cass recenserade Under the Dome av Stephen King (Thorndike Press large print core)
This book rips
5 stjärnor
It’s over a thousand pages long but he never takes his foot off the gas and never really loses his way. Honestly one of his best books.
Inbunden, 880 sidor
På English
Publicerades 14 oktober 2009 av Hodder & Stoughton.
Inexplicably, an invisible barrier has descended over the town. A woodchuck is chopped right in half; a gardener's hand is severed at the wrist: the plane explodes with sheets of flame spreading to the ground and Dale Barbara. Iraq war vet turned short- order cook. is force.d to turn back into the town he so desperately needed to leave.
As residents speculate about what has cut them off from the rest of the world, the Army searches for an inside man. Barbara is put in charge. But Big Jim Rennie, the man who holds the town in his powerful grip. has other plans. And the Dome could just be the answer to his prayers.
As food, electricity and water run short and children start to have premonitions of a terrifying Halloween. 'Barbie' is forced to take on Big Jim and his renegade supporters. Now time is running out …
Inexplicably, an invisible barrier has descended over the town. A woodchuck is chopped right in half; a gardener's hand is severed at the wrist: the plane explodes with sheets of flame spreading to the ground and Dale Barbara. Iraq war vet turned short- order cook. is force.d to turn back into the town he so desperately needed to leave.
As residents speculate about what has cut them off from the rest of the world, the Army searches for an inside man. Barbara is put in charge. But Big Jim Rennie, the man who holds the town in his powerful grip. has other plans. And the Dome could just be the answer to his prayers.
As food, electricity and water run short and children start to have premonitions of a terrifying Halloween. 'Barbie' is forced to take on Big Jim and his renegade supporters. Now time is running out for those living under the Dome. Can they find what has created it before it's too late? --front flap
It’s over a thousand pages long but he never takes his foot off the gas and never really loses his way. Honestly one of his best books.
Small town (in Maine, duh) suddenly gets sealed off from the outside world by an invisible force field. After the initial shocks and a few grisly deaths, things get worse as the local republican bigwig seizes the opportunity to convince people to give up freedom for safety and quickly and efficiently sets himself up as dictator. Leading to more grisly deaths, an incredibly unsubtle parable about paranoia in Bush-era US, and funnily enough one of King's most entertaining novels in a while.
Which isn't to say it's great, by King standards or otherwise. Even if you shrug and accept the blatant political subtext (whether you agree or disagree, getting hit with the Message Bat always hurts), you're still stuck with a story that repeats a number of old King storylines without necessarily adding anything new to them; it's basically The Mist (one of the characters even compares it to the …
Small town (in Maine, duh) suddenly gets sealed off from the outside world by an invisible force field. After the initial shocks and a few grisly deaths, things get worse as the local republican bigwig seizes the opportunity to convince people to give up freedom for safety and quickly and efficiently sets himself up as dictator. Leading to more grisly deaths, an incredibly unsubtle parable about paranoia in Bush-era US, and funnily enough one of King's most entertaining novels in a while.
Which isn't to say it's great, by King standards or otherwise. Even if you shrug and accept the blatant political subtext (whether you agree or disagree, getting hit with the Message Bat always hurts), you're still stuck with a story that repeats a number of old King storylines without necessarily adding anything new to them; it's basically The Mist (one of the characters even compares it to the movie) meets The Stand. And if you start picking at the details, there are a number of things that make little sense (so the phones are cut off, but TV and Internet still work, and yet the citizens of the town immediately start acting as if there is no way at all to communicate with the outside world, or tell them what's going on in town...? What?)
That said, for a 1000+ page novel, it really zips. The advantage of King sticking to favourite subplots and character types is that he knows exactly what he's doing (unlike the ambitious but inept Lisey's Story) and while you could probably edit 100 pages or more out without losing much, he manages to juggle the dozens of main characters and their various story arcs well enough that there's never really a dull moment. King's approach to epic stories (put good guys and bad guys in the same pressure cooker, have the bad guys do awful things to the good guys until we beg him to stop torturing them, and then keep it up a while longer) is predictable but effective, and the thing that once helped make me a King fan - that you can never trust that the good guys will succeed, and certainly not escape unscathed - is still there. As political allegory, it's clumsy and overwritten; as straight-ahead action with blatant emotional manipulation, it works.