|
Home
Books Richard Bachman Movies Television Quotes Biography Posters Links About This Site
|
|
Eleven
Year Old, David Carver, helps his family escape from a cop turned
bad.
Synopsis
An astounding fall season for King
unfolds with three new novels: the wind-up of his Signet paperback serial
The Green Mile, and same-day dual publication of Desperation from Viking
and The Regulators from Dutton (as Richard Bachman--see above).
Desperation, while mystifying if read after The Regulators, is fabulous
storytelling that avoids the slovenly glee that corrodes the grand fantasy
of its mirror novel. The twin rulers of the dual novels are God the Cruel
(Desperation), who speaks only to David Carver, a very well-spoken
11-year-old, and the Great God Television (The Regulators), a rotten god
made visible through the mind of an autistic six-year-old, Seth Garon. The
two books share characters but offer distinctly different spins on their
personalities: The heroine of The Regulators is a big threat in
Desperation. Also on hand in both are the evil entity Tak and the heroic
but burnt-out novelist John Marinville, a recovering alcoholic. While
speeding through empty Nevada spaces, Peter and Mary Jackson are stopped
and arrested by a gigantic cop from nearby Desperation, a small mining
town. At the jailhouse, the nutty robotic giant shoots Peter dead. Then
the giant arrests Marinville, who is trying to recover his reputation by
crossing the country on his motorcycle and writing a Steinbeckian Travels
with Harley. The cop's body, we find, houses Tak, who constantly needs new
bodies to live in because his superhuman heart batters them to pieces. He
has already murdered the whole town and is now planning to house himself
in the still-alive Audrey Wyler, a mining specialist who has been
investigating the nearby China Shaft where ``the unformed heart'' of Tak
bubbles evilly. Then into town rides Steve, whose heart is pure, in a
Ryder truck . . . . Knockout classic horror: King's most carefully
crafted, well-groomed pages ever. -- Kirkus
Reviews
Quotes
from the Book
"'Jail,' the big cop said in his stuff, liquid voice. 'Where
anything you bray will be abused against you in a sort of
caw.'"
"God is
cruel, sometimes he makes you live."
"When
you've got a crazy cop on your hands, you've got yourself a
situation." |