| |
|
| | #19 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Vale of Glamorgan
Posts: 48
| Re: Stephen King - Cell Loved Cell. A little sceptical at first as it didn't start like usual King books, but after the first couple of chapters I was hooked. Definately one of his best IMHO, and I'm already looking forward to reading it again. |
| | |
| | #21 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Illinois
Posts: 11
| Re: Stephen King - Cell This is the first time I've ever read a King book. I'm not big on the horror type of SF, but this is one of the best in that genre I've read. Definately worth a read, especially if you're a fan of his sort of work. |
| | |
| | #22 (permalink) |
| I is Dragon, K? LOL Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: Warwickshire
Posts: 2,485
| Re: Stephen King - Cell I think, after all that threat of retirement (a threat to me at least, I'd be distraught...but then I don't think authors can really 'retire' you can never stop those creative juices!) Stephey-baby has returned on top form with this book. I love it, it's delightfully gruesome and the phone crazies are some seriously brilliant bad guys and gals. And as usual, SK's come up with a brilliant plot, when I found out why people were going crazy, I was amazed, it was such a cracking idea (I won't say what it is, in case people are still reading!) |
| | |
| | #23 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Dec 2000 Location: Puerto Rico
Posts: 2,264
| I finished reading Cell, and find it very good. Totally enjoy reading it and it maintains the attention from the first page to the end. So I recommend it. I was waiting something kind of different at the end but anyway it was great. ![]() |
| | |
| | #24 (permalink) |
| Sexy & Sassy Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: wales
Posts: 585
| Re: Stephen King - Cell I finally got round to reading Cell the other week and as usual couldn't put it down...I'm usually first in line when the new books come out but finances dictate that I have to use the library now but it will be in the rest of the collection asap. |
| | |
| | #25 (permalink) |
| Alfy Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: West Lothian
Posts: 9
| Re: Stephen King - Cell A great book. A similar situation as in The Stand but with the cast being so much smaller it became a much more intense read. The experiences of one or two people in this story were, to me, much more vivid and it was easier to empathise with the few characters rather than the ensemble cast of The Stand. Loved The Stand though. Although, as an ensemble cast, I think It is the best and his best book all round. Dissapointed with the last 45 minutes of the mini-series but budget and effects constraints would seem to have played a part there. The screen always limits what the combined imaginations of writer and reader can do.......... Best / worst book to screen King stories? New thread I think. |
| | |
| | #26 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: USA:
Posts: 5
| Re: Stephen King - Cell I’ve only read the first chapter of Cell, but . . . when I attended Mr. King’s Portland Arts and Lectures appearance, he mentioned the book. He said he got the idea when he saw a woman in a power suit get on her cell phone; this was in New York. He wondered what would happen if the lady got some kind of message that made her psychotic. I guess he found out: that woman actually finds her way into the book, except, if I’m not mistaken, the city is Boston, not New York--he said he didn’t want to piss off any New Yorkers by, for example, having his characters get off the train in a place where the train normally doesn’t stop; as anyone whose read the Dark Tower series knows, King is notorious for goofs in his research. King also explained the genesis of his newest book, Lisey’s Story. I guess he got the idea when he returned home after a near-fatal bout of pneumonia: his wife had cleaned out his office because she was going to refurnish it, so the rug was rolled up to one side, and all of his stuff was boxed up in the corner; King realized that this is what his office will look like when he dies. |
| | |
| | #28 (permalink) |
| Apostate Against the Eloi Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: California
Posts: 1,149
| Re: Stephen King - Cell I finished the book not too long ago, also. Without a doubt, one must instantly call upon (a very small pun intended) his/her memories of The Stand to see how well it stacks up against it. Cell is a tighter narrative than The Stand in several regards. The focus of a wide spread genocide is more narrow, and, not surprisedly, more effective than The Stand's attempt to drive home the point through several inner stories. A reader really gets the feeling that King has learned to achieve more with less since his bulky The Stand days. Another fine example is King's decision to leave more to the reader's imagination. In The Stand, King made sure to make us all aware what the virus was, where it originated, how it was released, and how the definitive misuse of the ramifications by Randall Flagg. In Cell, many of those questions are either left for the readers to figure out, or they are, at best, satisfied only through the theories of main characters in the story even though many of the characters, villains, stages of story progression, and plot are similar to the former book. Cell is a good zombie-like tale, and, due to popular culture zombie films by the likes of Romero and the original Twilight Zone, I am tempted to read between the lines and find sociological or even political metaphors in play. Could there be? King is certainly not known for such leaps into lecture, but, as suggested before, such themes have been cemented into the zombie genre. Thoughts? |
| | |
| | #29 (permalink) |
| wandering Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Australia, Western Australia
Posts: 1,186
| Re: Stephen King - Cell I enjoyed Cell probably more than I was expecting to, it had been awhile since I had read any King. As other's have said the comparisons with The Stand are inevitable but I think it holds up pretty well there. Its not intended to be another epic, in doing a tribute to or at least taking inspiration from the zombie movies/culture I thought it took on a nice cinematic feel (has a movie been confirmed yet? Im sure it will), it moved along quickly and I read it easily enough that I wasn't stopping to ponder it too deeply and over think the details. The only thing that I didn't enjoy was the developments later about reversing the effects of the pulse, I just didn't by it. |
| | |
| | #30 (permalink) |
| deathwizard Join Date: May 2007 Location: South Carolina
Posts: 37
| Re: Stephen King - Cell Though I'm a huge King fan, I bought Cell not expecting much, for some reason. And instead I loved it, from the opening page until the end. The first thirty pages or so are amazing. |
| | |
|
| About | Link To Us | For Writers | For Publishers | Privacy | Terms of Use | Copyright | Press | XML/RSS | Contact Us © Copyright Science Fiction Fantasy Chronicles 2003-2008 |