What makes King so real is his ability to be uneven in his prose and, simultaneously, so uniquely versatile. He is one of those writers who is not afraid to tackle a new genre that isn’t horror, and to navigate it perfectly. His Duma Key, the novel about the real pain and challenge of being talented, is a great example of that.
King has referred to “The Stand” as his attempt to do an American version of “The Lord of the Rings.” But his seven-book “Dark Tower” series (an eighth book was published after the story proper concluded) is King’s truest Tolkien analogue.Indeed, it’s one of the great American genre series — an epic in multiple modes (horror, sci-fi, fantasy, Western) about a gunslinger-knight who is trying to save his world and ours from complete destruction by his foe, the Man in Black. Published over the course of 20 years, the series has become the center of a King extended universe, with multiple novels and stories connecting to its characters and locations. The first volume, “The Gunslinger” (1982) is the shortest, and it will give you a tiny taste of how weird and inventive the series gets. ©
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