King's new Dark Tower novel
Posted by MacDood
Today I finished Song of Susannah, the next-to-last volume in Stephen King's Dark Tower series, books that King started as a teenager and that he claims will end his career -- he's vowed that the final volume in the series will also be his last book.
I believe him. He's doing  the thing that Asimov and Heinlein did at the ends of their careers, tying in the loose ends of all his old work and name-checking and referencing all the  writers who influenced him.
But unlike bad end-of-career novels like Heinlein's Cat Who Walks Through Walls, Song of Susannah is a sharp and tight book, a comparatively slim book of only 400 or so pages. I raced through it in just a couple sittings, devouring the yarn at speed and wanting at once for it  to be over  and for it never to end.
For King's Dark Tower quest is an astonishing series of novels, rich and wide and deep, drunk on prose and on the best characterization of  King's creer. There's plenty King's written that  I haven't cared for, but I'd crawl on glass to get my hands on the final installment of  the series.
This volume in the story is about itself as much as it is about the characters and their quest. King's theories on writing are very sound, and this story is as much about how we read and understand and use stories as it  is a story in and  of itself. 
But it's never  preachy and it's never dull. King's story, which has all the  hallmarks of
cliche, manages to be both startingly original and utterly sane and  crazy. 
 



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