SteONorDar wrote:
Mr Chris wrote:
Hang on - are you saying that the small change is that the Tower stands (which, surely, it did to start with), or have I missed a change there? If so, what is it and how's it important?
I've not got the books with me to check the exact details, Davydd Grimm has them now, and will probably be along on the thread presently, but basically he picks up the horn that belong to his comrade (Alain or Cuthbert, I can't remember which), that he was supposed to blow at the top of the Tower. This is mentioned in passing several times in the books.
I faintly remember the horn, yes - did he pick it up after he'd returned to the start of Book One? And why didn't he have it with him when he got to the Tower the first time?
I borrowed the final book from the library, and I only own one or two from the series, so I can't look any of this up myself either!
Quote:
I believe he did it simply because he liked Father Callahan, and wanted to use him again. I agree with that - he's a good character. He's used recurring character a lot in the past, all the books set in Castle Rock have some of the same characters. Also, as one of the main themes of the book is the general "interconnectedness of things", to phrase it rather badly, bringing characters and plots in from other books works, at least for me.
I suppose I can't argue with that, but something about the way that he used his own stories to illustrate that sat ill with me. Not hugely so, and it only really annoyed me after I'd finished, but it did seem to stick out quite a bit whilst you were reading. I guess what rankled is that drawing in your own works into a new story makes the reader go "Oooh! That's the bit from [book x]!" which sort of spoils the suspension of disbelief a bit.
Quote:
Quote:
As far as hair splitting goes, I thought that argument of his was up there with a molecule thick strand in a particle collider. If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck...
I understand what you mean! For me, it works in the story. It also works outside the story, as a comment on the connection between the Tower and his life, but is done in such a way that it doesn't break the fourth wall, at least not technically.
It did work in the story, I agree, as the basis for their very existence was that they were artifacts of a narrative created by someone else. But as with the use of characters and locations from King's other books, the use of himself as the "god author" just jumped out a bit much - sort of like your car going over an unexpected speed bump whilst you're driving along a pretty country road, if I can use a really not very apt analogy.
The breaking the fourth wall bit I meant was at the ending only, where he was berating the reader.
Quote:
I think he liked the story, in the sense of plot, but not the way it was written. Just prior to the release of DT6, a substantially rewritten and expanded version of The Gunslinger came out. It's much more in the style of the later books, obviously, so you may not like it. However, if you do decide to reread the series, I would recommend reading that version.
Oooh, that I didn't know. I shall have to reread it for completeness. Which will then inevitably lead to me rereading the whole series....
Quote:
Good thread, Mr Chris, as you can probably tell I like this series quite a lot! It's good to see someone who can dislike something and give good reasons for it.
See, I didn't really hate it. I just hated the ending. For instance, that book based around the young Roland and Alaine and Cuthbert was jaw droppingly excellent. Which made it all the more annoying that some of the later books were, comparatively speaking, weak.