Book Talk discussion
What Are You Reading?

Did you like "The Stand"?

I loved The Stand. Read the abridged and unabridged versions. One of my favorite King novels.

(By the way, I didn't like The Stand.)
:D

I love the characters in the book more than I love most of my extended family. : )

Like I said, "a novel that rambles that much, and with such thin and cornball characters." It was just a really flabby read. We spent a lot of time with dull characters thinking deadly dull, corny thoughts and doing nothing that needed doing. He could easily have told the story in half the space ... and then he released a new and even longer version.



I still like a good apocalypse story.
The conversational style with lots of diversions and a leisurely pace in some sections is sort of what you get in most Stephen King books. Could they be shorter and tighter? Yeah, probably. But they are what they are and I love reading King.


Just sit back, relax and enjoy the ride.
You want literature, go read Peter Straub.

I agree regarding literature and Straub. Sometimes he does get a bit wordy, though.


Just sit back, relax and enjoy the ride.
You want literature, go read Peter Straub."
And if you want pacing and lack of flab, King is also not your man. Not past his first few books, anyway. I love the earliest King, but after that, he grew too self-indulgent and dangerously editor-free.

The Stand is anything but interminable mediocre writing.

I had been too kind.

Have you no feeling for poor Nick Andros, Tom Cullen, or Larry Underwood? Baby can you dig your man?
No feeling at all? : )

Have you no feeling for poor Nick Andros, Tom Cullen, or Larry Underwood? Baby can you dig your man?
No feeling at all? : )"
I'm not saying there weren't good parts to the book, Charlene, though I did not think all the characters were well drawn. It's that the good parts were buried so deeply in so many tons of dreck. This was written in King's "drink heavily every day" phase, as I recall, and IMO it shows, moreso than in any of his previous work. I think that's what claimed the first 50 pages of The Shining, too. The Shining recovered splendidly, though. The Stand just seemed to take a lack of focus and run with it to its furthest limits till it was all spooled out. It was lazy and undisciplined.
That was really hard for me to admit at the time, as I had adored his first few books, back when hardly anyone had heard of King. But he took a big downward turn, IMO, and early on loosened his style and focus tremendously, opting to write flabby doorstops. He wasn't as focused and committed to adding value to every scene pretty shortly after he first came onto the national scene.
Of course, he's prolific enough that his "shortly after he came onto the scene" could cover whole career spans of other authors. It's not like he didn't put out a number of good, focused books. But he's pretty much the textbook case of a guy who outgrew editing, with predictable results.

I grew up reading King so his writing is so familiar to me that I just sort of fall into the experience of reading another one of his books and don't think that much about whether he is taking the long way around in telling the story. He could stand having an editor but it ain't gonna happen so I don't think about it too much. Jon said it best when he said he was a storyteller rather than a writer. King would probably agree.
I will strongly disagree with him being characterized as "mediocre." He is a very good writer and he appears multiple times on my all time favorites list.

I think that King has some of the best characterization skills out there. For me, it's the best feature of his writing.

My favorites of his are the shorter ones. Salem's Lot, The Shining, Pet Sematary, Misery and his novella length works like Apt Pupil, Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption and The Body. All of those are some of my all time favorite reads.
But I read it all and enjoy just reading another King book because I love the characters he creates and his narrative voice---except I have read none of Dark Tower since I am not much into fantasy.


I found that the additional portions really added to the story as a whole and I liked that version even more than the original release.

I think I already weighed in on my thoughts on King a few weeks back (interesting thread on that recent article crushing King) a la Joshi... minus the polemical overtones of course. No need for me to ruffle any more feathers... ; )

I used to have some weird sense of honor about finishing a book. I'm glad that I don't anymore. Still, I kind of miss believing that it was somehow some sort of right thing to do.

But a book that big, I would be doing a lot of second guessing before I picked it up.

I think the next horror writer I remember getting into doorstops was Clive Barker. In an interview, he noted how well they had sold for King, and that that prompted him to write very long novels. I had really liked (despite a lot of poor characterization) his Books of Blood ... but when I saw him move into doorstoppers, I took a big step back and never returned.
That's one reason I largely decide whether I want to read an author's novels on the basis of their short stories. You get a chance to test their mettle over and over again, and the commitment level is low. By the time I get to one of their novels, they've earned it.

I've read doorstoppers by Tom Clancy, Dan Simmons, Peter Straub and George R.R. Martin.
Clancy's books are torture.



I've thoroughly enjoyed the doorstoppers by the authors Jon mentioned, (except for Clancy novels, *shudder*).
I most especially enjoy Dan Simmons' stories. His sci-fi is imaginative, his horror is actually scary and his research is beyond reproach. I've loved everything by Simmons, except for Flashback-and that was a decent story I just didn't enjoy the politics.
I would never NOT read a book I was interested in just because of its length. Would you?

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Marc, I think that was very well said.
Normally, I go with the 10% rule, meaning if I don't like it within that limitation, then I ditch it. I kept up with this one because so many people insisted that it would pay off.
I normally love doorstoppers-if they keep me engaged. I read The Stand and IT (both more than once) and never once did my engagement wane. When I'm not that engaged with the story, I find myself dragging my feet to get back into it. I am sure that contributed to why it is going so slowly for me. (Though it's an 800 page book and I started it a week ago Saturday, so that's not THAT slow!)
Plus for part of that time I was drunk off my butt in Martha's Vineyard swearing and making gestures at Oprah's yacht. : )