Lezersrecensie
The first line matters
There will not be a lot of people who haven't read something of, or at least heard about, Stephen King. Many of his novels and short storys have been made into film or series.
'The Dark Tower' is his magnum opus (if I may call it that) where he mixes Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror. Although the entire series entails seven books, the readers had to do a lot of waiting before Stephen King wrote the ending. This first part: The Gunslinger, was published in 1982. The next parts needed five, five and six years, while the last three books were published right after each other, but it took another six years. So people had to wait 22 years between the first part and the last three.
'The Dark Tower' tells the story of Roland, the last gunslinger, and his hunt for the man in black. Roland hunts the man in black, but his real goal is to get to The Dark Tower. He believes that the Dark Tower is the cause of all the issues in all the worlds. The story takes place on multiple (bizarre) worlds, and over a long period of time. The Gunslinger tells about the traps the man in black puts in front of the gunslinger, and how he overcomes these traps. Over time the gunslinger changes, as we all do during our lives.
Eventhough The Gunslinger is at times not the most accessible book, for me that has mostly to do with Stephen King writing about a world that 'has moved on'. In essence it is a world waiting for the end. Which leaves a bleak image. Often it is said that a first line needs to pull the reader into the book and for me the first line did just that:
"The man in black fled accross the desert, and the gunslinger followed."
This sentence raised a lot of questions for me, but also put down a part of the setting. Western. But reading on in The Gunslinger, it is not just western, there is also fantasy, and science fiction, and a bit of horror. This mix makes for a different reading than you might be used to. The first line and this mix also made sure I picked up the next book, and the next.
'The Dark Tower' is his magnum opus (if I may call it that) where he mixes Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror. Although the entire series entails seven books, the readers had to do a lot of waiting before Stephen King wrote the ending. This first part: The Gunslinger, was published in 1982. The next parts needed five, five and six years, while the last three books were published right after each other, but it took another six years. So people had to wait 22 years between the first part and the last three.
'The Dark Tower' tells the story of Roland, the last gunslinger, and his hunt for the man in black. Roland hunts the man in black, but his real goal is to get to The Dark Tower. He believes that the Dark Tower is the cause of all the issues in all the worlds. The story takes place on multiple (bizarre) worlds, and over a long period of time. The Gunslinger tells about the traps the man in black puts in front of the gunslinger, and how he overcomes these traps. Over time the gunslinger changes, as we all do during our lives.
Eventhough The Gunslinger is at times not the most accessible book, for me that has mostly to do with Stephen King writing about a world that 'has moved on'. In essence it is a world waiting for the end. Which leaves a bleak image. Often it is said that a first line needs to pull the reader into the book and for me the first line did just that:
"The man in black fled accross the desert, and the gunslinger followed."
This sentence raised a lot of questions for me, but also put down a part of the setting. Western. But reading on in The Gunslinger, it is not just western, there is also fantasy, and science fiction, and a bit of horror. This mix makes for a different reading than you might be used to. The first line and this mix also made sure I picked up the next book, and the next.
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