Monday, February 1, 2016

Under the Dome by Stephen King


1074 pages
Trade Paperback
Fiction
2009

I continue with my Stephen King obsession with a pick from his more recent efforts. I think from the outside I had thought King had jumped the shark a bit and was putting out books that seemed to be rehashes of his older books. I felt it was only fair to give him a chance on some of his newer stuff and so far I have been impressed. 

We start in a small town called Chester's Mill. A new pilot is learning to fly when the plane suddenly strikes an invisible barrier. Soon a few cars run into a barrier that seems to be like a huge invisible wall. It doesn't take people to long to figure out that the barrier completely surrounds the town like an enormous dome. 

The book is a thousand pages and there is a lot of development of characters and there relationships. The efforts of the American government to "help" free the people and the downfall of the social norms. We follow three main Characters and a host of others. Big Jim Rennie is the local politician trying to make his move in "his" town before the outsiders can fix it. Julia Shumway is the local newspaper editor who is trying to expose the political corruption that is vying for power and Dale Barbara. A discharged Captain that is the Army's choice to take over leadership within the Dome. The town keeps things moving along mostly in a normal state, but soon the local children start have seizures and seeing visions of the future. A small group of teenagers appoint themselves the mission of finding the source that is creating the dome and the local Police force starts adding rookies to its ranks to help 'in this time of crisis".

I really got sucked into the book and read the over 1,000 pages in just a few weeks. King made the townspeople very believable except to a certain degree, Big Jim Rennie. It doesn't take to long to see that he is the Bad Guy. It seems at times he goes out of his way to be the bad guy when it really isn't necessary. 

Overall, it is story of town being trapped with itself and how quickly that starts to fall apart.

3 Emotional/Intellectual - Many of the characters on the "good" side are easy to care about and come off as realistic.

4 Style/Readability - King sells millions of books for a reason. He takes fantastic elements and puts them in real situations. He has great aptitude for foreshadowing, creating a problem, adding additional problems, solving earlier ones and then continuing the story. You don't want to stop reading to see what happens next, but then another conflict arises that you want to see solved as well.

3 Long Term Impact - King will surely be read for a hundred years, but this may not be as popular as other earlier books of his, but honestly it still deserves recognition.

10 out of 13. Any King fan should give it a try. I wouldn't suggest it as a first book for him, but I don't think it would be a bad place to start if you did.


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