Showing posts with label The Dark Tower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dark Tower. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Stephen King's Numbers

Thing are playing around my mind. Questions that I think have some answers to it and I know that Sai King can answer. It's a simple questions of numbers.

I believe his most recent project is the motion picture 1408 starring John Cussack.

Now, does 408 mean anything to a Stephen King fan? We'll see.

I came across 408 when reading The Talisman one night. I noticed that the room in the Alhambra hotel where Jack and his mother Lily is room number 408. And it struck me that 1408 is the latest movie adaptation of a Stephen King novel. What do you think? What is the connection if there is?

Other numbers that Mr. King includes in his novels are the number 19 from Bag of Bones (and eventually to the Dark Tower saga), 237 from The Shinning, 1996 from The Dark Tower saga and probably some more.

If there are more, Stephen King fans, tell me. Good days, and Pleasant nights.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Stephen King's Connection with LOST


Some of the connections between on of my favorite TV show LOST and Stephen King are the characters of the show versus the characters of the Dark Tower. Plus the style of the story of LOST is somehow Stephenkingish... The coincidental meetings of the characters for example has been one the idea of Mr. King.

Anyway, here are some of the character of The Dark Tower vs. the characters on LOST

  • Eddie Dean, a smart-alecky drug addict from which Roland the Last Gunslinger drew form our world to his word is being compared to Charlie of Lost... Both a slave of heroin.
  • While reading the Talisman one night (in the CR) I notice Jack Sawyer and I thought of the two most popular (in my opinion) male character of LOST - Jack (Shepard) and Sawyer
  • Jake, a young boy with special powers and a close father and son bond with Roland can be compared to Walt and his father.
  • “Ka”, which dictates that everything happens for a reason, similar to Locke’s belief in fate and the belief of the mysteries of the island.
Some of the more obvious of these similarities are found between Kings Dark Tower character Susannah. For example,
  • Susannah is bound to a wheel chair, having lost her legs after getting pushed in front of a subway train, but is able to walk in some parallel worlds. This is strikingly similar to Locke from Lost, as he was paralyzed from the waist down until waking up after Flight 815's crash having amazingly been cured.
  • Susannah can at times be compared to almost any of the Lost characters.
  • Again, Jake—a young boy with supernatural abilities know as “the touch”—and the character of Walt from Lost, who also seems to be gifted with his own set of supernatural abilities yet to be explained.
  • Jake adopts and develops a strong bond with a Mid-World animal called a Billy Bumbler, while Walt adopted his dog Vincent on the island.

It is indeed hard to ignore the parallels between Lost and many of King’s novels, most specifically the related works of The Stand, Insomnia and the Dark Tower. While there are many similarities between Lost and King's legendary book The Stand, the more striking similarities are shared with themes, concepts and characters from the Dark Tower books.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

The Gunslinger - (e)Book Summary

The Gunslinger is the first book of Stephen King's magnum opus, The Dark Tower.


It is the story of a lone last Gunslinger to a world that has moved on.

This post is to summary Roland Deschain's first of many adventures towards the Dark Tower.

The story begins "The Man in Black fled into the dessert and the gunslinger follows"

He is described in great detail in this section. He wears two guns with sandalwood stocks across his hips.

From this dessert where the story begins, Roland - the last Gunslinger - crossed the hot, dry and dead dessert to catch the Man in Black, which he knows will bring him to his tower.

The gunslinger reaches what he believes to be the last hut in that dessert, he met a young man who is tending his crop of corn. His name is Brown.

The two men eat a dinner of beans and corn. The men talk about the town of Tull and the gunslinger asks Brown if he has ever been there. Brown has been there but avoids it if he can. He only goes there when he's selling corn and other stuff. The gunslinger tells Brown that he was almost killed in Tull by a man who people said was touched by God. In reality, the gunslinger says, the man was brought back to life by the Man in Black.

In this town he met Alice, the girl who bartend the bar where he hear's Hey Jude playing while entering the town. They had sex and then she began to talk. She explains that the man at the bar, Nort, was dead and then he was touched by God. She details Nort's fall into addiction and how the devil-grass started to take over his soul. Children would chase him in the street, tormenting him. He died. Alice continued that the man in black comes into Tull in the late afternoon in a worn cart led by a tired horse. He looks like a monk or a priest, since he is dressed in long black robes with a black hood that covers his face. The man in black sets a trap for Roland. When he's in it, he killed almost, if not all of the the resident of Tull.

After he finished telling the story to Brown, he left the next day. He continued crossing the desert. He saw what looks like a remain of a campfire but he can't see any clue that the man in black was close by. The remains looks cold and there are no other objects that may have explain that he's been there.

He then met Jake Chambers at the Way Station. According to Jake, he had died. A man dressed as a priest apparently pushed him in the road and he was ran over. That's why he was able to come to this world.

Jake joined Roland to his journey to the dark tower. The gunslinger felt that he must take this boy with him.

On one part of their adventure they ran into an oracle where jake almost died. After that, they came across the slow mutants in the mountains.. This is where jake fell and died. "Go then, there are other worlds that this" was jake's last words when he plundered down the abyss.

Roland, the last Gunlinger, finally reached the man in black and they had a very long palaver. He read him his fortunes using a set of tarot cards. He told Roland that soon he must draw. Man in the Black showed Roland the universe and it's infinity. "You did good" said the man in black, "better that your father".

The story ends when roland wakes up 10 years later and the man in black is just a pile of bones. He then continues his search to the dark tower.