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The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, Book 1)

The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, Book 1)

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Why'd you do it Stephen?
Review: I am so annoyed that I bought this book. I am a HUGE fan of the Dark Tower series and I can't wait for the rest of the series to be published. I just don't see the need for anyone who has already read the original version to read this one. The meeting with the man in black was altered too much and he took out some of its better lines. Example: "Do I know you?" was changed to "Will I win?" There are a few other unnecessary alterations that I can't mention because they would be spoilers. I think that the original version is perfect by itself and if you can find a copy of it, please read it instead of this version.

I gave this version of the book 3 stars because I still love the story to no end, but I had to count off for the annoyance factor. I'd give the original 5 stars.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: So many questions, so few answers
Review: The hype surrounding the Dark Tower series finally got to me and I picked up The Gunslinger, unsure of what I would find. What I found was a stark, fresh, somewhat surreal and demanding (yet light!) experience that left me wanting more, much more.

This first novel in the series finds the hero (for wont of a better word!), The Gunslinger, slugging across the desert in search of the mysterious Man in Black. The desert is bleak and so our the words - yet they have a definite beauty. Along the way The Gunslinger meets a couple of people (are they alive or dead?) and reveals some of his back history - a strange massacre in a town, his childhood friends and mentors and hints at a Dark Tower.

Death permeates this book. We're not sure who's dead or alive. Something strange has happened with time - the main search right now is for this cause - and strange fragments of the "real" world appear through the fog - Hey Jude playing in a Western Saloon is one of the strange and wonderful images we encounter. Time itself is an illusion it seems and still the Man in Black is ahead of us.

My one reservation about the book is that the final meeting with the Man in Black is a little anticlimactic. Perhaps that's because it's been building up but after the meeting we wonder why he was running at all. However, there is a lot of backstory missing in the book - obviously slated for the later books - so perhaps issues like this will be resolved. All in all a most strange but powerful book - well worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Childe Richard...err....Roland... to the Dark Tower Came
Review: I saw a display for The Gunslinger and the other recently re-released Dark Tower novels in a bookstore recently, and decided to buy the first volume. I guess I'm a sucker for advertising, but I judged a book by its cover and thought it looked cool, and I had nothing else to read.

I expected at least an adventure story, with plenty of six-shooter action that would keep my mind occupied for a while. I got that and a lot more out of The Gunslinger. I quickly saw that Stephen King was creating around me an entirely new world with a culture and mythology of the kind that I'm used to seeing in Tolkien and Herbert.

King even draws some of his inspiration from a Robert Browning poem, "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came", which I thought was pretty cool.

I found The Gunslinger to be a fun, yet deep, read, and flew right through it. If you're even remotely curious about what The Gunslinger is, you should definitely check it out. If you normally don't read Stephen King novels for some reason, rest assured--this is pretty much unlike any other story of his I've seen. Any fans of fantasy should check this out too, although if you're not into fantasy (like me) you won't find any unicorns or leprechauns to laugh at, so don't be afraid.

This is a book for anyone--go ahead and buy it, or just borrow it from a friend. You'll thank him.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dune meets Preacher
Review: (...)P>Fans of Garth Ennis's Preacher series of graphic novels will immediately recognise the gunslinger as an archetype of the Old West. Like Preacher, this book takes some of the motifs out of westerns, fantasy, and religion, and twists them together, making them part of a mythic whole.

As for Dune, one of my favorite books of all time, this book reminded me of that work because it creates a world so complete in its detail that you believe in it. Even when something isn't explained, you know it will come together, it will make sense, it will work, because the rules of this world have been worked so well. Roland's boyhood in a world which has "moved on" from its noble roots is similar to the crumbling of House Atreides in Herbert's novel; with varied, colorful characters who are well drawn.

It's only beginning with this book. It may seem sparse, but that's part of the beauty of it.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A MAJOR DISAPPOINTMENT
Review: I enjoyed EYES OF THE DRAGON, ON WRITING & several of his horror/thrillers.

But this novel didn't work for me: I believe the beginning of a story should pack some punch in the first 40 pages or it will lose people, who have better choices.

Such was the choice with DARK TOWER; talk of grits and the cowboy
and gateways only held my interest for so long.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The one that strated it all...
Review: He wrote this book in 1970(published in 1982) and it started the series that holds his whole literary universe together. A little tough to read especially if you have been introduced to King through his newer works, it is still by far one of his best. Once you read this book you will be compelled to get into the series. I highly reccomend the book and the series. But you don't have to take my word for it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: All the positive reviews are misleading
Review: Gunslinger is the worst book I have ever had the mispleasure of reading. DON'T believe all the gushing reviews that praise this trash. The characters are flat, the story is skeletal and the book reads like fan fiction. It was probably King's grade school writing assignment -- no kidding. The grammar is awful. The book abounds with errors and incosnistencies. I couldn't wait for it to be over.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Jump on at the beginning, but the best is yet to come.
Review: I want to say this carefully, because, in the end, "The Gunslinger" is a good book. It's mysterious, moody, and full of memorable imagery. You'll most likely be very glad you read it (especially in this new revised edition, which, interestingly, is tighter and yet breathes more at the same time). But you should be aware that this first volume in Mr. King's epic (and soon to be completed!) dark fantasy series does not quite reach the "must-read" status easily achieved by subsequent volumes in the "Dark Tower" epic. I'm betting, in fact, that many of you out there who read this book will say something positive but ultimately lukewarm at its close, something like this: "Good book, I'll have to pick up the next one one of these days." And that would be a mistake, because you should pick up volume 2 ("The Drawing of the Three") immediately, not "soon" or "someday". The second volume is THAT good, showcasing King's imagination firing on all cylinders, with memorable, amazing scenes happening right out of the box. The plan may have been at least partially intentional... King may have said, "let's give the readers something more reserved and thoughtful at first, and then hit them hard in volume two by stirring in the really amazing and visceral stuff." Anyway, read "The Gunslinger". It's great (I actually give it about three-and-a-half stars). But do yourself a favor and stay on the ride and keep reading the other books, when things really take off. Trust me, you'll be glad you did.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Fable for Modern Times
Review: The gunslinger, Roland, moves through a world that has "moved on." This is not a typical gunslinger story a la spaghetti western or Louis Lamour; it is a story of a quest, more of a knight's tale of morality, adventure and hardship. Most importantly, it is the first door to a fascinating series of stories making up the Dark Tower series by Stephen King. This series is, in my opinion, his best work, and "The Gunslinger" is the first in the series.

Each of the characters in "The Gunslinger" is well established and fully created. The situations encountered by them draw you into their individual stories, and you also grasp their importance in Roland's quest, to a point. There is much foreshadowing, although you won't know this until you read the subsequent novels in the series. The book stands well on its own, although you will be drawn to continuing with Roalnd's quest in the following novels. After all, Ka will lead you to finishing the series if you are a knight at heart.

This book has it all, interesting characters, a fascinating plot, creative setting, and a cast of characters you can both identify with at some level and really care about as you travel with Roland on his quest for the Dark Tower. The CD version is particularly good for listening to as you travel or just sit and enjoy the creative swtory-telling skills of Stephen King.

Although George Guidall's performance in reading "The Gunslinger" is very good, I would have preferred hearing Frank Muller, who reads subsequent novels in the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An amazing epic, excellent starting point for new King fans
Review: I have never been into Stephen King's better-known horror stories, and in fact, until reading The Gunslinger, I was never a fan of Stephen King.

Boy, was I missing out. The Dark Tower series is truly an amazing epic. This is a classic that will endure far beyond other books, and I think this is also one of the most creative and imaginative in modern writing history.

Imagine a world that is very far in the future but in many ways resembles the medieval era. The last Gunslinger came from a great kingdom, that has now fallen, and everyone he knows and loves is dead. Instead of knights, the kingdom was defended by gunslingers, and the hero of the story is the last one. The world has "moved on" as people say, and nothing in the world seems right anymore. The Gunslinger now relentlessly pursues a man in black across the desert, and an unknown future awaits.

The mystery surrounding the story keeps you reading when other books have long ceased to be interesting. There is so much about the Gunslinger's past that the reader doesn't know about, and there is so much ahead of the gunslinger, that one cannot stop reading this book.

I think what really seperates this book, and what seperates Stephen King from other writers, is the excellent attention to detail. Some of the words used in this book come from the gunslinger's time, so the reader at first may not understand everything, but overtime, you feel almost as if you can speak the language. Also the culture of the gunslinger's world is very different, with a mix of magic, and technology, all in a wasteland.

Its really hard to express how great this book is, so I can only recommend this book to anyone who wants to read a great epic. You will simply not be disappointed, nor will you be bored. If you have never read a Stephen King novel, this is the place to start, just as I did.

In summary, few epic series will match this book, if any. Read this book! :)


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