LooK iTz Jinjo said:
OP in future please put more thought into your threads. I think I've heard of the Dark Tower... None of the rest look familiar at all.
I disagree. If you've read the book(s), then that line should ring through & you'll know EXACTLY what the thread is about. It's a bit like someone titling a thread "Don't Panic!" for a Hitchiker's guide to the Galaxy related thread.
My experience of the series was a bit of a love/hate thing.
I read the Gunslinger when it first appeared in the UK back in 1984, and enjoyed it. I then had to wait on average 5-6 years for the next four books in the series. By that time Wolves of the Calla came out, I was 33 and my reading tastes changed, but I kinda stuck with it despite worrying about what Stephen King was playing at.
The next year, the final two books came out. I really felt that the story had taken a turn for the worse. It all felt rushed, predictable, and seemed to pish all over the fact that I had spent 2/3rds of my life waiting for the moment when I would finally read the conclusion. I know many life-long fans felt the same.
It's like Stephen King just thought "Fuck it! Let's put loads of references to my other books in, even include myself & my accident in there, kill off some of the popular characters and end the whole thing in the easiest, most formulaic & unsatisfying way possible! I just want rid of it!"
I loved the Wastelands, where the ka-tet started on the path of the beam. There were some fantastic moments there, like the rescue of Jake from the monster house, the rose, and the riddles of Blaine. It was a killer of a cliffhanger, and left me waiting 7 years for the resolution.
Wizard & Glass was also great. It was, however, a bit of a standalone story that sort of just stuck any progress for the journey.
After that, Wolves of the Calla pandered to the wishes of the fans by bringing Father Callahan in from Salems Lot, and the first bits of chucking in a Stephen King book within a Stephen King book made me feel a bit worried that King was beginning to lose the plot...literally.
The next two books in the series were so bad, I felt really cheated. They had some absolutely great moments in there, but the overall plot was ruined. 3 Kings? The world Trade Centre? The spider-thing from 'IT' (or one just like it) being born for no reason?
And finally, the half-baked end that rendered all the build-up of Roland's past life in Gilead completely worthless. If King had to do something, why not reward the patient reader with a proper resolution. I don't buy into the fact that King makes an apology within the very novel that he's writing about the end, and that there is no alternative ending. There are plenty. Even Roland dying, having defeated the crimson king, would have been a better ending. - No. My opinion is that the last books of the Dark Tower were rushed, and badly thought out, written by a man who was bored with the whole thing, and just wanted to get rid of it.