Carsten Doig's Reviews > Gerald's Game
Gerald's Game
by Stephen King
by Stephen King
Written 19 (a magical number in King's canon of work) years ago the basic premise had never appealed to me: Gerald handcuffs his wife Jess to bed for sexual adventure and she accidentally kills him by kicking him and inducing a heart attack. She has to get out of this predicament and deal with flashbacks from her past (her incestuous father), a wild dog who enters the house and a monster(?) who visits in the night.
Despite my previous hesitancy, it turned out to be very compulsive reading and I duly finished the book in three days, reading half of it on the day I started. In fact must declare it to be one of King's best.
In the first instance, the bondage and notions of rape by her husband are quick in passing, leaving Jess to deal with getting out of the handcuffs. The relationship with her father is disturbing but fits in well with her present situation and a voice from her past helps to guide her through her escape attempts. I wasn't even sure if she would get out, half expecting some kind of deus ex machina, but thankfully this overused device wasn't reverted to. A monster also appears to visit her in the night but rather than be a cliched figment of her imagination (something King has used before in other books), the monster is cunningly unveiled at the end of the book.
Despite my previous hesitancy, it turned out to be very compulsive reading and I duly finished the book in three days, reading half of it on the day I started. In fact must declare it to be one of King's best.
In the first instance, the bondage and notions of rape by her husband are quick in passing, leaving Jess to deal with getting out of the handcuffs. The relationship with her father is disturbing but fits in well with her present situation and a voice from her past helps to guide her through her escape attempts. I wasn't even sure if she would get out, half expecting some kind of deus ex machina, but thankfully this overused device wasn't reverted to. A monster also appears to visit her in the night but rather than be a cliched figment of her imagination (something King has used before in other books), the monster is cunningly unveiled at the end of the book.
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