I know there are a lot of fans of Stephen King's Dark Tower series on here--my post about the Dark Tower Series still holds the record for view count. I ripped through Stephen King's latest installment, The Wind Through the Keyhole recently, and I must say, it's good to be back in Roland's world. In the chronology, it falls between Wizard and Glass (book 4) and Wolves of the Calla (book 5).
Do I have to read all the Dark Tower books first to enjoy this one?
No--Stephen King answered that question in the introduction, and gives you all the information you need to know to enjoy the story (which isn't much). It does very well as a stand-alone story, and what a remarkable story it is. Actually, it's three stories.
It begins with Roland and his ka-tet where we left them at the end of Wizard and Glass. Sheltering from a terrible storm, Roland helps to pass the time by telling a story, actually two stories--a story within a story nestled together one inside the other like Russian nesting dolls. It starts out with Roland's story going back to when he was a young gunslinger and was send to hunt down a skin man--a shapeshifter. And of course that story falls into another story.
Many readers weren't very satisfied with the conclusion of The Dark Tower Series. It was fun to jump back in the story and find Roland, Jake, Eddie, Susannah, and of course, Oy back along with path of the beam.
It was a great yarn, and will give fans another look into Roland's mysterious world. And for Stephen King, it was really short, too, at just over 300 pages. Well worth the price of admission. As Stephen King said in the book "A person's never too old for stories. Man and boy, girl and woman, we live for them."
I have a feeling this book is going to introduce many new readers to Roland of Gilead. Read it, and if you enjoy it, the series starts with The Gunslinger and the words "The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed."
~Todd E. Creason
The Midnight Freemason
A group of Master Masons talk about topics of Masonic interest--each from their own unique perspective. You'll find a wide range of subjects including history, trivia, travel, book reviews, great quotes, and hopefully a little humor as well on topics of interest for Freemasons and those interested in the subject of Freemasonry.
Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts
Coming April 2012: Stephen King's Dark Tower Returns
Due out 4/24/12 |
As you know, I occasionally review books on The Midnight Freemason, and every time I mention Stephen King's Dark Tower Series, the hit count goes through the ceiling--so why not do it again? Here we are less than a month away from the release of the first Dark Tower book since we thought he finished the series in 2004. I guess he had a little more to say about Roland's world after all.
Stephen King’s Upcoming Dark Tower Novel, The Wind Through The Keyholeis due out on April 24, 201. In this new book, we join Roland and his ka-tet as a ferocious storm halts their progress along the Path of the Beam. As they shelter from the screaming wind and snapping trees, Roland tells them not just one strange tale, but two–and in doing so sheds fascinating light on his own troubled past.
In his early days as a gunslinger, in the guilt-ridden year following his mother’s death, Roland is sent by his father to a ranch to investigate a recent slaughter. Here Roland discovers a bloody churn of bootprints, clawed animal tracks and terrible carnage–evidence that the ‘skin-man’, a shape-shifter, is at work. There is only one surviving witness: a brave but terrified boy called Bill Streeter.
Roland, himself only a teenager, calms the boy by reciting a story from the Book of Eld that his mother used to read to him at bedtime, The Wind Through The Keyhole.
"A person’s never too old for stories," he says to Bill. "Man and boy, girl and woman, we live for them."
What Stephen King Has To Say About It:
First, Mid-World lies next to our world, and there are many overlaps. In some places there are doorways between the two worlds, and sometimes there are thin places, porous places, where the two worlds actually mingle. Three of Roland’s ka-tet—Eddie, Susannah, and Jake have been drawn separately from troubled lives in New York into Roland’s Mid-World quest. Their fourth traveling companion, a billy-bumbler named Oy, is a golden-eyed creature native to Mid-World. Mid-World is very old, and falling to ruin, filled with monsters and untrustworthy magic.
Second, Roland Deschain of Gilead is a gunslinger—one of a small band that tries to keep order in an increasingly lawless world. If you think of the gunslingers of Gilead as a strange combination of knights errant and territorial marshals in the Old West, you’ll be close to the mark. Most of them, although not all, are descended from the line of the old White King, known as Arthur Eld (I told you there were overlaps).
Third, Roland has lived his life under a terrible curse. He killed his mother, who was having an affair—mostly against her will, and certainly against her better judgment—with a fellow you will meet in these pages. Although it was by mistake, he holds himself accountable, and the unhappy Gabrielle Deschain’s death has haunted him since his young manhood. These events are fully narrated in the Dark Tower cycle, but for our purposes here, I think it’s all you have to know.
For longtime readers, this book should be shelved between Wizard and Glass and Wolves of the Calla . . . which makes it, I suppose, Dark Tower 4.5.
As for me, I was delighted to discover my old friends had a little more to say. It was a great gift to find them again, years after I thought their stories were told.
—Stephen King
I guess the most surprising thing for me so far, is that the book listing on Amazon indicates it's only 320 pages--that's pretty short for a Stephen King novel. Could that suggest more is on the way?
~TEC
Stephen King's New Novel: 11/22/63
Stephen King started publishing books about the same time I started reading them. I can tell when and where I've read every one starting in about the fourth grade or so. I was trying to think the other day which one I read first--it was The Shining. That would have been in about 1977, and I was ten years old at the time. It scared the hell out of me, so naturally, I read Carrie and Salem's Lot right after I finished that one, and I've been hooked ever since.
So I've grown up with him, and every time I start to read a new one, it's like falling back into step again with an old friend. I think I may be the guy he calls Constant Reader--that I am. I haven't like all his books, in fact, there have been a couple I never finished.
So I've grown up with him, and every time I start to read a new one, it's like falling back into step again with an old friend. I think I may be the guy he calls Constant Reader--that I am. I haven't like all his books, in fact, there have been a couple I never finished.
The Dark Tower returns April 2012 |
But his newest book 11/22/63: A Novel is fantastic--even for those of us who weren't around when Kennedy was assassinated, I think at one point or another, we've all had that moment where we wonder what the world might have been like if it hadn't been for that one day in Dallas. Stephen King explores that very question, as usual, in his own unique way. He's always known how to use small details to really pull you in, and there are so many subtle nostalgic nuances, it's not long before you're completely immersed in that era in American history--it's difficult to put down once you get started. It's available in Kindle and Nook editions as well.
Stephen King has another one coming out soon that has a lot of people excited--the latest in his epic Dark Tower series--The Wind Through the Keyhole. I wrote about that series here. So keep your eye out for it also--it's due out in April 2012.
Happy reading,
~TEC
Stephen King's Dark Tower: Volume VIII Coming In 2012
I often review good books I've read, and my favorite books of all time are Stephen King's Dark Tower series. Some months ago, I posted a rather long piece about the Dark Tower series--you can read that here. But here's some really good news for fans of Stephen King's Dark Tower series:
StephenKing.com is proud to announce The Dark Tower: The Wind Through the Keyhole. The next installment of the epic series is set for release in 2012.
"It’s not going to change anybody’s life, but God, I had fun."
~Stephen King
about "The Wind Through The Keyhole"
It's long been rumored that Stephen King was working on another Dark Tower book--that would be Volume VIII! Well, it's true, and you can pre-order it at Amazon.com right now. According to the Amazon listing, the book is scheduled for release April 3, 2012.
Sounds like it's going to be a story within a story, much like Wizard and Glass that tells about one of Roland's early adventures. I guess we'll just have to wait until April 2012 to know for sure--and that should give you just enough time to re-read the first seven volumes. Just in case you've forgotten the order, I'll help you out.
- The Gunslinger (1982)
- The Drawing of the Three (1987)
- The Wastelands (1991)
- Wizard and Glass (1997)
- Wolves of the Calla (2003)
- Song of Susannah (2004)
- The Dark Tower (2004)
~TEC
Book Review: Stephen King's Epic "Dark Tower" Series
“The man in black fled across the desert,
and the gunslinger followed.”
And with those words begins one of Stephen King’s least known works--his epic Dark Tower series. The series is without question, my favorite, probably because it's been with me for so long. I first read those words over thirty years ago when I was in grade school. The Gunslinger was first published as a series of stories in Science Fiction & Fantasy Magazine, and while it was being run, I ran to the library at our school on a daily basis to see if that month's magazine had arrived yet--I drove poor Mrs. Fisher insane over it. For a nine or ten year old boy, that story had everything--it was like Clint Eastwood meets J. R. R. Tolkien in a world that reminded me of Planet of the Apes. I was disappointed when the series ended to say the least.
A few years later, just after I'd gotten my driver's license, I saw Stephen King had published The Gunslinger in book form. I bought it of course, and re-read it (when I should have selling quality new and used instruments at the mall music store I worked at). Again, I was disappointed when I finished it.
About the time I got married the first time ('87), I was thrilled to see he'd published a second book The Drawing of Three. The third, The Wastelands ('91), I read late at night, since I was up anyway, feeding and changing my eldest daughter, Jaclyn. Wizard and Glass came out during the divorce (about the only thing I enjoyed in '97), and by the time Wolves of the Calla came out in '03, I'd met Valerie, gotten remarried, and started a new life. The last two, Song of Susannah and The Dark Tower came out the following year finishing the series--an adventure that took twenty-five years to complete.
The Dark Tower series is difficult to describe--it's a hybrid between a fantasy novel and a western novel--along with an epic Tolkienesque quest. The story starts with the Gunslinger following the "man in black" across the dessert, a man that he catches at the end of the first book. But that is only the very beginning of the gunslingers' quest for the Dark Tower--the mythical center of of his dying world. We get the idea that the Gunslinger's world is unraveling, and the Dark Tower is the cause of this deterioration, and that perhaps Roland Deschain, our gunslinger, is on a quest to save his world. Along this quest, he meets a motley assortment of characters that join him, and they face many difficult challenges. There's nothing else quite like this series. I highly recommend it. It's Stephen King's best work--even The Stand pales by comparison, possibly because Stephen King had already written The Gunslinger, and the events that took place in The Stand was related--just a small piece in a much larger puzzle that is The Dark Tower.
What's most interesting about the Dark Tower Series are the connections between the series, and many of Stephen King's other books. If you've read Stephen King for a long time as I have, after you read The Dark Tower Series, you begin to see that Stephen King has referenced that mysterious world in a number of his books--It, Insomnia, From a Buick 8, Rose Madder, The Eyes of the Dragon, many more. It seems that in Stephen Kings mind, everything in his fiction is in one way or another connected back to Roland Deschain's world--and the Dark Tower.
Since Stephen King finished the series in '04, Marvel Comics has been putting out a series of graphic novels called Gunslinger Born--the prequel to The Gunslinger. I've lost track, but I think Marvel is into a second and third storyline as they explore Roland's past.
And now the news that really prompted me to review these books--Stephen King misled us. Apparently, the seventh book wasn't the end of the series. He will be releasing another Dark Tower book (the eighth) titled The Wind Through the Keyhole in 2012.
If you start reading now, you'll be ready for the new book in 2012.
The Dark Tower Series--check them out! |
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