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Authors: Hans-Ake Lilja

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Earlier, King said that he would retire after
The Dark Tower VII
(something he has now taken back) and that (and the fact that parts of
The Dark Tower VII
are really sad) made the experience of reading the book quite sad. You didn’t want it to end.  

Well, it did end. And even though it didn’t put an end to King’s career, it did (at least, according to King) put an end to
The Dark Tower
saga. But, then again, you can never know with King. I wouldn’t bet that this is the last we have heard about the characters or the Dark Tower itself…  

 

Lilja’s final words about
The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower (audio)
 

I’m going to say just about the same thing I said when I reviewed the book. If you haven’t read it already you should listen to it. This is one of King’s best books and it would be a pity to miss out on it. But, before you listen to this one, you should listen to parts one through six if you haven’t already, and that’s an order! 

 

**** 

 

The Road to The Dark Tower
 

Posted: December 21, 2004  

 

I have just finished
The Road to The Dark Tower: Exploring Stephen King’s Magnum Opus
, or as I want to call it,
The Dark Tower 8
. Let me explain. 

The Road to The Dark Tower
is not a continuation to the seven books King has written, but it’s still the thing to read after you have finished
The Dark Tower 7
. Bev Vincent has done a tremendous job in reading all seven books, and all books and short stories that are connected to
The Dark Tower
series, and he has then put all the information in this book. First, there’s a summary of all seven books; no, summary isn’t the right word for it. A summary is something that you can find on the back of a book. What we get here is so much more. Bev has provided his own thoughts and connections as well as other important things he noticed while reading the books. For some of it, you think, “Yeah, I saw that,” while the rest you are totally clueless of until he spells them out. King himself has commented on the book with these words: “Opens doors to Roland’s world that not even I knew existed,” and it really can’t be said better!  

But there’s more. As I mentioned earlier, Bev has looked at all connections to other books by King. (Each of the books with connections has its own chapter in the book, and the connections are explained and put in perspective.) Some are more vague than others though.  

All of the main characters are documented extremely well in another chapter where we get all of the information we could possibly need and more.  

There is also a timeline for both the fictional world and real world connected to
The Dark Tower
. In the timeline for the real world, we get the history of everything that is connected to
The Dark Tower
—when King wrote what, when it was published and so on. In the fictional timeline, we get the history of Roland’s ka-tet and all the events that took place during the saga listed in chronological order.  

Along with other information, we also get a Mid-World glossary where a lot of strange words are explained as well as a list of important websites. I was very pleased to see my own listed there.  

All in all,
The Road to The Dark Tower
has everything you could possibly need to know about
The Dark Tower
series. It’s very similar to Robin Furth’s book,
The Dark Tower Concordance
, with the difference that where Robin’s book is more like a dictionary, Bev’s book is more like a discussion (or a friendly talk) with the reader. It’s a very easy and relaxed read.  

 

Lilja’s final words about
The Road to The Dark Tower
 

So, as you might have guessed by my alternative title to the book at the beginning of the review, I think that
The Road to The Dark Tower
is a book that you have to read after you have finished the seven books in the series. But please don’t read it before you have finished all seven parts. It’s crawling with spoilers.  

If you loved the series you’ll find some new connections that you didn’t know about (I can promise you that you didn’t catch all that Bev did), and if you didn’t like the series I bet you’ll appreciate it more after you have gotten a little inside information about the story.  

There is only one thing that I didn’t like about
The Road to The Dark Tower
, and that’s the endnotes. They are placed at the end of each chapter, which results in a lot of flipping back and forth. If I had been able to decide where they went, I would have used footnotes at the bottom of each page.  

OK, I’m done. Go out and get the book if you haven’t already! 

 

**** 

 

The Dark Tower – Concordance, Volume 2
 

Posted: April 9, 2005  

 

Volume two of
The Dark Tower Concordance
is finally out. It was supposed to be out back in November of last year, but for some reason it was delayed and not released until now. I don’t know why, but I do know it was worth the wait. It’s almost twice as big as volume one and has an introduction by the author, Robin Furth. 

One of the things I wondered about before it was released was how the information about the different characters would be displayed. I thought volume two would only cover the last three books, but it actually has information about what happened to the characters during the first four books—it’s like a shorter summary of the first four books and then more in-depth information regarding the last three. While this setup works, it won’t be easy if they get the idea to put both volumes in one book.  

Otherwise, volume two contains much of the same as volume one…but, for the last three books and together with volume one, they cover everything you need to know about
The Dark Tower
series very well. Remember, though, that this isn’t a book you read from cover-to-cover (if you want a book like that, check out Bev Vincent’s
The Road to The Dark Tower
). This is the kind of book you take out to look things up while you read the books or when you have a discussion about the series with a friend.  

This one also has something called Reading Group Guides for all seven volumes. Personally, I didn’t have a clue as to what that meant before I looked it up in the book. Let me tell you what they are if you don’t know either. They’re a bunch of questions about each book that you can talk about when you get together with other fans. They’re a way to get a reading group discussion going. Nice!  

Like volume one, it also has some maps, and even though they cover most of the important places, I think there could be more. Still, though, it’s nice to see how things stick together.  

 

Lilja’s final words about
The Dark Tower – Concordance, Volume 2
 

If you have volume one and think that it’s a good book you should definitely get volume two as well. You will get what you expect with no surprises. (Not that it’s something I wanted or expected, but it gives you a feeling of what kind of book it is.) 

 

**** 

 

The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
 

Posted: June 21, 2005  

 

The Good, The Bad And The Ugly: Secondary Characters In The Dark Tower Series
by Bev Vincent is a signed limited edition chapbook featuring material which does
not
appear in Bev Vincent’s book,
The Road to The Dark Tower
. It was limited to five hundred copies which you could only get through buying books from Cemetery Dance. My guess is that it’s now sold out. 

In it we get eight chapters that were originally cut from
The Road to The Dark Tower
before it was released. In the eight chapters we get to know more about five good, two bad and one ugly guys. The good ones are Calvin Tower (Toren), Aaron Deepnau, John Cullum, Irene Tassenbaum and Ted (Theodore) Stevens Brautigan; the bad ones are Enrico Balazar and Jack Mort; and last, but not least, the ugly—Jack Andolini.  

As in
The Road to The Dark Tower
we get all of the information we need about these characters, and it’s a nice but short read at thirty pages. They are all important characters in
The Dark Tower
saga and it’s pretty sad that these chapters aren’t in
The Road to The Dark Tower
. Maybe they will be included in the paperback if/when that’s released. We can only hope. The style of these chapters is the same as that in
The Road to The Dark Tower
, so it shouldn’t be a problem to incorporate them. After all, they were ones cut from that exact book.  

The book is pretty simple for a limited—it’s more like a folder than a book, actually, but it doesn’t matter that much. It’s actually rather fitting. It feels like the right way to publish this book.  

 

Lilja’s final words about
The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
 

Everyone who enjoyed Bev’s book,
The Road to The Dark Tower
, and King’s
Dark Tower
saga will enjoy this one as well…if they can get it, that is. 

 

**** 

 

The Gunslinger Born 1
 

Posted: February 5, 2007  

 

I have just put down the first issue of
The Gunslinger Born
and I was blown away by it. The first thing that hits you is how good the illustrations are! In fact, they are more than just good—they are fantastic. Jae Lee and Richard Isanove have done a marvelous job with them. It’s just as good as I was hoping for…if not better. The drawing and the coloring are superb! My favorite character is Cort. He is so powerfully drawn that he almost jumps right out of the pages and grabs you by the throat. 

I’m also very pleased with Peter David’s scripting. I feel that he has really captured the spirit of King’s saga in the comic. It’s the same language as in the books and it fits the images very well. 

The first issue gives us some background. It’s adapted from King’s book and shows how Roland becomes a gunslinger. The comic is very true to the book and it really doesn’t give you any ideas on how the team (Robin Furth, Peter David, Jae Lee and Richard Isanove) will do when it comes time to make stories that aren’t a direct adaptation from King’s books. If they do it as well as when they adapted this, there won’t be a problem, though, and we will all be very happy. I personally have faith in them and think they will pull it off…but that still remains to be seen. 

The only thing that throws me off a bit is the section called “The Sacred Geography of Mid-World.” I thought those parts would be more like reading from a history book. Now they are told
like
a story
in
the story and I’m not sure that is the best way to do it. I feel that there might be too much story and too few facts about the issue at hand when it’s done that way.  

It’s not that I don’t enjoy it. It’s very well-written (by Robin Furth) and it explains what it’s supposed to explain…It’s just that I always saw it as pieces from a history book. I think, however, that I’ll get used to this way of doing it once I get to read more of it. It’s just not the way I imagined it would be…which doesn’t automatically mean it’s not good, I assure you. I’ll get back on this subject in my review of issue 2. 

After I finished issue 1, I really wanted more and felt it was way too short—the same I felt after finishing each of King’s seven books—and I think that might be a problem when it comes to non-King fans who read this first issue. Let’s face it,
The Dark Tower
is a story that takes some time getting into, and if you don’t know King’s books I’m not sure this first issue is going to do it for you. I hope it will, but I’m not sure… 

Besides the thirty-one pages that the comic itself takes up, this first issue also includes a one-page letter from the series editor, Ralph Macchio, a map over Barony of New Canaan, six pages of “The Sacred Geography of Mid-World” and four pages of previews for issue 2. 

In the preview for next issue it’s hinted that we’ll get to see more of the Big Coffin Hunters, and that’s something I personally look forward to a lot; that, and getting the chance to meet Susan…Roland’s true love.  

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