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Saturday, 1 November 2014
Doctor Sleep; Does it shine...?
Eventually he rocks up in New Hampshire, where, again eventually, he finds himself working as an orderly in a hospice,
using his psychic talents to comfort the residents in their passing. While here,
he connects up psychically with a young girl, Abra Stone, a kid who, like Dan,
has grown up with the shining talent, although hers is especially powerful.
Over time, Abra becomes aware of a thread of missing children, each with some
shining of their own, and is led to the reason why; The True Knot is a
long-lived band of wrinklies who move around America in motorhomes and
caravans, tracking and killing psychic kids, to inhale their ‘steam’. And now,
Abra realises, as they slowly weaken due to disease, they have their sights set
on her, the biggest steamhead they have ever known. Naturally, it’s up to her,
Abra, and her new friend Dan Torrance, to deal with this band of psychic vampires...
Pretty good
plot, and the characters of Dan and Abra are well drawn and interesting to
read. However, most of the other characters didn’t seem as real to me, but just
supporting characters. Especially disappointing here was the treatment of Rose
the Hat, the leader of the True Knot and the main ‘Big Bad’ here; she came
across as a bit comedic, a bit ridiculous, rather than scary. The other bad
guys, the rest of the Knot, were mostly interchangeable, with little of King’s
usually-excellent character work, instead just giving easy names like Crow
Daddy, Barry the Chink, Grampa Flick etc... but it wasn’t just the bad guys; I
had trouble with most of the supporting characters here.
The
narrative itself was strange. Sometimes in a book, people talk about ‘the
boring middle bit’, but with DOCTOR SLEEP, I found the middle bit to be about
the best, with the plot strands growing together and Abra Stone’s character
being revealed. The beginning [after a few good pages of wrap-up from The Shining] seemed to flounder and took
a while to get going, and then the ending felt like a damb squib; I found the
last 50 pages or so a bit of a [sometimes confusing] slog to a very weak climax,
and found myself closing the book thinking ‘Meh!’
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