My Review of Stephen King’s Cell

April 24th, 2006 at 7:54 pm (Fiction: Horror)

Well, this will be the first Stephen King book I’ve reviewed on this book reviews blog, but it certainly isn’t the first one I’ve read. Ever since I first read Carrie when I was ten (and wondered what the hell, really, was going on in that opening segment!) I was pretty much hooked on Stephen King. I’ve heard him described as a sensual writer, and whatever he writes about, something in his style, his choice of words, the way he shapes language, makes me feel as if I’m right there in the story. King’s works do this more than any other, and it’s quite amazing, which is no doubt why I’ve probably spent a good few thousand hours over the last 25 years immersed in the Stephen King universe. For it is a universe, much more than simply a collection of characters or a single world (Go then, there are other worlds than this, as we hear Jake say in the Dark Tower series!).

One gets the sense that just around the corner, in any Stephen King novel, you could run into characters or events from any of his books (and sometimes you actually do!), and during the course of reading Cell, I was convinced we were going to run into Randall Flagg at some point, the walking dude, the midnight cowboy! Maybe the Raggedy Man was him, who knows? Anyway, although Flagg doesn’t raise his ugly world-murdering head, I’ve no doubt he has something to do with the horrible event that sets in motion the horrible aftermath which unfolds in this apocalyptic novel. And yes, King comprehensively examined the end of world theme in The Stand, but Shakespeare wrote about regicide more than once, Dickens wrote about poor orphaned children more than once, and I for one was happy to look over King’s shoulder as he visited another version of the end of the World in his mind’s eye :)

Like many King novels, the action is sudden, preposterous and bizarre, yet all too believable. And King’s quirky observations often carry an eerie sense of verisimilitude. The story opens normally enough with comic book artist Clayton Riddell on his way to a hotel, after closing a deal for his artwork. Like the world around him, Clayton is preoccupied with enjoying the present and anticipating the future, with a sense of potential walking along with him, when the world is suddenly, inexplicably, terrifyingly ended within the space of a few pages. It’s not a bomb, it’s not bullets, and it’s not airplanes flying into skyscrapers. It’s the humble cell phone, and the damage is done as some strange and mysterious signal unencodes the user’s mind and returns it to its most primal, insane vestiges. And that, as you might expect, is when people start to kill each other, and when those who have been untouched (those who either don’t own or have lost their cell phones) must band together to survive.

Clayton, meanwhile, is desperate to get home to see how his wife and child have fared amidst this chaos. Of course, he can’t use a cell phone, and the landlines are down. Much of the story revolves around this journey home, but as with many King novels, it is as much the characters, the humour, the interactions, the observations, as much as the plot that keep it going.

I read Stephen King’s Cell in 2 sittings, the first time I have just sat down and got through a book so quickly in a long time. I am definitely planning to spend some of this summer re-reading a few of the favourites in my collection :)

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Warning Signs by Stephen White

April 20th, 2006 at 12:56 pm (Fiction: Thrillers: Crime)

I enjoyed reading this novel, although I was distracted by some other issues at the time so probably didn’t get into it as much as it deserved :( The action takes place in Boulder, Colorado, where the murder of a district attorney is just the beginning of a terrifying trail of violence.

Indeed, the possibilities of terror within the book are very real and all too plausible, as is the human frailty we see in some of the major characters, particular the hero and part-time narrator Alan Gregory, the clinical pyschologist who has featured in a number of Stephen White novels, and homicide detective Lucy Tanner, a suspect in the first half and a victim in the second half of the novel, with some very human failings despite having some likeable features. The real villain of the piece is also ambiguous in that we cannot really blame his motivation even as we abhor his methods! This book is well worth a read as are other books by Stephen White!

Speaking of Stephens, I am currently half way through Stephen King’s Cell and I will be posting my review of it in the next few days!

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The Rosary Girls – Richard Montanari

April 13th, 2006 at 7:03 pm (Fiction: Thrillers: Crime)

This is the first book of Richard Montanari’s that I’ve read and I must say I enjoyed it very much and plan to read more. The strapline “Only a killer hears their prayers” sets the tone perfectly, as this is to be a serial killing spree with a religious motive, at least, that is what the symbolism suggests as we find our first victim is a schoolgirl arranged into a position of prayer, with her hands nailed together…

That ought to tell you this book, like many crime thrillers, is definitely not for the squeamish and those who do not like stark and bloodthirsty imagery. But the novel is not simply a shock horror fest of murder and mayhem. A very interesting villain aside, much of the story focuses on the beginnings of the relationship between the two protagonists Kevin Byrne and Jessica Balzano. Byrne, a tough guy with a soft center in cop novel tradition, has the additional quirk of vague psychic abilities brought on by a near death experience, and like many rough diamonds it is his imperfections that make the reader warm to him. Jessica Balzano on the other hand seems somewhat out of place as a murder detective until we get to know her better. A single parent, recently separated from her husband, Jessica ends up far more involved in this case than any cop ever should be.

This novel has some nice touches, including some first person narrative from the killer; I was certainly surprised when the identity was revealed at the end, and the ID of the killer hadn’t even crossed my mind (although just about everybody else in the book had!). In all I would recommend this book and Richard Montanari’s crime novels will be on my shopping list for my summer reading this year. With titles such as Kiss of Evil, Deviant Way, and Skin Gods (published Oct in the UK), how could I resist! :)

Try these links for more Richard Montanari books and audio books:

USA:

UK:

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