Friday, February 14, 2025

Recap of Novels 231 – 240

Average rating of novels 231 – 240:  3.7 stars (out of 5)

 

 

231.   ★★★½             Dandelion Wine

232.   ★★★★             For Whom the Bell Tolls

233.  ★★★½              Hangover Square

234.  ★★★★              The Day of the Jackal

235   ★★★½              The Dark Tower #1
236.  
★★★½              The Dark Tower #2
237.  
★★★½              The Dark Tower #3

238.   ★★★★             The Dark Tower #4

239.   ★★★★             The Dark Tower #5

240.  ★★★½              The Dark Tower #6

 

 

Favorite: Wizard and Glass: The Dark Tower #4

 

Least Favorite: The Wastelands: The Dark Tower #3

 

Best Hero: The Gunslinger; Roland Deschain from the Dark Tower Series

 

Best Heroine: Susannah Dean from the Dark Tower Series

 

Best Villain: The Jackal from The Day of the Jackal

 

Most interesting/Complex character: Roland Deschain

 

Best Quotation: Fault always lies in the same place, my fine babies: with him weak enough to lay blame. ~ Cort, the Gunslinger’s teacher

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Classics Club Spin #40

It is time for the 40th edition of the Classics Club Spin – List 20 books from my CC TBR, by Sunday, February 16; the mods will then pick a random number, and I have until April 11 to read the corresponding book.

 

My spin list:

 

1. North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell

2. The Counterfeiters by Andre Gide

3. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier Spy by Jon le Carré

4. Rabbit, Run by John Updike

5. The Magus by John Fowles

6. Barnaby Rudge by Charles Dickens

7. Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens

8. The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder

9. Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad

10. The Ballad of the Sad Café by Carson McCullers

11. Grendel by John Gardner

12. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

13. Scoop by Evelyn Waugh

14. Cool Hand Luke by Don Pearce

15. The Silver Sword by Ian Serraillier

16. Tess of d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

17. Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu

18. Kim by Ian Fleming

19. Post Office by Charles Bukowski

20. Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery

 

I don’t have strong feelings about any of these. I suppose I’m hoping for Cool Hand Luke or Tinker, Tailor, Soldier Spy. Nothing I know enough about to dread on this list.

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Song of Susannah: The Dark Tower series #6 by Stephen King (novel #240)

I’m nothing but Roland of Gilead’s [expletive] secretary. ~ spoken by fictional Stephen King, self-inserted into this novel by the real Stephen King

Song of Susannah is #6 in Stephen King's eight-volume The Dark Tower series. It is a dark fantasy set in Earth’s future, where physical and metaphysical laws are significantly altered. There is some collective memory of the old world and occasional portals between the old and new; characters do not refer to different “worlds” but different “whens”.

 

Roland Deschain is a Gunslinger, not so much a description as a title or profession: a knightly order trained in personal combat to be defenders of justice. Roland is the last of the gunslingers; more precisely, he was. He is on a quest to find the Dark Tower and to set something right that has somehow gone horribly wrong in the world that moved on.

 

In volume #1, Roland was alone pursuing the man in black. In volume #2, he picks up two companions from a different when: 20th-century America. He encounters Eddie, a former drug addict, and Susannah, a former schizophrenic and double-leg amputee. Eddie and Susanah fall in love and become Roland’s companions and gunslingers in training. In volume #3, the three risk great peril to add one more to their group, a boy named Jake, also from the 20th century. Volume #4 is a flashback telling Roland’s backstory. Volume #5, Wolves of the Calla, is a detour from the quest when they assist a farming community harassed by evil and dangerous beings. The very end of volume #5 leaves a cliffhanger when Susannah, pregnant with an unnatural child, leaves her companions and travels to a different when, late 20th century America to give birth.

 

Susannah is possessed by Mia, a minor demon who made a sort of reverse Faustian bargain to exchange her immortal being to become a mortal woman in order to have a baby. Mia needs Susannah, a fully human host, to carry the baby until the moment of delivery when the baby will be transferred from Susannah to Mia. Initially, Susannah fears the baby is a monster, but she learns it is the very human offspring of herself and Roland, though her pregnancy came about quite unnaturally.

 

Meanwhile, Roland, Eddie, Jake, and newly recruited gunslinger Father Callahan attempt to follow Susannah. Actually, Roland and Eddie intend to pursue Susannah, to 1999, while Jake and Callahan travel to 1977 to conduct business regarding their quest. However, the two pairs are sent to the other’s intended destination at the critical moment of passing through the portal. The gunslingers persevere and carry on, determined to do their best. This is particularly hard on Eddie, who is desperate to follow Susannah, but he soldiers on trusting Jake and Callahan to rescue his beloved.

 

In many ways, this was my least favorite volume thus far. It gets very weird; well, a King novel that isn’t weird would be weird, but this feels very contrived. I will spare further critique until I review the series as a whole.  In other ways, this volume was very good. The previous volume, Wolves of the Calla, hinted at a bit of metafiction, which comes full force in Susannah’s Song. It also contains very clever author self-insertion. King writes himself into the tale, every bit the best-selling author he is. Roland and Eddie travel to 1977 Maine on the quest business I mentioned. While there, they learn that Stephen King lives nearby and that he has written about Callahan, the newest member of their company. Callahan is in a different King story: Salem’s Lot. They find King and learn that he has written, but not yet published the beginning of The Dark Tower and created the character Roland of Gilead. He hasn’t gotten to Eddie yet. He tells them…

Yeah, The Dark Tower, it was called. It was gonna be my Lord of the Rings, my Gormenghast, my you-name-it.

And…

…you started to scare me, so I stopped writing about you.

Meeting his fictional creation in the flesh was rather disturbing to King, but Roland and Eddie convince him that he must complete The Dark Tower series. It was very clever and a bit confusing.

 

My rating: 3 ½ out of 5 stars



 

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Sunday, February 2, 2025

Wolves of the Calla: The Dark Tower series #5 by Stephen King (novel #239)

As always, he [Roland] was never so happy to be alive as when he was preparing to deal death. Five minutes of blood and stupidity.

…he always felt sick afterwards.

 

Wolves of the Calla is #5 in Stephen King's eight-volume The Dark Tower series. It is a dark fantasy set in Earth’s future, where physical and metaphysical laws are significantly altered. There is some collective memory of the old world and occasional portals between the old and new, but characters do not refer to different “worlds” but different “whens”.

 

Roland Deschain is a Gunslinger, not so much a description as a title or profession: a knightly order trained in personal combat to be defenders of justice. Roland is the last of the gunslingers. He is on a quest to find the Dark Tower, and to set something right that has somehow gone horribly wrong in the world that moved on.

 

The precise meaning or mission of gunslingers is revealed gradually through this series. From volume 5:

He [Eddie] knew from Roland’s stories (and from having seen him in action a couple of times) that the gunslingers of Gilead had been much more than peace officers. They had also been messengers, accountants, sometimes spies, once in a while even executioners. More than anything else, however, they had been diplomats.

Roland himself explains more succinctly:

Fighting for those who can’t fight for themselves is our job.

In volume #1, Roland was alone. In volume #2, he picks up two companions from a different when: 20th-century America. He encounters Eddie, a former drug addict, and Susannah, a former schizophrenic and double-leg amputee. Eddie and Susanah become Roland’s companions and gunslingers in training. In volume #3, the three risk great peril to add one more to their group, a boy named Jake, also from the 20th century. Volume #4 Wizard and Glass was a flashback and Roland’s backstory.

 

Volume #5 returns to the quest, but only briefly. The gunslingers are forced to detour when they encounter a farming community harassed by evil and dangerous beings. According to their code, the Gunslingers must render aid and succor. The Calla is the farming community of Calla Bryn Sturgis, and the enemy is the Wolves: not actual wolves but seeming humans behind wolf masks.

 

The odds seem impossible, and there is a traitor in their midst, but Roland is undeterred.

As always, he was never so happy to be alive as when he was preparing to deal death. Five minutes of blood and stupidity.

 

…he always felt sick afterwards.

Besides the looming battle, an important sub-text is present. Susannah is in a delicate condition: she doesn’t show because the “chap” within her is an unnatural and evil being that will likely destroy her once released. At the critical moment of battle his arrival seems imminent, but Susannah forces it to wait by force of will. Shortly after the fight, she leaves her fellow Gunslingers and travels to a different when…the story of the next volume, Song of Susannah.

 

I’ve spoken of the four companions or the four Gunslingers: Roland of Gilead, Eddie Dean, his wife Susannah, and a boy Jake Chambers. There is one more companion I’ve not mentioned thus far: Oy, a doglike creature called a Billy Bumbler from Roland’s when. Oy becomes Jake's fiercely loyal companion. Billy Bumblers mimic human speech, but Oy demonstrates particular intelligence. His speech often conveys meaning beyond just mimicry.

 

I think a new gunslinger is joining the quest. The gunslingers encounter Father Callahan in Calla Bryn Sturgis. He is from 20th-century America but has taken up ministering to the folk of the Calla. This volume involves some traveling between different whens, and Callahan discovers a book of fiction by Stephen King from the 20th century. Callahan is disturbed to find that Salem’s Lot tells his story, causing him to question his own existence.

 

Thus far, I’ve rated each volume of the series individually and I will stick with that until the end, but I’m forming an opinion for the whole as well. This volume can probably stand on its own better than the others, though there is a maddening cliffhanger: what is to become of Susannah? But again, on its own, Wolves of the Calla is very exciting, very satisfying, and at the same time piquing my interest for more.

 

My rating: 4 out of 5 stars


 

 

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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Wizard and Glass: The Dark Tower series #4 by Stephen King (novel #238)

What you call ‘the bottom line,’ Eddie, is this: I get my friends killed. ~ The Gunslinger

Wizard and Glass is #4 in Stephen King's eight-volume The Dark Tower series. It is a dark fantasy set in Earth’s future, where physical and metaphysical laws are significantly altered. There is some collective memory of the old world, and characters describe the present state as a world that has “moved on.” There are portals between Roland’s world and the old world.

 

Roland Deschain is a Gunslinger, not so much a description as a title or profession: a knightly order trained in personal combat to be defenders of justice. Roland is the last of the gunslingers. He is on a quest to find the Dark Tower, and once finding it presumably to set something right that has somehow gone wrong in the world that moved on.

 

Thus far, the exact purpose of gaining the Dark Tower is not precisely clear, but it does begin to come into focus in volume #4.

 

In volume #1, The Gunslinger, Roland was alone. In volume #2, The Drawing of the Three, he picks up two companions from 20th-century America: Eddie, a former drug addict, and Susannah, a former schizophrenic and double-leg amputee. Eddie and Susanah become Roland’s companions and gunslingers in training. In volume #3, The Waste Lands, the three risk great peril to add one more to their group, a boy named Jake, also from the 20th century. It is unclear if Jake will become a gunslinger. Roland loves him like a son, but nothing…NOTHING…is more important than finding the Dark Tower.

 

Wizard and Glass is more of a flashback than anything else. Roland’s companions question him about his past, his family, how he became a Gunslinger, a lost love he occasionally refers to, and the origins of his quest for the Dark Tower. Most of this volume is the four sitting around the campfire as Roland recounts his past. I can imagine that during the original publication, readers were clamoring for Roland’s backstory. This is it.

 

I didn’t have to wait for the next volume to be published, but I was just as anxious about this missing segment. It is riveting and tragic – my favorite in the series thus far.

 

After Roland finishes his story, he releases his four companions from their part in his quest, even though he knows they are critical to success. The retelling of his tale sharply highlights his sacrifice, and Roland will no longer risk everything and everyone for the Dark Tower.

 

My rating: 4 out of 5 stars


 

 

There is little humor in this story, but occasional comic relief. Roland is typically stoic and even severe. He espouses a mystic notion of ka: something like fate, but when his companions use ka in argument against him, Roland's only response is “kaka”.

 

…the three of them stared at him, mouths open.

Roland of Gilead had made a joke.

 

In the world that has moved on, there are vestiges of former things though sometimes a bit confused: some ancient songs are remembered, Hey Jude, for instance; Punch and Judy shows are played now as Pinch and Jilly; derelict vehicles and buildings bear meaningless words such as Chevrolet or Citgo; people remember Arthurian legend; and there are memories of the ancient religion and Jesus, relegated to legend himself.

 

On a personal note, I felt it was time to address this treatment of Christ. As a Christian, I considered abandoning this series for this near blasphemy, but after prayerful consideration, I don’t feel that is necessary. I am not inclined to defend that decision here. I only felt compelled to profess that Jesus Christ is not a legend and never will be, no matter how the world may move on.

 

Peace

 

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Monday, January 6, 2025

What's in a Name? 2025

 

This is my fifth time taking the What’s in a Name Challenge, hosted by Carolina Book Nook

 


The title of the books must contain or refer to one of the following subjects:

 

Cardinal Direction

Wanderlust

First and Last Name

Alliteration

Deity

Crime

My choices for these categories:

 

Cardinal Direction

North and South

Elizabeth Gasekell

 

Wanderlust

O Pioneers

Willa Cather

 

First and Last Name

A Prayer for Owen Meany

John Irving

 

Alliteration

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

John le Carré 

 

Deity

The Great God Pan

Arthur Machen

 

Crime

The Counterfeiters

Andre Gide

 

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Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2024

I read 25 individual works: 13 novels/novellas; 1 Sherlock Holmes short story;  2 Shakespeare comedies; 5 non-fiction works; 3 Christmas reads; and The Bible: New Living Translation.

 

 

Novels:

Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens

The Screwtape Letters by C. S. Lewis

The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean M. Auel

A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren

Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury

For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway

Hangover Square by Patrick Hamilton

The Day of the Jackal by Frederick Forsyth

The Gunslinger: The Dark Tower #1 by Stephen King

The Drawing of the Three: The Dark Tower #2 by Stephen King

The Waste Lands: The Dark Tower #3 by Stephen King

 

 

Sherlock Holmes short stories

The Crooked Man by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle:

 

 

Shakespeare comedies:

The Winter’sTale

As You Like it

 

 

Non-Fiction:

Foxe’s Christian Martyrs of the World

Cinema Speculation by Quentin Tarantino

Warrior Preachers by David A. Harrell

Withstand by Ryan Kimmel & Jonathan Delger

The Imitation of Christ by Thomas à Kempis

 

 

 

Christmas reads:

The Elves and the Shoemaker by the Brothers Grimm

A Kidnapped Santa Claus by L. Frank Baum

Noel a poem by J. R. R. Tolkien

 

 

One Reading Challenge:

What’s in a Name? 2024

 

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