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Best Dark Tower book
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Hmm... I really liked the first three, but found myself stalled halfway through the fourth.
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Still need to read TWTTK. I do agree with your first 2 choices.Not sure which one I like better.I go back and forth between the 2.Wizard would be 3 and wolves would be 4.What about Little Sisters?It is short but still part of the series.
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1. The Drawing of the Three - love the expansion of this story universe beyond the first book here. Meeting the members of Roland's ka-tet and the intertwining of all realities - the big and the small. Both handled wonderfully.
2. The Wastelands - continues the drawing of the ka-tet with Jake being brought back. Very touching first half of the book.
3. The Gunslinger - "The man in black fled across the desert and the gunslinger followed." 'nuff said
4. The Dark Tower - the end arrived at in a honest way. And Jake's sacrifice. Very moving.
5. The Wind Through the Keyhole -a lovely story within a story within a story. Not necessary to the arc of the series but it deepens the mythos and character relations especially between Roland and his mother.
6. Song of Susannah - a bridging book that sets up story points that get paid off in the final book.
7. The Wolves of the Callah - entertaining but not enough forward story momentum. Especially after the flashback nature of number 8.
8. Wizard and Glass - it fleshes out Roland's back story but came at a time when I really wanted the main story to move forward.
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I always give the reader several chances to take back the "click" on one of my spolier tags.
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I kept clicking spoiler to see if you'd really say anthing. lol. I didnt read it. just about 4 words. I just hadda know. haha
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Although I've loved all of them my vote goes to Wizard and Glass. Maybe it was because I was just thankful for any Dark Tower book after King's long absence from the series.
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I've just finished The Wind Through the Keyhole and I thought I'd try to insert in my rankings.
1. The Drawing of the Three. Narratively, imaginatively superior to all the others.
2. The Wind Through the Keyhole--simply a joy to read; narrativitely simplistic, but the depth and passion of King's vision is unsurpassed in this seemingly unlikeiest of sequels.
3. The Wastelands. The first half continues the narrative of TDot3. The second part is not as good, but still scores narratively.
4. Song of Susannah. Exciting and revealing with an unique structure compared to the rest.
5. The Gunslinger. Narratively simplistic, but well-written and exciting.
6. The Dark Tower. A satisfying conclusion to the series..and a beginning.
7. The Wolves of the Callah. Well written and exciting, but a lack of creativity keeps it at the bottom.
8. Wizard and Glass. Narrative problems, combined with an unreliable narrator and a lack of creativity.
Spoiler!Are you sure?Spoiler!Ok...Spoiler!In TWTTK, King returns to his ka-tet as the leave the Green Palace at the end of W&G (and aren't glad to be rid of that chore!) Not much happens in the story along the Path of the Beam in this book; the focus is on Roland and the stories of his youth. The story is bookended by the journey from the Green Palace to the land of the Callas, across the river Whyie. Along the journey, they seek shelter from the Starkblast--a sudden onslaught of destructive cold that billy-bumblers are specially attuned to. During the storm Roland tells a tale of his first mission after his exploits in Mejis. The two parts of his tale bookend the story's primary tale of TTWTK, a story that Roalnd's mother would read him from the Great Book of Elden Tales. So you've got bookends within bookends holding up a fairy tale.
King doesn't really give us much more understanding of Roland here. But he does introduce a fascinating meteorlogical element of Mid-World--the Starkblast; and the bill-bumblers affinity for predicting it. At one point in the tales, the billy-bumblers stay poised with their snouts in the air as the storm passes, even though they must know that death awaits the. It almost seems that the starkblast is the main purpose of the bumblers. Jamie DeCurry is Roland's ka-mate for this journey--and this is the first time he's been in the forefront in print (though i've not read the comics). Then the tale of TWTTK is related--a tale of the only gunslinger not of the line of Eld.
King says in his forward that the book can be read as a stand alone novel. I suppose, but anyone attempting to do that will be missing out on the richness of King's Mid-World, particualy the language. And it's nice to see King acknowledging his own failings: As he begins his tale, Roland says that when he first started out, he wasn't good at telling tales, but he got better at it as time wnet by. And having read W&G, I know what he means. The storytelling techniques are used to much greater effect in TWTTK. The narrative voice is consistent, going from third person, to first, then back to third. And he doesn't interrupt his own tale, as he did an annoyingly many times in W&G. Plus, Roland is not unveiled at the last minute as an unrelaible narrator this time, giving the whole work a flow that doesn't make you want to stop reading (and at 330 pages, I could have read the whole thing in one marathon sitting if I'd been able to.) All of King's talents as a writer are on full display in this book; and it gives hope for more DT tales because TWTTK is but one of the tales from the Book of Eld.
King dedicates this book to Robin Furth and the gang at Marvel Comics--and it reads like a comic book.
I warned you.
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Originally posted by frik51 View PostI don't know if King ruined it that way.
For some people he did, for others, he didn't.
Personally, I wish he hadn't put himself in this series.
I'm pretty sure if he hadn't had his accident, the final three volumes would have turned out much differently.
sk
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Originally posted by bookworm 1 View PostGood to hear from you again.before I figured out how to use this forum I enjoyed following your posts and looking at your collection.
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Good to hear from you again.before I figured out how to use this forum I enjoyed following your posts and looking at your collection.
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Siep, old friend, where have you been hiding? Lots of people here have missed you.
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