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The Wind Through the Keyhole
A new Mid-World / Dark Tower book is being written by Stephen King - possibly not directly related to the 7 books of the Dark Tower series, but set between the events of books 4-5 (Wizard and Glass - Wolves of the Calla) That doesn't really narrow the time frame much...
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I finished reading Wolves of the Calla last night, I thoroughly enjoyed it from start to end. I didn't feel there was any dip in quality compared with the first 4 books, and I will definitely be buying the Song of Susannah & Dark Tower (though I will probably take another little break from Dark Tower in order to read something else) Now that I have finished Wolves of the Calla and seen some of the things that the reviewer I mentioned earlier criticised, I was finally able to read ArrBee's spoiler comments. I'm very glad I had the discipline not to read those spoilers until now.
*** If you haven't read Wolves of the Calla yet, just move along. No need to look at anything here, the comments below could be a terrible spoiler ***
This sentiment is how I feel about most of my previous exposure to Stephen King's stories. I think the worst may be the Langoliers, which was roughly on par with the Lamp Monster from the Family Guy sketch but the entities in IT or Desperation were not much better. In sci-fi and fantasy there are plenty of weak and poorly used ideas: Indian burial grounds, flying through black holes, multiverse etc that get recycled over and over again. If the author uses any of these things in the plot then everything else better be pretty damn good to make up for the lazy ideas.
There are obvious clichés in Dark Tower, and some pretty patheticbut I've been able to let it go and maintain the suspension of disbelief because of the hints at the way all of these things relate to the story and Dark Tower universe.In the user review, the guy absolutely ripped into Stephen King for the arrogance of placing himself in the story. Toward the end of the book I was thinking the reviewer was an extrordinarily petty twerp - because the only mention of Stephen King himself was on the 'menu' board at the Manhattan bookstore. Of course in the final pages of Wolves of the Calla, Roland picks up the copy of Salem's Lot - so I wonder if my reviewers ire is directed more at the final books in the series. I'm willing to take the chance and see how it pans out.
As for Father Callahan and his recounting of his tale, I don't mind at all, except for the fact that I haven't read Salem's Lot and it was in my short list of Stephen King novels to try I may still read it, but I my enthusiasm for that one has been severly dented. |
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