Ratings37
Average rating3.2
Barton Dawes’ unremarkable but comfortable existence suddenly takes a turn for the worst. Highway construction puts him out of work and simultaneously forces him out of his home. Dawes isn’t the sort of man who will take an insult of this magnitude lying down. His single-minded determination to fight the inevitable course of progress drives his wife and friends away while he tries to face down the uncaring bureaucracy that has destroyed his once comfortable life.
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King said it's the weakest novel in The Bachman Books collection so I was dreading what abomination it could be if The Long Walk was already one star material. But it was not so. Written between Salem's Lot and The Shining it's sort of a writing exercise that would be perfected in the latter book.
While not outstanding I was intrigued almost all the way through though the ending has a bit smaller bang than I hoped for. I couldn't even bring myself to finish last ten pages late at night, finished them in the morning instead. Theme of losing sanity is among my favorites (it's why I love Philip K. Dick and The Shining) so this single thing kept me going with this novel. Not as good as The Running Man but far better than The Long Walk. It had structure, it had a story, it had character motivation. I can't say the same about The Long Walk.
I went into this book blind, and had to look up spoilers because the content was so heavy. Not in the sense of gore or spookiness, but the depiction of grief and depression, ending in EXTRA SPOILER!! suicide by explosives END SPOILER was just too much for me.
This is the third Bachman Book that I've read as part of The Grand Stephen King Experiment on TannerWillbanks.com. It is, however, the first one that I have truly enjoyed. It is a well-written story about a man losing touch with reality and the links that somebody will go to when they reach rock bottom.