Thursday, May 10, 2007

And the World Moved On...

Stardate 05-10-2007



"The greatest mystery that the universe offers is not life, but size...The child that is most at home with wonder says, 'Daddy, what is above the sky?' and the father says, 'The darkness of space.' The child, 'What is beyond space?' The father, 'The galaxy.' The child, 'Beyond the galaxy?' The father, 'Another galaxy.' The child, 'Beyond the other galaxies?' The father, 'No one knows.'"

"You see, size defeats us. For the fish, the lake in which he lives is the universe. What does the fish think when he is jerked up by the mouth through the silver limits of existence and into a new universe where the air drowns him and the light is blue madness? Where huge bipeds with no gills stuff it into a suffocating box and cover it with wet weeds to die?"

"If you fell outward to the limit of the universe, would you find a board fence and signs reading, 'Dead End?' No. You may find something hard and rounded, as the chick must see the egg from the inside. And if you should peck through that shell or find a door-- what great and torrential light might shine through your opening at the end of space? Might you look through and discover that our entire universe is part of one atom on a blade of grass?

"Imagine the sand of the desert. And imagine a trillion universes, not worlds, but universes, encapsulated in each grain of that desert, and within each universe, an infinity of others. We tower over these universes from our pitiful grass vantage point. With one swing of your boot, you may knock a billion, billion worlds flying off into darkness; in a chain, never to be completed. Size. Size."

"Yet suppose further. Suppose that all worlds, all universes, meet in a single nexus. A single pylon. A tower."--Thoughts by The Man In Black

These were a few excerpts from book one of Stephen King's seven book series-- The Dark Tower. Book one of The Dark Tower series is The Gunslinger. Many have said that The Dark Tower series is King's greatest achievement. Book one was written in 1982 and the series wasn't complete until books six and seven were released in 2004. King has said that during this time period, the number one question that his fans asked him was, "When are you going to finish book seven?" Though there is violence and some gore, this series is not horror, like most of King's other works, but a fantasy. I listened to The Gunslinger on CD and really enjoyed the story and the narration. The narrator sounds like an old cowboy with a raspy voice and a bit of a drawl. The voice of the narrator reminded me of the voice of the old guy from Young Guns II who claimed he was Billy the Kid.

In book one we meet Roland of Gilead, the last of the Gunslingers. He is on a quest to find the mysterious Man In Black, who will start him on the path to find The Dark Tower.

The book is set in a world that feels like the old west, where light and dark magic exist, and its people are strewn out over a vast desert plain. From the start the reader knows that there is something strange about time in this land and that things don't fully make sense. For example, there is a part where Roland walks into town and coming from the local saloon, he can hear Hey Jude being played ragtime style on the piano. Stranger things occur when Roland finds Jake, a young boy from New York who explains that he died in a car crash and then woke up in this strange land. There is also talk of In-World, Mid-World, and End-World, though it is unclear which they are in and how they get back and forth from one world to another.

A lot of people have said that book one can be slow at parts, but that the rest of the series is just amazing. I personally didn't find it slow at all. I really enjoyed the whole thing and I'm very excited to read or listen to the rest of the series and find out what awaits Roland in The Dark Tower.

5 comments:

Katie said...

I'm curious, does Stephen King do the narration oh his books on CD?

Jayme said...

Spencer:

I enjoyed your review. Stephen King has always eluded me. Or, better put, I have always wanted to read his books, but avoided him because I am not a fan of horror novels. Maybe this is the Stephen King novel for me. I'll let you know if I pick it up.

Spencer Davis said...

I've listened to a couple of Stephen King books on CD or audible and i've heard stephen do forwards or afterwards, stuff like that. I have never heard of him doing his own though. I read on audible the other day that there was one gentleman that he used to use for almost all his books but he got in a car accident or something and for one reason or another can no longer do his voices.

Jayme-
I'm sort of on the same page as you. I've found that King has a lot of non-horror books and those actually tend to be the ones that people like the most. Like The Stand or The Dark Tower series. My guess is that more people read them because they are not horror. I'll keep posting on the rest of the series if it remains as good as people say it is.

whitney said...

He spencer. Brad and his brother have read all or almost all of this series. They realy like it. Not my thing so I'm not much help.

Spencer Davis said...

Whitney-
I'm glad to hear it. It really gets me excited to finish the series. Plus, it truly proves how much Brad and his bro like the series because in the USA, it costs around $15.00 to buy one of these books, but in Canada, it costs like $35.00, which is a lot of money to buy a book.