Was it a good book? A bad book? Or somewhere in between? What did you think of the ending?
Was it a good book? A bad book? Or somewhere in between? What did you think of the ending?
It definitely wasn't that simplistic. It wasn't emphasised that Flagg's people were irreligious, or that the people in Boulder rejected technology.It's been probably 25 years or more since I read it, so I don't recall many details, but I do recall that I didn't like it much. As I recall, it was simplistic good vs evil stuff with the good guys being nice religious people who like old-fashioned ways and the bad guys being people who aren't religious and like technology. Guess I would have been on the wrong side in that one.
I checked out descriptions of those books on Wiki and they sound pretty interesting. I might check them outTry A Canticle For Liebowitz, Alas Babylon or Earth Abides to see how to end the world correctly. IMO.
That's exactly what I've felt. He got bored, didn't know how to finish the book and just nuked half of the characters ...King very obviously got tired of telling the tale about 2/3-3/4 of the way in.
It definitely wasn't that simplistic. It wasn't emphasised that Flagg's people were irreligious, or that the people in Boulder rejected technology.It's been probably 25 years or more since I read it, so I don't recall many details, but I do recall that I didn't like it much. As I recall, it was simplistic good vs evil stuff with the good guys being nice religious people who like old-fashioned ways and the bad guys being people who aren't religious and like technology. Guess I would have been on the wrong side in that one.
In that sense, I wonder about the Cold War influence here. You've got two groups of people who have been driven to such enmity that the only solution is one wiping out the other, and facing each other down across the Rockies (Berlin Wall?). They have no choice in whether they even want this conflict--that is in the hands of higher entities (the nation), which places victory above common humanity; nor can they really choose what side they want to be on, since that is determined by birth (if not before), while the psychic control Flagg and God execise over their respective followers stands in for the ideological, propagandistic nature of the conflict. One does apperceive that one side is better than the other (because one is the 'Free Zone', the other a totalitarian technocracy), but the controlling entities on both sides are just as callous in their disregard of human life, each as willing to sacrifice their own people in the name of the ideological pissing contest being waged between them. And, of course, it begins with an incident of germ warfare part of the American/Soviet arms race and ends with a nuclear explosion, using the arsenal of that conflict.
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
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