Stephen King is one of the best known authors of our time. His works have been adapted for television and movies, many of which are well respected and even award winning. He attacks various topics from innumerable directions. I had read the first two books in the Dark Tower series and had given up, but I'd heard from many that those were different from his other work, so, when I saw Needful Things at a used book sale I decided to give it a try.
Title: Needful Things
Author: Stephen King
Format: Book
Time to Finish: 34 days
I
read the introduction and first chapter and was hooked. The stories
revolves around the small town of Castle Rock, Maine, where a new
business has opened. It is called Needful Things, and sells exactly what
you're looking for, but at a price. Part of the price is to play a
trick on someone else, but the tricks, seemingly innocent at first
become more and more dastardly and harmful. Soon the town is in chaos
and watching it all is Mr. Gaunt, the proprietor of this new shop.
The solid
premise, and King's writing is good enough to not distract most readers
from the content. He's the problem with the book: being hooked for the first twenty pages does not guarantee you will devour the 630. I, in fact, did not. About
250 pages into the story I was ready to be done with the book, but was too stubborn
to completely give up on it. I can read a 700 pages book and enjoy
every word (A Song of Ice and Fire, King Killer Chronicles, Acacia)
because often those books are developing a few characters very well, allowing them to endear themselves to the reader. In
this doorstop of a novel, King spends his pages creating brief
caricatures so that...SPOILERS...he could kill them a few minutes later.
It's extremely tiresome and makes it so that you could not care less what
actually happens to most of the characters. Creating a character 500 pages in for the sole purpose of killing some one and/or dying is lazy and meaningless to the story at large. The reader becomes so jaded about these people and their forced in stories that they are wont to roll their eyes and moan, "not another one." The multitude of undeveloped killable characters means that there is no emotional investment, and without that, readers start to wonder why they even bother. For me it
was stubbornness, others may just worship Stephen King.
Regardless, I'd say give this book a pass. It's not scary, creepy, or
horrifying, but most tragically, it's not even interesting.
3/10
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