|
Under the Dome: A Novel | 
| Author: Stephen King Publisher: Scribner
List Price: $35.00 Buy Used: $5.45 as of 7/30/2010 07:34 PDT details
Seller: bookmasteraz Rating: 940 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 1074 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.6 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 2.7
ISBN: 1439148503 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9781439148501
Publication Date: November 10, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tell A Friend
| |
| Features:
| • | ISBN13: 9781439148501 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Gift quality. Unable to ship to APO and FPO at this time.
Amazon.com Review Amazon Exclusive: Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan Reviews Under the Dome
Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan share their enthusiasm for Stephen King's thriller, Under the Dome. This pair of reviewers knows a thing or two about the art of crafting a great thriller. Del Toro is the Oscar-nominated director of international blockbuster films, including Pan's Labyrinth and Hellboy. Hogan is the author of several acclaimed novels, including The Standoff and Prince of Thieves, which won the International Association of Crime Writer's Dashiell Hammett Award in 2005. The two recently collaborated to write the bestselling horror novel, The Strain, the first of a proposed trilogy. Read their exclusive Amazon guest review of Under the Dome: The first thing readers might find scary about Stephen King's Under The Dome is its length. The second is the elaborate town map and list of characters at the front of the book (including "Dogs of Note"), which sometimes portends, you know, heavy lifting. Don't you believe it. Breathless pacing and effortless characterization are the hallmarks of King's best books, and here the writing is immersive, the suspense unrelenting. The pages turn so fast that your hand--or Kindle-clicking thumb--will barely be able to keep up. You Are Here. Nobody yarns a “What if?” like Stephen King. Nobody. The implausibility of a dome sealing off an entire city--a motif seen before in pulp magazines and on comic book covers--is given the most elaborate real-life alibi by crafting details, observations, and insights that make us nod silently while we read. Promotional materials reference The Stand in comparison, but we liken Under The Dome more to King's excellent novella, The Mist: another locked-door situation on an epic scale, a tour-de-force in which external stressors bake off the civility of a small town full of dark secrets, exposing souls both very good...and very, very bad. Yes, "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street," but there is so much more this time. The expansion of King’s diorama does not simply take a one-street fable and turn it into a town, but finds new life for old archetypes, making them morally complex and attuned to our world today. It makes them relevant and affecting once again. And the beauty of it all is that the final lesson, the great insight that is gained at the end of this draining journey, is not a righteous 1950’s sermon but an incredibly moving and simple truth. A nugget of wisdom you'll be using as soon as you turn the last page. This Is Now. Along the way, you get bravura writing, especially featuring the town kids, and a delicious death aria involving one of the most nefarious characters--who dies alone, but not really--as well as a few laugh-out-loud moments, and a cameo (of sorts) by none other than Jack Reacher. Indeed--whether during a much-needed comfort break, or a therapeutic hand-flexing--you may find yourself wondering, "Is this a horror novel? Or is it a thriller?" The answer, of course, is: Yes, yes, yes. "...the blood hits the wall like it always hits the wall." It seems impossible that, as he enters his sixth decade of publishing, the dean of dark fiction could add to his vast readership. But that is precisely what will happen...when the Dome drops. Now Go Read It. --Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan The Story Behind the Cover Click on image to enlarge The jacket concept for Under the Dome originated as an ambitious idea from the mind of Stephen King. The artwork is a combination of photographs, illustration and 3-D rendering. This is a departure from the direction of King's most recent illustrated covers.
In order to achieve the arresting image for this jacket, Scribner art director Rex Bonomelli had to seek out artists who could do a convincing job of creating a realistic portrayal of the town of Chester's Mill, the setting of the novel. Bonomelli found the perfect team of digital artists, based in South America and New York, whose cutting edge work had previously been devoted to advertisement campaigns. This was their first book jacket and an exciting venture for them. "They are used to working with the demands of corporate clients," says Bonomelli. "We gave them freedom and are thrilled with what they came up with."
The CGI (computer generated imagery) enhanced image looks more like something made for the big screen than for the page and is sure to make a lasting impact on King fans.
Meet the Characters Dale Barbara Barbie, a drifter, ex-army, walks with a burden of guilt from the time he spent in Iraq. Working as a short-order cook at Sweetbriar Rose is the closest thing he’s had to a family life. When his old commander, Colonel Cox, calls from outside, Barbie's burden becomes the town itself.
Julia Shumway The attractive Editor and Publisher of the local town newspaper, The Chester's Mill Democrat, Julia is self-assured and Republican to the core, but she is drawn to Barbie and discovers, when it matters most, that her most vulnerable moment might be her most liberating.
Jim Rennie, Sr. "Big Jim." A used car dealer with a fierce smile and no warmth, he'd given his heart to Jesus at age sixteen and had little left for his customers, his neighbors, or his dying wife and deteriorating son. The town's Second Selectman, he’s used to having things his way. He walks like a man who has spent his life kicking ass.
Joseph McClatchey Scarecrow Joe, a 13-year-old also known as "King of the Geeks" and "Skeletor, a bona fide brain whose backpack bears the legend "fight the powers that be." He’s smarter than anyone, and proves it in a crisis.
| Chester's Mill, Maine (click on image to enlarge) |
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 940
A Killer of a Book July 30, 2010 Temi M (Seattle USA) Stephen King's Under the Dome is a killer of a book at 1074 pages. When I started it, I thought it was one for about two weeks or so and that I might have to read it alongside another book. That did not happen. I read it like I used to read in my secondary school days when I could finish an M&B novel in 2 hours. I finished it in four days. The suspense is unyielding and will have you flipping the pages anxiously for the next event.
The town of Chester's Mill, Maine, is a pretty typical-seeming small American town with a popular song that says "Everyone supports the team". This means that its 2,000 or so residents are good, honest people who genuinely care for each other and for their town. However, when a mysterious and invisible force field materializes out of nowhere, and cuts the town completely off from the rest of the world, things deteriorate quickly. If you've read Stephen King you'll know a little of what to expect. You'll still be surprised though at the depth of human wickedness.
There is a message for everyone. This may be a novel, you know, fiction, but at its core is an allegory of what is happening today in the world. Who or where you are determines the meaning you'll read into it. In the villain, a confused character with a god-complex, we see how power corrupts and what the end of absolute corrupted power could be. There is also that aphorism from our great Wole Soyinka; "The man dies who keeps quiet in the face of tyranny" in those few citizens who stand against him. Other themes in the book include climate change, the moral standing of the police and military to maintain order and wage wars, among others. No matter the themes and messages you take from this book, what you'll certainly get is a rollicking if fearful(the death count is atrocious) read.
A Heart to Mend
Political statements took me out of the story July 28, 2010 corky 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I think King is a great story-teller and I couldn't put this down for about 700 pages. He kept taking me out of the story, however, with his political bias....The Evil Republican Villain has a picture of himself shaking hands with Sarah Palin...and has even been know to watch...wait for it...Fox News. It was just so obvious, exaggerated and ridiculous that it made me lose all respect for his story-telling abilities. I want to be in the story, not pulled out of it by King's love for CNN and Wolf Blitzer. I wish I had all those hours back, and I won't read King again.
King channeling Dickens July 28, 2010 Steve M (Irvine, CA USA) This book has everything SK constant readers expect in his "big" novels: small stories stitched together into larger stories that quietly turn into epic stories. The only other author I can think of who did this so well for so long and so successfully was Charles Dickens. Someone needs to do a comparative treatise on the similarity between the authors' work. Quick, compare and contrast Pip's story in Great Expectations to Harold's in The Stand!
Like many others, I've been reading SK books since the mid-seventies and the quality continues to impress me. There were elements I loved (ex. the dome, the drug lab and the numerous pivotal points it plays in the story, the abrupt uses of violence by the "bad" guys who were quicker to recognize the opportunities the dome created) and elements I absolutely hated (ex. the source of the dome, Junior's and Senior's fates, the precognitive flashes various characters have without point or purpose).
More than anything, I loved how this story kept me guessing and speculating about the characters and their plight. Even when I was annoyed about certain developments, I was surprised that I CARED what happened. That's the real reason SK's constant readers are legion.
Great Read July 27, 2010 Dozer 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I really enjoyed this book though the last quarter of it seemed to drag a little. I thought the ending was great and the writing and use of characters was fantastic. I highly recommend it to someone that like's Stephen King Novels or needs a good wrist workout (1200 pages).
Go and read Gone, then we'll talk July 27, 2010 Stacey L. Vanhouten (Lawrence, KS United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Last summer, I read Gone, a young adult novel and was thrilled with the premise - a town trapped under a dome and what happens after that. Then in the winter, along comes this novel, also about a town trapped under a dome and I was struck by how similar this was to Gone. I know King says that he started this book 26 years ago, but put it away. but when another book is published with the same theme, he decides to finish his. Hmmmm . . .
Showing reviews 1-5 of 940
|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |