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Loading... IT (Stephen King Library - Red Leather) (original 1986; edition 1986)
Work detailsIt by Stephen King (1986)
This was some messed up shit. I thought reading a book about a clown would make me realize just how irrational my fear of them is. Nope. Uh uh. I now know with absolute certainty that fear of clowns is the most natural, rational thing in the world. Thank you Stephen King. ( )This is my first horror book... and the five stars(i re-edited my four star rating to a five lately) i've given to it are not at all based on the scaring or creeping abilities of the book, though the book really is creepy at some points but for me atleast i think its always hard to be really scared from a book cause you know in the back of your mind that this is not real, its fiction. So i was telling you why actually i gave it five stars. I just love the characters and their conversations and the world building which surrounds them. This book is narrated beautifully, all credit to Mr. King..He really binds the reader (though too descriptive sometimes) , especially in the 'childhood' sections of the book. It really is long, but it will touch your heart before the last page is turned. The friendship of six children facing their personal fears via a common evil which terrifies the whole town is a gratifying plot to read. However, i must say the ending is a bit less satisfactory than the whole novel and an unnecessary scene at the end of the book might disturb you.Nonetheless the book is quite a read. I recommend it completely to all 'pulp' and 'literary' readers. It has something for everyone. Oh how much I loved this book. No idea how many times I have read it, but it must have been at least 3 times and I am sure I will read it again. This is one of my favourite books by King. Love the way he describes how the friendship between the children evolve. He makes them so real. How alone they felt in their guest and later when they meet as adults. Interesting to see how they have changed. Yes I must re read soon. Love love Love it! This book was a bit like a rollercoaster I've been on. It started off slowly, slowly, until you think, "oh god, maybe I'm wasting my time", and then it gets to the top and starts to roll down and twist about and sometimes seems to throw you upside down, and you're going to be sick, and if you're a braver person than me, when it rolls to a halt, you decide you're going to do it all again right away. It is a seriously dense book. There's layers and layers of setting the scene, building the characters, placing you firmly in Derry yourself. There's so much background that, like the characters of the book, I think I'm starting to forget a lot of it now that I've reached the end. I loved it. It certainly has its flaws -- it gets too dense, in parts, goes too slow, and sometimes it's just too obvious. We get told over and over again that Bill Denborough is the big leaderman, that Ben's the one who can build things, etc, etc. But I enjoy really solidly built characters and really deep world-building, so this was really my thing. I thought parts of it, like the Turtle, were really pushing it, but it was worked in, in little bits, throughout the story, so I could go with that. At first I thought it wasn't going to freak me out that much, but then it did. Ohboy, it freaked me out. And now I have to walk to dinner in the pitch-dark...! Scary, smart, classic. I remember thinking "King's work is changing" when I read this one, and I was right. His tribute to the ghost stories of our childhoods that must make way for the realities of adult life. Beautiful in every way, overcoming the multiple narrator problem he has in this one. no reviews | add a review Has as a reference guide/companion
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0451169514, Mass Market Paperback)They were seven teenagers when they first stumbled upon the horror. Now they were grown-up men and women who had gone out into the big world to gain success and happiness. But none of them could withstand the force that drew them back to Derry, Maine to face the nightmare without an end, and the evil without a name. What was it? Read It and find out...if you dare!(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:00:37 -0500) It began--and ended--in 1958 when seven desperate children searched in the drains beneath Derry for an evil creature, but in 1985, Mike Hanlon, once one of those children, makes six phone calls and disinters an unremembered promise that sets off the ultimate terror.… (more) (summary from another edition) |
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