Rating: Summary: great job steve Review: I thought that this book was great. I started reading it and i couldnt stop! The first few chapters were kinda dull though, (thats why I gave it a 4). The story is about a girl that gets herself lost on a trail because she has to use the bathroom. Her parents and brother always fight, thats why they didnt notice she was missing.She gets low on supplies and starts hallucinating. She starts seeing tom gordon and believs that she is being followed by a monster of some sort. Its a real cliff hanger! Great job steve!
Rating: Summary: Monotonic Review: Story is about a 9 year old child who is lost in a forest. The story is very monotonic and did not excited me. I only liked the last chapter and after reading that one i got near to cry. All the story passes in a forest and contains some references to her past experiences. She is a little shysophrenic becouse most of the time she "saws" Tom Gordon (also she know he is not there :)).Book may be can be used for a reference book: "How to survive in a forest" bot not for getting excited. Kings little "excited" tellings did not made me feel so. It may be a great book but did not gave me what i had waited for. May be was not my style.
Rating: Summary: Hard to put down. Review: Not your typically Stephen King. The story is about a little girl who gets lost in the forest and her love for a baseball player name Tom Gordon helps keep her going. You feel for the child every inch of the way. You feel her pain and fear. Stephen King has really out done himself.
Rating: Summary: Aburrido Review: Empece a leer este libro con la esperanza de verme sumido en los placeres que solo el sentir miedo nos da. Sin embargo, al pasar las paginas me vi envuelto en una historia para colegiales; un tanto estupida. Es un libro aburridisimo. EL CRITICO LATINO
Rating: Summary: King - There is No Substitute Review: I've been a fan of Stephen King for many, many years and although I haven't had time to read much of his "newer" stuff lately (the last book I read was "Bag of Bones"), I did manage to pick up the pretty short "Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon" and read it in two wonderful hammock visits. And in the end, I was actually crying. The story is pretty basic. Nine-year-old Trisha is on a hiking jaunt with her older brother and mother, and when she steps off the main trail to relieve herself, she gets lost in the woods almost instantly. King brings Trisha alive with an uncanny maturity for a 9-year-old, and throughout the tale, he manages to keep the same setting but through Trisha's hallucinations (Tom Gordon, the Boston Red Sox closer and Trisha's favorite baseball player, who seemingly walks the woods with her), her memories of friends (Pepsi, whose banter keeps you laughing), family (Dad, whose love of baseball and beer keeps Trisha close, yet so far away), and the scary things in the woods (you'll have to read for yourself), it never gets mundane. To keep it simple, "The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon" is a quick, wonderful book that takes a unique 9-year-old girl and thrusts her into an extremely dangerous setting. King's way of showing Trisha's maturity as she copes with the denizens of the forest is terrific, and as always, he makes you care about the fate of this little girl. Again, King throws away the supernatural and pure terror (as he did in "Bag of Bones") and gives you 200+ pages of emotion. You won't put it down until it's Game Over.
Rating: Summary: Go Red Sox! Review: Nine year old Trisha McFarland, wearing her favorite blue Red Sox batting practice shirt and Red Sox cap, began her six mile hike in the woods with her mother and brother Pete. Her troubled brother and recently divorced mother were constantly bickering. This hike of the Applachian Trail could not for one moment extinguish or interrupt their steady flow of quarreling. To evade this annoying and endless confrontation, Trisha drops back and wanders off. She decides to go forward instead of backtracking to the path and unknowingly strays further and further into the wilderness. Trisha listens to her Walkman for comfort and hears the Boston Red Sox game being broadcast and anxiously awaits the performance of her hero, number 36, relief pitcher, Tom Gordon. Trisha truly amazed me with every turn of the page, displaying courage, faith and a will to survive. Stephen King transports the reader to a new plateau of emotions in this novel. Did I mention that I was also a Red Sox fan?
Rating: Summary: An okay offering from King Review: The overall plot (a young girl lost in the woods being trailed by a mysterious creature) is interesting yet the book never quite delivers creepiness that readers expect. King shines in this book with his fully-fleshed and believable characters as he does in all of his work. However, when measured against other King titles, this one falls behind.
Rating: Summary: Pretty Good Review: Young Trisha McFarland is put through the test of her young life while on what started out as a six-mile hike on the Maine-NH branch of the Appalachian Trail. Mom's been difficult since the divorce and Trisha's older brother Pete hasn't been much better. Trying to escape their constant arguing, Trisha allows herself to fall a little behind, but wanders off the path, takes a wrong turn and falls deeper into the woods, finding herself completely lost. Trisha's Boston Red Sox hero, number 36, relief pitcher Tom Gordon, helps comfort her as she catches a couple games on her Walkman and through her own vivid imagination. A story of a child's terror, her faith and her love of the "game." A pretty good story that really held my interest. Growing up just south of Boston, I really enjoyed all the Red Sox talk.
Rating: Summary: I think I love Tom Gordon Review: I was done reading this book just as soon as I opened the cover. My friend recommened that I read the book because it was a "quick read," but I didn't think it would go quite as quickly as it did. Stephen King really knows how to hold a reader's attention. The suspense was non-stop up until the end. I found myself worrying about the well being of this nine-year-old girl while I was suppose to be learning other topics at school. I've never been much of a fan of literature, but this book just might have turned me into a Stephen King fan. The usage of sports as a reason to stay alive was very refreshing. It made me realize that there's more to life than just money and careers; there's also entertainment. Life's simple pleasures can actually keep somebody alive. I loved the book and I recommend that everyone should read it.
Rating: Summary: The amazing story Review: This book was like a breath of fresh air after reading Dreamcatcher. The plot is very simple: a survival story about a little girl lost in the woods scared to death and she's looking for her mom and brother and finds them at the end of the book. King manages to avoid the psychological babbling of his recent books but still pull you in with well developed characters. In this story a little nine year old girl must battle the elements, her fear of a stalking creature, and the deterioration of her body and senses. This book is not meant to scare you into the wee hours of the night but it will keep you turning the pages just the same. King makes you care about this girl and whether or not she will survive, which makes it a given that she will (this isn't a Bachman novel). Knowing this doesn't take away from the intensity of her struggle. I highly recommend this to Stephen King fans or anyone who loves a good read.
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