is haunting and spare, and if you were only going to read one Dark Tower book, this would be the one. Just try not to continue, though, when you reach the end.

For me, the strongest books in the series after The Gunslinger are The Drawing of the Three (Volume II) and The Wastelands (Volume III). In these books, Roland is putting together his ka-tet, the group of people who will travel with him on his quest, and he first crosses from his world into ours (or a world very much like ours). The suspense in these two books is ramped up high; I have reread both several times and still could not put them down. Many readers would also name Volume IV, Wizard and Glass, as their favorite because it tells Roland’s back story: how he first became a gunslinger, his first love and what happened to her, and how his kingdom of Gilead was brought down. I find Wizard and Glass to be a little long-winded but still highly enjoyable.

The fifth and sixth installments, Wolves of the Calla and Song of Susannah, are probably the weakest links. In Wolves of the Calla, King really crosses into metafictional territory, spicing it with cross-references — and even one major character — from his other works, as well as elements from Marvel comics, Star Wars and Harry Potter. There is a lot going on in these two novels, maybe a bit too much for some readers. But having journeyed this far, it seems a shame to stop now, and both are still great fun, especially Wolves, which features a spaghetti Western-style showdown at the end. I do have to say that these books introduce King’s most audacious twist of all, which I won’t spoil. Some readers see this as a shocking and arrogant bit of hubris, although I look at it not only as an interesting experiment with reality within fiction, but also a culmination of themes King has been writing about for a long time. It may not be completely successful, but it certainly is something new.

The last book, The Dark Tower, has deeply divided fans. It is the heftiest of all the volumes (with the possible exception of Wizard and Glass), but you can’t stop if you’ve made it this far. This novel is a mass of contradictions: absurd and moving, deeply satisfying and completely unsatisfying in its long-awaited conclusion to Roland’s quest, disappointing and ultimately redeeming. Of course, King kills off a bunch of major characters, which I am not spoiling because that was foreshadowed all along, but don’t forget Jake’s haunting line from Volume 1:

Go on, then; there are other worlds than these.

And there certainly are.

Several aspects of Volume VII border on the ridiculous. It does go on a little too long, and at some point, you’re ready for the Dungeons and Dragons escapades to stop and the serious story to resume. But the ending makes up for it, in my opinion. I won’t give it away, but I imagine I’m one of the few readers who didn’t howl in frustration and throw the book against the wall when we find out what happens to Roland. It takes quite a bit of musing to unravel the tangled web that King has spun of story upon story, world interconnected with world, and that’s good enough to satisfy me. I won’t say that The Dark Tower is my favorite in the series — the first three books are far better — but I will say that King wrote an ending I never saw coming, and that’s why I liked it so much.

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Book News and Views

June 24, 2009 at 10:30 am | In Books, On the Web | 1 Comment
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Stephen King

Stephen King via last.fm

Here is where my web travels have taken me lately:

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The Comic Book Adaptations of Stephen King

June 22, 2009 at 10:08 am | In Books, Reviews | 1 Comment
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Cover of

Cover via Amazon

Two of Stephen King’s longest works — the Dark Tower series and The Stand – are currently being adapted into comic book form, and a third, The Talisman, is forthcoming. I am reading both the Dark Tower and Stand series. Here are my thoughts.

Unlike the novel series, the Dark Tower comics tell the story in chronological order, so the first series, The Gunslinger Born, begins with the events that are told mainly in flashback in the fourth novel, Wizard and Glass. These earliest series relate significant events in young Roland’s life, many of which were only hinted at in the books, so there is a lot of new material here. Robin Furth, King’s longtime assistant and author of The Dark Tower Concordance, writes the comics, so she is particularly well-qualified to fill in the holes. Because of the new events, which nevertheless mesh well with the existing Dark Tower storyline, the comics add a lot of value for Dark Tower fans. Each issue has additional material at the end that explains some of the mythology and other mysterious aspects of the Dark Tower universe, as well.

The art for these comics is spectacular and evokes perfectly Roland’s world, a world that has “moved on.” I think the Dark Tower comics represent the best of what a Stephen King comic adaptation can be. The visual medium truly enhances the story and adds to the reader’s enjoyment, while the new material deepens our understanding of the universe King originally created.

The Stand comic series, on the other hand, does not bring anything new to the table. Instead, it merely retells the story that King fans are already very familiar with. The artwork is fine, but the visual medium is not used very effectively. Instead of telling the story in pictures and dialogue, there is a lot of narrative for a comic book, which seems to be taken straight from the novel. If you have already read The Stand, I see no reason to reread it in comic form.

It remains to be seen which direction The Talisman will take. It is not one of my favorite King novels, and the decision to adapt it now seems to capitalize on the success of the previous two adaptations. On the other hand, The Talisman straddles both worlds, so there is opportunity to bring something new, if the writers and artists will take that risk.

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Book News and Views

June 16, 2009 at 2:35 pm | In Awards, Books, On the Web | 1 Comment
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Let’s take a little spin around the book haps on the web, shall we?

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Hell Is Repetition: The Theme of Cycles in Science Fiction

May 14, 2009 at 11:03 am | In Books | 2 Comments
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Recently, I have become fascinated with the notion of cycles. We humans tend to regard everything linearly, with a beginning and an end, because that is our individual experience. But taking a wider view, we can see that events tend to happen in cycles, that an end leads inexorably to another beginning. It’s easiest to see this in nature, with our regular seasonal cycles and the cycle of growth to death to fertilizer to new life again. In physics, the concept of eternal return posits that the universe has been recurring and will continue to recur in a self-similar form an infinite number of times. According to Eastern religions, we are all caught up in the Wheel of Life, an endless cycle of birth, death and rebirth, until we can escape via enlightenment.

Post-apocalyptic literature, a favorite of mine, is obsessed with endings, an interesting mind game in itself. What would happen if everything, as we know it, just stopped? But the concept of repeating patterns, of endless cycles, is even more of a mind bender. Recently, a couple of favorite TV shows have explored this theme.

**Spoilers for Battlestar Galactica and Lost follow, so stop reading now if you don’t want to know.**

Battlestar Galactica’s controversial finale, seen as a happy ending by some and as a silly warning to be nice to your robots by others, was, in my view, highly pessimistic. Despite all their efforts to break the cycle of Cylon uprising and mutual destruction, even to the point of sacrificing their technological advantages, the surviving characters only managed to put the inevitable off for a few thousand years. But all this has happened before, and will happen again — and the cycle begins anew on modern-day Earth.

Lost is exploring similar themes, although it is not clear yet whether the pattern can actually be broken. Still, last night’s excellent season finale asks the question: If the pattern is destined to keep repeating, why take action at all? Why not just opt out? In my opinion, the show has not taken a side. We’ve seen characters opt out (Bernard and Rose), and they seem perfectly happy. We’ve seen other characters take action to try to change the pattern, break the cycle, but we don’t know if they will be successful. Even if they are unable to change the pattern, will just trying be enough for some kind of personal salvation or redemption? Is what matters making a choice and doing something, rather than the effects of that action? These are great questions to ponder on a sleepless night.

I am now getting interested in science fiction novels that explore similar themes. Here are a few that I could think of (ahoy, there may be spoilers ahead):

  • Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell, which is structured in a cyclical manner progressing forward and then back through time.
  • The Dark Tower series by Stephen King, in which Roland seems doomed to relive the events of his quest for the Dark Tower until he can find a way to break the cycle of repetition.
  • The Mote in God’s Eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, in which an alien civilization is doomed to cause its own apocalypse and then rise from the ashes over and over.
  • Replay by Ken Grimwood, in which a man relives his life again and again (I haven’t read this).

Does anyone have other suggestions? I would love to hear them.

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Book News and Views

April 1, 2009 at 9:14 am | In Books, On the Web | 1 Comment
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Here are some interesting tidbits I’ve collected from the Interwebs:

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