Download and read  "Under the Dome: a Novel" by Stephen King Hall



Stephen King Hall, Literature & Fiction » Genre Fiction » Horror
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The main thing readers might find frightful about Stephen King's Under The Dome is its length. The second is the detailed map of the town and list of characters at the front of the book (including "Dogs of Note"), which sometimes foreshadows, you know, heavy lifting. Do not believe it. Breathless pacing and passive characterization are the symbols of writer's best books, and here the writing is immersive, the suspense unrelenting. You will turn page after page so fast, that your hand will hardly be able to keep up.
When the little town of Chester's Mill, Maine, is surrounded by an unknown force field that no one is able to see, the people inside must struggle for their lives. The situation worsens quickly due to the ecological effects of the dome and the machinations of Big Jim Rennie, who is an indecently hypocritical local politician and drug lord who likes the idea of having an isolated people to dominate and manipulate. Rennie also wants to keep hidden his lucrative sideline in the manufacture of crystal meth. Citizens start to panic, because the government's efforts to puncture the dome are useless. But there are few people trying to oppose him. They are footloose Iraq veteran Dale Barbie Barbara, newspaper editor Julia Shumway, a gaggle of teen skateboarders and others who want to solve the mistery of the dome. King fills the book with lots of characters masterfully but mercilessly, forcing them to live (or not) with the consequences of fast taken decisions. The list of characters looks like this:
Dale Barbara
Barbie, a drifter, ex-army, lives with a huge feeling of guilt from the time he was in Iraq. He works as a short-order cook at Sweetbriar Rose, and that is the closest thing he's ever had to a family life. When his old commander, Colonel Cox, calls from outside, Barbie's burden becomes the town itself.

Julia Shumway
Very pretty editor and publisher of the local town newspaper, The Chester's Mill Democrat, Julia is self-assured and Republican to the core, but she is drawn to Barbie and discovers, when it matters most, that her most vulnerable moment might be her most liberating.

Jim Rennie, Sr.
"Big Jim", who is a car dealer with a fierce smile and no kindness, he'd given his heart to Jesus at the age of sixteen and had little left for his customers, his neighbors, or his dying wife and deteriorating son. The town's Second Selectman, he's used to having things his way.
Joseph McClatchey
Scarecrow Joe, a 13-year-old also known as "King of the Geeks" and "Skeletor", a bona fide brain whose backpack bears the legend "fight the powers that be." He is cleverer than anyone, and proves it in a crisis.
Stephen King succeeded to fascinate readers with his new book. Although, there is only one supernatural thing the Dome itself, and everything else is pretty ordinary. But that doesn't make the novel boring or usual. Read the book, and you will definitely enjoy it.


Read an excerpt:

...overeducated cotton-picker') had finally insisted that Big Jim see a cardiologist at CMG in Lewiston. The cardiologist said he needed a procedure to knock out that irregular heartbeat once and for all. Big Jim (who was terrified of hospitals) said he needed to talk to God more, and you called that a prayer procedure. Meantime, he took his pills, and for the last few months he'd seemed fine, but now . . . Maybe . . . 'Dad?' No answer. Junior flipped the light switch. The overhead gave that same unsteady glow, but it dispelled the shadow Junior had taken for the back of his father's head. He wouldn't be exactly heartbroken if his dad vaporlocked, but on the whole he was glad it hadn't happened tonight. There was such a thing as too many complications. Still, he walked to the wall where the safe was with big soft steps of cartoon caution, watching for the splash of headlights across the window that would herald his father's return. He set aside the picture that covered the safe (Jesus...

Reviews

It's like the OLD Stephen King ... kinda

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marthamealey:   11 Jun 2010
It's a little bit of Lord of The Flies meets Tommyknockers, but it FEELS like the old pre-accident Stephen King. You get really excited, you feel the story really coming together, and then it fizzles .... It goes to a place where not even the die-hard King fans can swallow. SO disappointing! At the end of the book is a little blurb from King telling you that he started the book back in the 80s (pre-accident) and finished it in 2009ish. As soon as I read that, the failure of the book made per
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Guest: 7 May 2010
Thise book is peace of shit. Don't read the book ever!!!!