Stephen King, Michael Whelan
Dark Tower VII
The Dark Tower
Remarkable
Page turning
Surreal

Dark Tower VII The Dark Tower

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Reviews

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larissa campos @ssecretgardenss
4.5 stars
Dec 8, 2024

wild, as expected since the beginning. read it so fast, so incredible consuming and fascinating. stephen king has an amazing mind, one of a kind.

+7
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Justin Staack@justinstaack
2.5 stars
Jul 30, 2024

5 von 10 Punkten Stark an sich, war ein interessanter Charakter, genau wie Alan. Aus Stark hat man aber so gut wie nicht gemacht. Gerne hätte ich gelesen, wie Thad darüber denkt, dass dieser Mann ein Teil von ihm sein soll. Für Stephen King hat dieses Buch große Bedeutung, da er hier Richard Bachmann beerdigt, dennoch hätte ich mir für ihn eine bessere Geschichte gewünscht, in der mich der Hauptcharakter mehr interessiert.

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
3 stars
Jul 30, 2024

6 Punkte Die Zusammenfassung von Glas fand ich zu kurz. Die zusätzlichen Geschichten um Arthur Eld sind gut gelungen und passen in die Welt von Roland.

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
3 stars
Jul 30, 2024

5 Punkte Für mich wurde Susannah charakterlich zerstört. Es gibt keinen wirklichen Grund sich nicht gegen Mia aufzulehnen. Zu beginn weiß man schon, wie es endet. King versucht hier eine billige Ausrede nach der anderen zu benutzen. Ich bin schwer enttäuscht davon, zumal ich Susannah sehr mochte (zum Glück rehabilitiert sie sich größtenteils im letzten Band wieder, trotz ihrer letzten Szene).

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
4 stars
Jul 30, 2024

7,5 Punkte

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
4 stars
Jul 30, 2024

9 Punkte

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
4 stars
Jul 30, 2024

9 Punkte

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Justin Staack@justinstaack
4 stars
Jul 30, 2024

9,5 Punkte

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Patrick Book@patrickb
4 stars
Jul 5, 2024

This book has the thickest pages I’ve ever seen in a mass market novel. It’s like they printed it on a collection of card stock or book of carpet samples. Just holding this book up for the amount of time it took to read 400 pages gave me carpal tunnel syndrome. I read for too long one night and the goddamn thing dislocated my thumb.

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Patrick Book@patrickb
3 stars
Jul 5, 2024

It’s been such a long time coming it wasn’t likely to ever please anyone, but the last third felt extremely rushed a d the Red King section is dreadfully anticlimactic. But my sense of accomplishment is enormous!

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Patrick Book@patrickb
4 stars
Jul 5, 2024

Maybe the most western one since the first one, in a fun way. But also backs into some potentially sketchy territory in the epilogue. But that’s a problem for another book!

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Patrick Book@patrickb
5 stars
Jul 5, 2024

It’s so long and it’s kind of silly in small ways but it’s also surprisingly impactful and provides an extremely well-drawn story inside a story. The best of the series, I think.

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Patrick Book@patrickb
3 stars
Jul 5, 2024

3.5 ⭐️. Despite its absurd length this series works so well as a continuous story, flowing so well from chapter to chapter while maintaining mood and tone. This one covers a lot of ground and maintains the tension and excitement of the previous chapter, but like it suffers from unnecessary repetition; if you’ve made it this far you’re in for the whole ride, we don’t need excessive reminders of what’s come before.

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Patrick Book@patrickb
4 stars
Jul 5, 2024

When I was around 10-12 years old I tried reading a few King books; my dad had literally all of them I think, and my sister seemed to like them. The big ones never really hit for me; I gravitated to the Bachman collection and this. It’s short, for one thing, which he too often isn’t, but it also offers enough story, background, and action to keep you hooked while also laying an incredible amount of mystery and groundwork for the endless goes to come in this series.

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Matt Eaves@eavesyy
5 stars
Jul 5, 2024

The End. ?

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tori 👻@persefonitas
4 stars
Jun 15, 2024

Randall Flagg is a really memorable character

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Tobias V. Langhoff@tvil
3 stars
Feb 24, 2024

Oh, Discordia. I finally got back to The Dark Tower after almost a year off, and I didn't care much for this entry. It's OK, I liked parts of it, I gave it three stars, but all the criticism from the previous book is doubly valid here. The book is, as usual, needlessly verbose. There are entire plot points that are unnecessary. For example, why did Roland and Callahan need to go back to Cal Tower to get the deed? Why couldn't that have been taken care of the last time they saw him? It added nothing but bulk to the story. The main plot of this book was not as engaging as the ones in the previous books, but that's not surprising. All the previous books have had one self-contained main plot in addition to the overarching journey towards the tower, and I'm one of those who liked them (even the extended flashback in book four), but I understand that in the penultimate book, the main plot needs to be a bit more of a cliffhanger that ties into the overarching plot. It just didn't grab me as much. There are lots of great parts of this book too, though. Although King is very wordy and pulpy sometimes, he can also be poetic and literate, and this book had that sprinkled inbetween every chater. I also very much liked the short flashback to Odetta's past, and the small hints of lore from Discordia. I didn't hate the controversial part where King himself appears in the book. I think it was handled just fine, perhaps even more tactfully than I had anticipated. I've enjoyed this series, but not loved it, I think. This book was probably the weakest yet. I'm looking forward to the next and last one, and maybe looking forward to being done with the series, just a little.

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Tobias V. Langhoff@tvil
4 stars
Feb 24, 2024

Stephen King is so verbose. This book, and several of the others in the series (especially the second one), could probably be half the length if King for a change tried to show, not tell; to make things implicit instead of explicit; and to skip re-telling the readers what we already know just because some other character doesn’t yet. It’s just his writing style, I suppose, and I do like his style even though I often feel that he’s treating me like a roont. Like the previous book in the series, this one also feels like a side story, although the main plot progresses a little more this time around. Our heroes depart from their journey to help a small village with a wolf problem, and there’s a new game of figurative Castles (Mid-World’s equivalent to chess); this time we see an adult Roland lay plans and execute them, and although now he’s decades (or centuries?) older and with a new ka-tet, this book is structured very similarly to the last one. Also like in the previous book, although not to the same extent, a bulk of this book consists of a flashback. This time not to Roland’s past (although there is a short one from there too, where we finally learn more about Jericho Hill), but to Father Callahan’s life after the events of 'Salem's Lot, which (apart from being a good book) is pretty much required reading before you read this one, I’d say; it’s basically a prequel to a whole subplot here. We get some more lore and glimpses of the ancient world that came before Roland’s Mid-World, which is the favorite part of the universe King is weaving here. Well, universes, obviously. We trot along on some interdimensional highways through different whens and wheres here as well, and get to visit good old New York again. Although it can sometimes be maddening how slowly the main plot of this series progresses, it does in a way make the malevolent forces more powerful when they’re revealed to slowly. We still don’t know who the Crimson King is, but his tendrils infiltrate our Wall Street too. I also wish I’d read a few other books before this one (I thought I’d did my homework), although they’re not as required, as far as I can gather. The Low Men are mentioned pretty extensively in Callahan’s flashback, and they appear in several other stories that I think I have to pick up now before I read the next volume (along with a couple of other ones). I recently did some research on what Stephen King books to read in connection with The Dark Tower, wrote up this list, and am currently working through it. I’m especially glad I decided to do it this way, since near the end of this book, we start to delve into meta-fictional territories. It’ll be interesting to see how that works out. Although I was anxious to see how George Guidall would fare as narrator (this is chronologically the first audiobook in the series not to be narrated by the great Frank Muller, who gets a heartfelt mention in the book’s afterword), I was pleasantly surprised. He does a great job and I needn’t have worried.

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Tobias V. Langhoff@tvil
4 stars
Feb 24, 2024

Now we’re talking. After the first book The Gunslinger (which is an un-King-like mythical and surreal western) set the stage for the series, and the second book The Drawing of the Three (which was far too long and meandering for my taste) introduced the main characters of the series, this third book finally advances the plot, which was timely. I often feel that King’s books feel like they live their own life. They seldom seem completely planned from the beginning; plots unfold in a natural and sometimes surprising way, to both reader and, I assume, the author. (I haven’t read ON WRITING yet, so I don’t know if that’s true.) This is usually not problematic, but with certain books in the Dark Tower series it feels weird. The series is supposed to have evolved in King’s mind for decades, and the plot itself is presented as a prophetic and deterministic turning of the wheel of Ka. It doesn’t always feel that way. It’s hard to explain, but I can at least say that I think King had some issues with the pacing of these books. The first book is impeccably paced, in my opinion (even if it has some other issues). The second book was way too long, and in many places boring. King has never been one for writing succintly; parts of the book, like in the previous one, feel too drawn out, but it’s better. Some pacing choices felt very odd to me, such as how Jake goes out on more than one wandering of the street to find his door, but later parts of the book insist that this is extremely important (the vacant lot he found on one trip), so I will trust King on this one. This book has more action scenes and is more exciting overall, at any rate. It even ends on a cliffhanger. This book heavily reminded of The Stand, in many ways: The plot, the pacing, the framing, Lud, and just the general feeling of the story. We finally return in force to the post-apocalyptic science fiction undertones we gleamed somewhat in the underground passages of the first book. Learning more about the lost history of the world is the main thing that makes me want to read on. More lore is hinted at concerning the Tower as well, of course, but it’s still kept firmly in the mythical backdrop. I partly listened to this book as an audiobook (The Waste Lands), like I did with the previous one. When reading the last book I didn’t immediately love all of Frank Muller's delivery, but since then I've listened to his fantastic rendition of Moby Dick, and now he’s my favorite audiobook narrator. (An interesting piece of trivia: In this book, a class mate of Jake who's only mentioned once in passing is called Nathaniel Hawthorne, which is also the name of an author from Salem whom Moby Dick was dedicated to! Ka. King has read Moby Dick; he talks about it in the preface to 'Salem's Lot.) I don’t know what I’ll do after I’ve read the next book, Wizard and Glass, which was his last Dark Tower audiobook before he sustained a tragic head injury. (I recently discovered that he actually did a recording of the original version of The Gunslinger, before it was revised after his accident. I plan to acquire it and read it at some point.) At any rate, Muller gets a lot more to work with in this book. He’s really hit his stride with the voices of Roland, Eddie and Oy especially, and Susannah and Jake are fine too. He voices the numerous old people appearing in this book very well, and King’s written dialects come over nicely. My favorite voice of his here, though, is Blaine. The staccato, milky smooth delivery is perfectly unsettling. All in all the strongest entry in the series so far. Probably a 4.5. I’ll start on the next (and final one with Muller) right away. As I read this book I also stumbled upon The Dark Tower Music Project. First of all, as a young babby who never listened to ZZ Top, Lud: The God Drums was useful for me. Secondly, the track Blaine is simply fantastic progressive rock inspired by my favorite character in this book.

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Tobias V. Langhoff@tvil
4 stars
Feb 24, 2024

After resolving the cliffhanger at the end of the previous book The Waste Lands (and seeing a little more of Blaine, one of my favorite characters, although I didn’t think the end of that storyline was perfectly executed) and a small detour into aspects of The Stand’s plot (a book I recommend reading before this), the bulk of this book mostly consists of a lengthy flashback into Roland’s past, which we got glimpses of in the first novel of the series. This is probably the slowest book so far in the series. It’s not bad, but I’m glad I didn’t have to wait 6 years to read it and then 6 more years to read the next installment, like the poor first time readers did. It’s focused in plot and story, but long-winded; it trots along on a snail’s pace, Ka (like the wind) slowly building up to a storm of confrontation. The tension is very drawn out. It is, at times, a little boring. That’s not to say that it’s a bad book. The first book established the world, the second introduced and characterized the main cast, the third kickstarted the plot and explained some of the lore, and in this book we finally get to learn more about Roland’s past and motivation. It’s a change of pace from the previous book, but then again, each book is a change of pace from the one that comes before it so far. The flashback portion fleshes out a story that was introduced in The Gunslinger; that of Roland’s original ka-tet from his teens. This includes his first love, which is tenderly written. (The same can not be said about the erotic parts.) This story is incidentally also told in the graphic novel The Gunslinger Born, a nice adaptation. I’ve always been intrigued by the Mid-World of Roland’s youth and its lore, and we learn some things about it here. The world actually reminds me of the setting of Trigun; an alternate, post-apocalyptic version of Mexico or perhaps New Mexico, with cowboys and derelict oil fields and modern technology that nobody knows how to use. There’s also magic, of course, and smoke-like portals between worlds called “thinnies”, also featured in The Mist, make appearances. And near the end a lot of parallels to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz are made. Apart from the ones that are (very explicitly) stated, I realized that the field of blood-red roses that are elsewhere said to be surrounding the Dark Tower looks much like the expanse of the field of poppies in the classic 1939 film. Even though it’s not my favorite so far, this book holds a special place in my heart – it’s the final audiobook in the series narrated by Frank Muller, before he had a tragic accident and George Guidall took over the reins. I’ll give him a fair chance, but nobody can replace Muller for me. I’ve mentioned it before in other reviews, but I really recommend his narration of Moby-Dick. (Also, for super fans: Guidall narrates the first book in the series, because it was released in a revised edition in later years, but Muller did actually narrate it first. His narration is hard to find, but it does exist.) In this book, Muller has more range than in previous books; the lisping half-wit Sheemie, the quavering voice of Eldred Jonas, the mad cackle of Rhea the witch, the happy go lucky joker Cuthbert, and of course the return of the calm and psychotic Blaine as well as Eddie’s New York accent. All masterfully delivered. I’ll miss you, Frank.

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Geoffrey Froggatt@geofroggatt
3 stars
Nov 29, 2023

Dark and twisted. Will Graham isn't as interesting as Clarice Starling in my opinion. I was obsessed with the dynamic between Reba and Francis. I was hoping for more Hannibal scenes in this but ultimately his scenes were cut short. I will definitely be reading the other books in the series.

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Lara Engle@bzzlarabzz
2 stars
Aug 23, 2023

20 pages of action with 900 pages of exposition. Too much! I don't mind a long book and I usually love a long Stephen King book, but this one needed to pick up the pace. I did like most of Father Callahan's storytelling, but it wasn't exactly important for this story. Two books to go before my quest for the dark tower is done.

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Lara Engle@bzzlarabzz
4 stars
Aug 23, 2023

Despite its pacing issues, this book earns four stars based on its flashes of greatness. Specific scenes stand out and the lore of the Dark Tower is significantly built in this installment. We get moments of King gore, but the real terror is in the desperate lives of those trying to live in a decaying mid-world. They barely manage to subsist. Their lives are nowhere near that joy we would consider to be truly living. Roland and the rest of the Ka-Tet are owning their power and saving the world. (We hope.)

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Lara Engle@bzzlarabzz
4 stars
Aug 23, 2023

I'm a little conflicted about this one. The story was great, the mythology was cool and multilayered, and the connections between mid-world and our world seemed just right. But ... it's just too long! The story needed some serious tightening up. As always, the imagery and emotion is right on track, but in this one the plot was plodding. I was so relieved to return at the end to Eddie, Susannah, Jake, and Oy. And seriously, you're in Kansas, so you have to go Wizard of Oz?! Ugh. Predictable and annoying.

Highlights

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Laura Ladwig@lala

Fat Johnny reached down, and as he grasped the wallet, he farted loudly and screamed. With faint amusement the gunslinger realized he had mistaken the sound of his own fart for a gunshot and his time of dying had come.

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Laura Ladwig@lala

…, but what I mean is she talks like a cliche. Do you know that word?‘ ‚It means what is always said or believed by people who think only a little or not at all.‘