Good Last Thursday of July! This summer is really flying by!
This review is the first of two today, in case you are reading or watching in any sort of order.
Now, before you go hitting the back button or the pause button depending on how you view these simply because it's Stephen King, let me stop you. This isn't horror. It's not even really thriller. This is medieval fantasy (as an aside, King's horror fans initially hated it; this reaction became the basis for his next book about an author, Misery). There's kings and queens and princes, the poor riff raff of the kingdom, an evil wizard/sorcerer/magician, true love, revenge, escape...actually I'm sounding a lot like the Grandpa in The Princess Bride trying to convince the sick kid to listen to the book! Which, if you'll permit me, is kinda how I found this.
I have read this probably a dozen or more times. I first read it in 1994, when I was a freshman myself (point here: my son will be a freshman in a month's time). My Dad had grabbed the paperback on sale at Walden (the book store that used to be in the mall) on a whim. After he read it, knowing I loved The Princess Bride, he handed it over. I fell in total love with it.
So why read a book over and over? This book is like a comfort. I can safely escape to the Kingdom of Delain when I don't need to be fully present. Thus, Friday, facing the aforementioned son's 3+ hour 3rd Degree Black Belt test (and screaming younger siblings and awkward parents attempting small-talk), this was my "please don't bother me, I'm reading" excuse.
Roland is an aging King, a widower who lost his beloved wife Sasha in childbirth of their second son Thomas. Roland dies of poison, and his oldest son Peter is convicted and sentenced to life in prison. The reader knows very early on the King's advisor (magician, wizard, etc.) Flagg is really to blame. That's all I'm giving on the plot. You just have to trust me you will NOT want to put this down. If you are a true Stephen King follower, you recognize our villain--he appears in The Stand and The Dark Tower.
And, Stephen King certainly leaves the door open to a sequel, but there hasn't been one...yet. Oh, and the rights to the movie where optioned in 2019...
All opinions expressed on this blog and the video version of it are solely those of Mrs. W.
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