At first, it sounded like a great idea. The master storyteller of weirdness, Stephen King, writing a novel based on one of the weirdest conditions a person can have
– insomnia. However, the result is
disappointing. Only long-time Stephen
King fans familiar with his Dark
Tower series will find
any worthwhile bedtime reading with Insomnia (Viking Press; 1994.)
The Good
A bad book by Stephen King is still a much reader read than
a good book by most other pop fiction writers.
Characters are well-drawn to the point where you do not need to be told
who is talking in order to know who is talking.
The fictional town of Derry, Maine is also familiar territory
for King fans and for anyone who has lived in a small suburb. The dogs in the book even become fully
detailed characters in their own right.
Perhaps the best thing about Insomnia is that it does
highlight the problems of domestic abuse without ramming it down the reader’s
throat. Although other issues like
abortion, putting parents in old-age homes and insomnia are mentioned, but with
as much finesse as King can do on the subject of abuse. This is a major theme in King’s entire body
of work, especially in Dolores Claiborne (1993) and Rose Madder (1995)
where both protagonists are abused women.
As always, King shows that not only supernatural creatures are monsters.
The Bad
Insomnia is mostly made up of some good chunks stuck
together with long expository passages.
Mainly, it’s a minor book in the Dark Towerseries, even though it was never marketed as part of the series. However, if the reader is not familiar with
the Dark Tower series, then a lot of small,
seemingly out of place details in Insomnia is going to be baffling.
The main struggle in the book between good human verses bad
Otherworld Creature gets far too long and complicated for even a King fan like
yours truly. When the main reason why
our protagonists have insomnia is revealed, it’s an anticlimax. The answer is just not satisfying enough.
The Ugly
But the weirdest image is that of a two-person airplane is flown into a building here a major speech is being held and many are killed. Remember, this book was published in 1994, which, on reflection, makes that particular scene even more bone-chilling. Of course, King probably got the idea from when a B-25 bomber crashed into the Empire State Building in 1945.
Stephen King in 2007 by Pinguino image from Wikipedia
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