• Higgs boson@dubvee.org
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    19 hours ago

    Which, while they are quite good, they feel like the least “Stephen King” of his novels, even the bachman books.

    • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      20 hours ago

      I read the first book and had absolutely no fucking clue what was happening. Do they get better? I feel like I needed to be doing cocaine at the time.

      • FryHyde@lemmy.zip
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        18 hours ago

        The first one is mostly vibes. There’s not a ton of good story meat in it, and it’s pretty short. Book 2 really gets going though, and book 3 is just wild. Once you get to Wolves of the Calla, though, it’s really gonna test your patience.

      • Higgs boson@dubvee.org
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        19 hours ago

        I enjoyed them but as I recall it stays weird. I’m into that, though. My favorites are mostly pretty weird.

          • Higgs boson@dubvee.org
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            18 hours ago

            My favorites for fiction would be Neal Stephenson,Roger Zelazny, Fritz Leiber, Ursula Le Guin, Stephen R. Donaldson, Charles Bukowski, Iain Banks, Frederick Pohl, Glen Cook, Jim Butcher

      • Ups and downs; like I said, written over a dozen years, the styles vary, and there’s some consensus that there are a couple which are “the best,” and a couple which aren’t. However, if you didn’t like the first, it’s probably fair to say you probably wouldn’t much care for the rest.

    • It’s because they’re not horror, and SK is known best for his horror. I do think he’d said, at one point, that TDT was the most meaningful series to him, and the fact that it forms an umbrella reality encompassing all of his other stories - sometimes featuring characters from his other novels, is significant.

      That said, I’m not a King fan; I don’t much care for horror, so his money making genre isn’t very compelling for me. But I did get super-into The Dark Tower. It’s up there among my favorite works, despite the ending.