Download PDF Full Dark, No Stars, by Stephen King
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Full Dark, No Stars, by Stephen King
Download PDF Full Dark, No Stars, by Stephen King
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Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best Books of the Month, November 2010: When a master of horror and heebie-jeebies like Stephen King calls his book Full Dark, No Stars, you know you’re in for a treat--that is, if your idea of a good time is spent curled up in a ball wondering why-oh-why you started reading after dark. King fans (and those who have always wanted to give him a shot) will devour this collection of campfire tales where marriages sway under the weight of pitch-black secrets, greed and guilt poison and fester, and the only thing you can count on is that "there are always worse things waiting." Full Dark, No Stars features four one-sitting yarns showcasing King at his gritty, gruesome, giddy best, so be sure to check under the bed before getting started. --Daphne Durham Amazon Exclusive: Justin Cronin, Suzanne Collins, Margaret Atwood, and T.C. Boyle Review Stephen King's Full Dark, No Stars "King is Poe's modern heir, and no writer has a richer sense of the dark rooms in the human psyche and fiction's singular power to capture them." Read more of Justin Cronin's review of "1922" "Fast-paced and beautifully plotted, 'Big Driver' pulls you into Tess's fragmented mind and holds you hostage until the story concludes." Read more of Suzanne Collins's review of "Big Driver" "It wouldn't be Stephen King if somebody's messily bleeding neck did not sprout a huge white knob. As it were." Read more of Margaret Atwood's review of "A Good Marriage" "[King's] very ordinary-looking devil has no use for human souls, which, in these enervated times, 'have become poor and transparent things.'" Read more of T.C. Boyle's review of "Fair Extension"
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From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Eerie twists of fate drive the four longish stories in King's first collection since Just After Sunset (2008). In "1922," a farmer murders his wife to retain the family land she hopes to sell, then watches his life unravel hideously as the consequences of the killing suggest a near-supernatural revenge. "Big Driver" tells of an otherwise ordinary woman who discovers her extraordinary capacity for retribution after she is raped and left for dead. "A Good Marriage" explores the aftermath of a wife's discovery of her milquetoast husband's sinister secret life, while "Fair Extension," the book's most disturbing story, follows the relationship between a man and the best friend on whom he preternaturally shifts all his bad luck and misfortune. As in Different Seasons (1982), King takes a mostly nonfantastic approach to grim themes. Now, as then, these tales show how a skilled storyteller with a good tale to tell can make unsettling fiction compulsively readable. (Nov.) (c) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Product details
Hardcover: 368 pages
Publisher: Scribner (November 9, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9781439192566
ISBN-13: 978-1439192566
ASIN: 1439192561
Product Dimensions:
6.1 x 1.3 x 9.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.5 out of 5 stars
1,577 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#184,866 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
I am not that familiar with Stephen King. My genre tastes typically flow to the realistic rather than the unreal (think crime noir rather than sci-fi). But I had heard that FULL DARK, NO STARS was set in the real world we know, dark and dangerous. So I picked it up. And it was a worthwhile choice.Four stories, from shorter to longer, comprise this volume. 1922 is a tale of that old cliché: the perfect crime gone wrong. In this case, what goes wrong, however, is not some flaw in the execution of the crime itself, but in underestimating the emotional and psychological toll on the perpetrators. Big Driver is also from that straight cliché book: the revenge tale. But this one has, what I considered at least, to be a very interesting twist about how the damsel got into distress in the first place. Fair Extension, the shortest story here, is also the one with a supernatural feel to it. Though I have to admit, I did not mind it as much as I thought. In fact, it was tight, fast and delivered a nice sucker punch. The book ends with A Good Marriage, a fictitious tale based on an unfortunately all too true event of the past decade.I can understand why King is so successful. The stories display a strong imagination, such that even the above-mentioned clichés take on a fresh scent. The man knows how to paint a scene and wrap the reader around in it.Like a number of authors, however, King is also weak on dialogue. People do not really speak the way the characters here do, and it was an unfortunate distraction. Also, my peeve is that characters’ inner voices tend to be externalized too much, such as in Big Driver with its talking GPS. A person’s inner voice, softly whispering dark possibilities into one’s ear, strikes me as a more effective way to build the suspense.But hey, I am not the one selling a billion books. King is, and it shows.
Each of these novellas delivers a hard, tough and bleak perspective on humanity. Yes, we find characters with whom we can sympathise, but these have been brought into bad places by others whose terrible deeds wreak havoc. There is plenty of violence, some of it sexual, and each story is tense and taut. Gripping is an understatement."The souls of humans have become poor and transparent things" says the Devil in Fair Extension, the least violent but for me, the most bleak of the tales. These words could serve as an epigraph to the collection. It is visceral, disturbing and although King says in the Afterword that he doesn't want to make readers think as they read, yet throughout Full Dark, No Stars I was challenged intellectually as well as emotionally. What would I do in, or following, the situations depicted here? How do we grapple with the age old problem of evil? The concept of revenge is another age old philosophical and literary concern, wrenched open again for our consideration by Stephen King.If you are a King fan you'll have this book already. If you are an occasional reader of his work, then I urge you to grab a copy asap. It ranks with his best.
4 stories, all quick reads. The first is very much a character study that really goes no place in particular. It is sad and a touch haunting but did not strike me as a must experience story. The second was a fun read. It had more of the kind of King vibe that I enjoy in this one. The start was good not great, the middle (short story so not much of one) was ok. It had a slight private eye feel to it. And of course the end. Small twist but overall a let down. Sometimes I just want the victims to be as brutal as the people that attack them. The third story really was a WTH did I just read moment for me. Very dark very disturbing but at the same time I could see people feeling the same way as the antagonist did in this particular story. The final story was probably my favorite and could have made for a great 300 page book with some side characters and some POV from the husband. But alas it's a short story so we get what's offered. If you enjoyed Gone Girl, the movie ( never read the book ðŸ™) then this story is fantastic. Good suspense, great mystery. And for once King gave me an ending that I could live with and not feel cheated. Though he did drag it out a bit for no apparent reason. Overall 1 great & 3 ho hum stories was what I came out with. Up to you to decide if you can live with that figure & who knows maybe you enjoy a different part/style of Kings writing than I do.
Full dark? No kidding, man. These are some of the darkest stories I've read in a very long time. I got a lot of insight into these stories after I finished them and read the commentary in the back of the book by Stephen King. He basically said these stories are about ordinary people faced with extraordinary circumstances. I enjoy observing human behavior and these stories certainly probe into how these ordinary people deal with their extraordinary circumstances. One story is about a man who's fed up with his wife, gets his son to help him kill her, and then how their lives fall apart. Another story is about a man who meets someone who can cure his cancer, but only by shifting his misery to someone else. Then a third story is about a woman who gets raped under some pretty predatory circumstances and the revenge she extracts. And the last story is about a woman who is in a stable marriage with a man she accidentally discovers is a serial killer and how she deals with that realization. It's all very dark, and it's all about ordinary people dealing with extraordinary circumstances. If you're a Stephen King fan, don't let this gem pass you by.
I really enjoyed this collection of short stories by Stephen King; the stories are enjoyable in and of themselves, but together make a nice grouping. Without giving away the plotlines, let me just say that, while "A Good marriage" was terrific, "Big Driver" was my favorite - and not because it shows a woman taking revenge in a big way (though she does) - it was more that the character was an ordinary woman before the events of the story happened to her, and I can honestly see myself behaving the same way if I were in her place. Well worth the price, and I will undoubtedly read these again.
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