Rating: Summary: These guys sure could do better. Review: This is just another Dark Tower installment, mostly made up of Mr. King's schtick. This book lacks the solid plotting that the Talisman has. Plot elements and devices are brought up and made a big deal of, then dropped, and other elements come out of the blue. Geez, I'm disappointed.
Rating: Summary: Boring and draw out Review: As a huge fan of Stephen King I was giddy to see this audio-book at the library. After listening to two tapes, I am convinced the story is not my cup of tea and seriously lacks any interesting story line. I hope his future books are much better.
Rating: Summary: Black House Another Book Fit For A King Review: I was very pleased with Black House, although I really dont think it seemed like a sequel to The Talisman. The territories only made brief appearances throughout the book. Still, it was a great story all the same. Henry Layden has to be one of King's most memorable characters and thats why I was surprised..oh Ill give it away, sorry. Come to think of it, there are many surprises in Black House. Dont listen to all those other know it all reviewers who dissed the book. I think any Stephen King fan will enjoy it. Its quite a comeback from the disastrous Dreamcatcher.
Rating: Summary: Bleak and Black Review: Stephen King and Peter Straub are back with The Black House which is the sequel to their earlier The Talisman. You don't have to have read the earlier novel to enjoy this one. Indeed in some ways it is perhaps better if you haven't read the earlier book for it was a routine fantasy quest and its very ordinariness may predispose you to think badly of The Black House, and that would be a shame for this new novel is a tour de force.The title is a pun, bringing to mind Charles Dickens' novel Bleak House. This is quite intentional. Stylistically the book owes a lot to the Dickens novel and even the convoluted plot has resonances with Dickens. The authors don't seek to disguise this relationship; the book is full of overt references to Bleak House and at one point one of the characters even spends some time reading that novel out loud to one of the other characters (who is blind). I love these little touches - it's only a game, but the game adds a depth and a freshness that I really enjoy. The story itself is set some twenty years after the events of The Talisman. Jack Sawyer is a retired Los Angeles detective living in the small town of Tamarack, Wisconsin. He has largely forgotten the adventures of his childhood. Tamarack is plagued by an odd series of gruesome murders of little children. They seem to parallel a similar series of killings that were committed several decades ago by a man called Albert Fish. Because of the resemblances, the new murderer is dubbed the Fisherman. The local chief of police begs Jack for help in solving the killings, but Jack is reluctant to be drawn in to the gruesome business. However the pressure becomes too much for him, particularly because he is getting flashbacks to his childhood adventures in the Territories. There may a relationship between the Fisherman killings and the Territories and Jack is the only link between them, the only man who perhaps can solve the problems that run in parallel on both sides of the veil that divides the two worlds. Much of the success of the novel can be traced to the superb characterisation. Jack in particular jumps alive from the page. At times the people almost degenerate into "caricaturisation", if I may coin a word; but though the book hovers on the brink, it never (quite) succumbs. I particularly liked the gang of motor cycle thugs who are all college graduates and who are the brains behind the success of the beer brewed in the local brewery. In between picking fights and doing drugs they are likely to be found talking about existentialism in the bar. At one point one of them discovers that the man he is about to hit in the face is a preacher, so he stops the fight in order to discuss a knotty problem of early Christian philosophy that has been worrying him for quite some time... Stephen King has a unifying plot thread that runs like a sub-text through many of his books. The image of the Dark Tower and the doings of Roland the Gunslinger are ideas that he picks at again and again; sometimes overtly as in the Dark Tower novels, sometimes less so as here in The Black House. The climax of this novel depends in part on the mythology of the Tower and certainly adds another thread of mystery to the theme (and illuminates others).
Rating: Summary: Extremely Dissapointed Review: Too much minutia! I kept reading hoping to reach some kind of plot but when I did it vaporized into a ridiculous fractured fairy tale. I usually enjoy both of these authors works but this one goes past horror into horrible.
Rating: Summary: Lovers of The Talisman beware Review: Black House has about as much to do with The Talisman as the old Lou Grant drama series had to do with The Mary Tyler Moore Show. As a huge fan of The Talisman, I almost flipped when I realized Black House was its sequel. When I opened it, I felt like a kid opening a new Harry Potter book. Unfortunately, by the time I was about 300 pages in, I realized this was just a long, rambling attempt to make money and throw a bone to fans waiting impatiently for the next Dark Tower novel. Black House is long, tedious, boring and, worst of all, has no connection with The Talisman. The Territories are barely mentioned and there's absolutely none of the sense of wonder and adventure that made the first book such a magical read. Jack Sawyer is unrecognizable, his retun to the Territories is rushed and disappointing and Henry Leyden, touted by many as one of King's most memorable characters, never comes close to realizing his potential. The love story is so tacked on as to be ludicrous. It's a desperate attempt to make Jack seem more real -- more Talismanish -- than he does in the rest of the book. There are many, many things wrong with Black House and I caution anyone looking for more of The Talisman to save their money. I almost wish I hadn't read BH -- at leat then I could have kept The Talisman unsullied in my memory.
Rating: Summary: Artificial Style Overcomes Plot! Review: Why do authors feel they have to interpose an artificial style between the readers and the story? Although the plot and characters were fascinating, the precious and condescending stylistic devices employed by the authors made this book almost unreadable. As a fairly enthusiastic fan of both authors, I anticipated another thrilling ride...but unfortunately the authors chose to tell their story in a highly obtrusive style in which the narrative voice takes on the persona of your 6th grade teacher, constantly reminding you that you are reading a book rather than experiencing a story. Too bad...it could have been really good.
Rating: Summary: If you thought this was about the Black Hotel....it isn't... Review: I remain firm that Talisman (prequel to this book) can and actually does stand on it's own. But Black House would be a dismal failure without the Talisman. I began this tale and immediately realized I had to read the Talisman first to get the most out of this book. There is one saving grace (actually two) for this book and if you are reading instead of listening, I honestly would chuck the written version and grab the unabridged audio. Frank Muller is a GENIUS - pure and simple. His character's voices are clear and distinct. Muller is what makes this book. Period. I had hoped that the black house was somehow tied to the black hotel in the Talisman, but alas, no. The second saving grace -- the times when we do get to return to the 'other world,' the Territories. Both King and Straub seem to be most comfortable there as well.
Rating: Summary: Masters of their craft, yet again... Review: It is startling to read so many bad reviews for such an incredibly written novel, but alas, to each their own. I was late in reading The Tailsman but fell in love with it as so many other people seem to have since it was first published so many years ago. When word came that a sequel was going to be written it simply could not be published fast enough to satisfy me. Yet, the wait was well worth it. I admit that at first the very unique style of writing was a bit off putting but as the book goes on you will get used to it. In a lot of respects as well you could consider this to be a sequel to The Tailsman as well as The Dark Tower Book 4 1/2. For all of you out there eagerly awaiting the fifth book in that series this one has enough elements from that world to keep you happy. If you are a King can its difficult to not give this one a read!
Rating: Summary: From someone who's *not* a big King fan! Review: I'd only read one previous King book, *Pet Sematary*, which I disliked. But when I saw a one-sentence description of this novel's plot in a newspaper listing of current bestsellers, it seemed like something I'd enjoy. And it was! I quickly realized it was a sequel to *The Talisman*, which I hadn't read; but the authors explained everything I needed to know. For me, the book's greatest strength is its characters--especially Henry Leyden. He alone makes it a worthwhile read.
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