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The Stand

The Stand

List Price: $12.99
Your Price: $19.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my all-time favorites! The Stand
Review: Everytime I read this book, I discover something I've missed. The uncut version gives so much more necessary detail that the original abridged version left out. If you want a book you can really get your teeth into, this is it. Buy it in hardback so you won't wear out the binding too soon.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: His best
Review: The Stand is King's best work, hands down. It is an epic story, telling the tale of survivors caught in a battle between good and evil. Building on these basic elements, King creates a tale where the reader gets engrossed in the many plot strands that all come together at the end. It's length is a bonus in my opinion; the plot strands are allowed to become more elaborate and deep. King may falter in some of his other work, but The Stand has all the elements of a great story-romance, action, horror, and the feeling of an epic tale. Read it

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great Book
Review: Although it takes a little longer to get into the uncut version than the previously released version of the book it is never the less entertaining and a priceless edition to my personal library. The fill from the cut down edition allows us to explore the mind and past lives of the main characters while throwing in a few new scenes to keep you on your seat. Never will there be another like this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I couldn't put it down!!!
Review: I bought The Stand innocently enough. I had considered myself a Stephen King fan, although in all actuality I hadn't read very much of his work at all. I searched through a bunch of Stephen King books, thought the summary looked pretty interesting and bought The Stand. Never before have I read a book like this one. Never before have I felt such an emotional connection to the characters in the book. Just the fact that the situation put forth really could happen, at least to some extent. I found myself caring about what would happen to characters as if I knew them and they are described so that is the case. Each character has a whole life behind them, and the reader is informed of a large part of it. I couldn't put the book down, but I didn't want it to end. I love this book. It's the kind of book that I will be able to pick up and read fresh over again as many times as I want. I highly recommend it!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Still My Favorite King Book.
Review: Stephen King is one of my favorite authors, and "The Stand" is my favorite Stephen King book. It is also the longest book I have ever read-- 1200 pages, I think, and while I typically detest overly-long novels, this one held my attention from cover to cover. I read the entire thing in one week, and I am no speed reader. I loved the mystery of Randall Flagg, and I am still not sure who or what he was supposed to represent. Oddly enough, and I do mean oddly, "The Stand" brought a kind of religious revival to my life. I had been struggling with some questions about the nature of God, and the 108 year old sage's character inspired me to "suck it up" and go on with my faith. Bad stuff happens. So what? All we are required to do is stand for the right things when our turn to stand comes. I highly recommend the stand, and I also recommend a book called "Castle of Wisdom." If you really liked the stand, you will like it too.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stand is a horror novel. Stand is a sci-fi novel. Huh???
Review: It's quite predictable that purists in either genre will hate this book's aspects of the other--that's a given in fusion forms of anything. But where King surpasses most apocalyptic sci-fi writers--and EVERY other horror writer--is that he has the character development skills usuallly found in authors of bona fide literature. Every character in here is believable. The only larger-than-life type is the main bad guy, who's of supernatural caliber. Randall Flagg seems a fusion of the Revelations Antichrist and Satan himself. As for everyone else, Mother Abagail is a very spiritually-minded elderly black woman whose greatness lies in her sprituality and her simplicity. Stu Redman is a good ole boy, a redneck without any of the flaws commonly associated with the type. Larry Underwood is a minor rock star who doubts his own integrity because people who expect too much of him critique it all the time. Frannie Goldsmith is an attractive young coed with a sensible side inherited from the father she adores. Nick Andros is a very decent guy who happens to be a deaf-mute. Were that not the case, he'd be the stuff of which great men are made. Harold Lauder is a brilliant school nerd type that it would be easy to feel sorry for, were it not for the fact that having been picked on and degraded all his young life has turned him into a very mean-spirited young man. Glen Bateman is a very solid middle-age college professor that might be the absent-minded prof cliche, were it not for the fact that his common sense shares at least equal billing with his intellect. Tom Cullen is a retarded young man who was taught good and evil as a kid, and it stuck. The result--not exactly the sharpest tool in the shed, but one hell of a decent guy. Among Flagg's troops are Lloyd Henreid, a lowlife punk who pulled a stickup which escalated into murder. Julie Lawry is a sluttish teenybop airhead who attracts trouble like a lightning rod. Real life analog--Amy Fisher. Dayna Jurgens is a bit of a paradox--plays with the bad boys but isn't really that bad a person. Another paradox is Nadine Cross, part of Mother Abagail's group until a dream tells her she's supposed to father Flagg's child. Barry Abanks is a former LAPD command cop whose religion is law and order. Not exactly a flaw, except that the good guys don't exactly have a monopoly on it. But you know what the bottom line should be before you file this book under either of the obvious genres? Stephen King just about ALWAYS writes about the struggle between good and evil--once you've spotted that here, you'll be able to pick up on it in his other books. Sci-fi sometimes does that, but it always involves some heoric Captain-Whosisname type. King reminds us of the capacity for good or evil in real people--as well as a great story, this book is the signature work of that side of King's mindset as a writer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Dreaming with your eyes open"
Review: is what King called writing. Reading can be the same thing, if you run across the right author. And King is often the right guy. Although a bunch of snobby high-art wusses like to put King down, all I have to say--a pox on them. King is the quintessential Ameican writer. He has the country down pat--his believable and sympathetic characters, the realistic dialogue, his unique and engaging style. He'll be read a hundred years from now. I certainly can't say the same for his critics.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stood and Delivered
Review: The Stand is a large novel, perhaps the largest one of the latter half of the 2nd millenium. At no point does Stephen King reveal his hand. He is relentless as always up until the bitter end. People die. The end of the world is HAPPENing, not theorhetical. With drunken allure to a religiously unsatisfied working class and positive props from scared Sunday school students, King keeps his audiences in check. The Dark man has entered the world and is working his dark magic as everyone falls under his spell of plague except the fortunate few who have some chromosomal indifference to death. The characters have a choice which is more closely linked to a calling pulling them either for good (GOd) or evil Dark Man. We jest at ourselves unbelieving that his identity is the same as Satan's. Will good champine over evil? Let your previous King experience be your guide, or better yet, pour through this oft poetic text of mayhem until the bitter/beautiful end.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best books I have read
Review: I don't give a best book rating often because there is usually something always wanting in a novel. I have always maintained that Mr. King is one of the greatest contemporary authors the late 20th century has created. In the age of the dollar he constantly produces works that are worthy of purchase and a person's time. I love long tomes and the uncut Stand qualifies. For anyone who is dubious of reading King then this is the novel to taste for it has all of the elements. A cruel antagonist and more than one fallible and human hero. Full of love and hope this novel will bring a tear to any person. Even though Mr. King maintains that he didn't like this novel I think that it is an awsome work. This is a novel that I will gladly share with my children when they are old enough.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Stand Is Absolutely Brilliant!
Review: Yeah, so I am only 12, but I can read novels. Stephen King's The Stand Complete and Uncut is the absolute best book ever published. I started out with a bad attitude (do I HAVE to read this?) and ended up turning pages for hours at a time. The quest so amazing and brilliantly realistic. It's scary thinking that a super flu epidemic could decimate the population, and to top it off a force like Randall Flagg's could gain power.

The book pits two forces together: The good (lead by Mother Abigail) and the bad (lead by Randall Flagg). The main characters form an immediate bond, but BELIEVE ME, there are twists in the plot. Whether you favor Stu Redman, Nick Andros, Frannie Goldsmith, Larry Underwood, Mother Abagail, or even Randall Flagg, THE STAND is unargueably the best book ever written.


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