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Ladataan... Buick 8 (2002)Tekijä: Stephen King
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![]() ![]() Well, if there is anything you could say about Stephen King, it is that his writing really invokes emotion. I wasn't overly thrilled with the plot, (without revealing too much) basically a haunted type car (which doesn't do the plot justice actually), but that is probably why it got three stars instead of four. Overall, it was a quality read, a little much at times, but a good read nonetheless. King is a master at his craft and it shows! Who'd have thought a book about a car could be this good? To be fair I didn't know what to expect going into it: my thoughts were more on something like that Supernatural episode with the racist truck, rather than the car just being a ... well, whatever it is! But it was good. Honestly, while the last 50 pages were much better than in some of King's books, I could've done without them. It could've just ended after all the stories, without any real third act to speak of. What happened worked, it really did, but it would've been a good ending either way. Honestly, the only reason I'm giving it 4 stars, is because I fucking hate mixed POV. I don't know why this wasn't told entirely in first or third person, but rather switched between them: it would've been much better if he'd just picked on and went with it. Stephen King clearly knows how to write in either POV, so I don't see why he would switch like that. It takes me out of the book in a weird way. Oh, well. Maybe I should give Christine a try now? That's a car too, isn't it?
Give this much to Stephen King: He doesn't sit on his laurels and rely on formulas. Yes, "From a Buick 8" is about an evil car, in a manner of speaking. And yes, King trod that ground years ago with "Christine," which was engaging if mediocre. But this latest novel is different in many ways — in topic, style and in the way King chooses to tell his story. Is From a Buick 8 Stephen King's last real novel? He insists as much, and -- bad sign -- his latest main character is a dissatisfied storyteller. A Pennsylvania state trooper fills a mournful teen in on the confounding history of a grinning, otherworldly Roadmaster that may or may not have offed the boy's father. IT must get exhausting, inventing monstrous evils year in and year out, especially the sort of ancient, supernatural forces that start by insinuating themselves into the fabric of everyday life and grow to threaten everything sane and decent before being vanquished, against all odds, by a valiant band of unlikely heroes. You can see why Stephen King, who has done this many times, might get tired of it, might look around him at a world that certainly enjoys no shortage of terrors as it is, and write a book like ''From a Buick 8.'' Back in 1983, Stephen King tried to send a collective shiver through his audience with "Christine," a novel about a killer hot rod that could mow down unsuspecting pedestrians all by itself. Despite some effective scenes, that book proved to be one of his sillier offerings. Stephen King was driving from Florida to Maine in 1999 when nature called. He pulled off the highway, found a gas station and used the restroom. Then he walked behind the building and lost his footing, sliding down a slope and almost landing in a stream. That was when nature -- his nature -- called upon him to dream up ''From a Buick 8.'' Palkinnot
On the heels of his hugely successful "Dreamcatchers" King delivers another classic novel about boys, men, and a terrifying force only they can contain. The state police of Troop D in rural Pennsylvania have kept a secret in Shed B out back of the barracks ever since 1979, when Troopers Ennis Rafferty and Curtis Wilcox answered a call from a gas station just down the road and came back with an abandoned Buick Roadmaster. Curt Wilcox knew old cars, and he knew immediately that this one was ... wrong, just wrong. A few hours later, when Rafferty vanished, Wilcox and his fellow troopers knew the car was worse than dangerous -- and that it would be better if John Q. Public never found out about it. Curt's avid curiosity taking the lead, they investigated as best they could, as much as they dared. Over the years the troop absorbed the mystery as part of the background to their work, the Buick 8 sitting out there like a still life painting that breathes -- inhaling a little bit of this world, exhaling a little bit of whatever world it came from. In the fall of 2001, a few months after Curt Wilcox is killed in a gruesome auto accident, his 18-year-old boy Ned starts coming by the barracks, mowing the lawn, washing windows, shoveling snow. Sandy Dearborn, Sergeant Commanding, knows it's the boy's way of holding onto his father, and Ned is allowed to become part of the Troop D family. One day he looks in the window of Shed B and discovers the family secret. Like his father, Ned wants answers, and the secret begins to stir, not only in the minds and hearts of the veteran troopers who surround him, but in Shed B as well. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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