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The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower, Book 2)

The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower, Book 2)

The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower, Book 2)

The Man in Black is dead, and Roland is about to be hurled into 20th-century America, occupying the mind of a man running cocaine on the New York/Bermuda shuttle. A brilliant work of dark fantasy inspired by Browning's romantic poem, "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came".

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #14097 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-08
  • Released on: 2003-08-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 480 pages



  • Editorial Reviews

    From Publishers Weekly
    Elaborating at great length on Robert Browning's cryptic narrative poem "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came," the second volume of King's post-Armageddon epic fantasy presents the equally enigmatic quest of Roland, the world's last gunslinger, who moves through an apocalyptic wasteland toward the Dark Tower, "the linchpin that holds all of existence together." Although these minor but revealing books (which King began while still in college) are full of such adolescent portentousness, this is livelier than the first. Roland enters three lives in the alternate world of New York City: junkie and drug runner Eddie Dean, schizophrenic heiress Odetta Holmes and serial murder Jack Mort. If King tells us too little about Roland, he gives us too much about these misfits who are variously healed or punished exactly as expected. Typically, King is much better at the minutiae and sensations of a specific physical world, and several such bravura sequences (from an attack by mutant lobsters to a gun store robbery) are standouts amid the characteristic headlong storytelling. BOMC alternate.
    Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

    Review
    King is a master at creating living, breathing, believable characters. -- Baltimore Sun

    This quest is one of King's best...communicates on a genuine, human level...but rich in symbolism and allegory. -- Columbus Dispatch

    Review
    King is a master at creating living, breathing, believable characters. (Baltimore Sun) This quest is one of King's best...communicates on a genuine, human level...but rich in symbolism and allegory. (Columbus Dispatch)


    Customer Reviews

    Gargantuan improvement over the first one4
    Well, I really expected these books to improve as they went along, but I didn't expect such a vast improvement so quickly! Basically, King immediately gets it going with everything the story needed: Roland gets a handicap; other, more fully developed and motivationally complicated characters are introduced; there's some more action this time with a stronger sense of danger; and he really develops the world more. Of course, I'm a little disappointed by how much it involves "the real world" or "our world", but nonetheless, a true spark has finally been ignited.

    True, the first book was more like a prelude, introducing the epic, archetypical aspect of the story. It really isn't a story on its own, it's just the beginning of the first act, leading up to the call to adventure. But that still remains my problem with it: not stand alone at all, it might as well have been a single chapter in this second book. It would have worked that way, too, with some good editing.

    But never mind that, now we've got THIS! Lobstrosities, dope-fiends, schizophrenics, and serial killers! Danger, adventure, suspense, and intrigue! A true beginning to what could now, in my changed opinion, become quite the delightful epic adventure.

    I do think that a lot of King's writing in this and the last book is simple enough that, had he cut out the focus on genitalia and maybe, maybe some of the darker aspects of this book (though not that necessarily), this would make a great teen series. In movie terms, it's a rated R movie that could have easily been made PG-13 with some minor choices. I don't know if that really matters, it just strikes me that this series reminds me more of the adventure fantasy of my pre-teen years than as adult-oriented fiction. But hey, I'm not the one who wrote it, so who am I to say who it's for? King makes quite clear it's basically just for him.

    --PolarisDiB

    Where The Dark Tower Series Really Takes Off5
    After being disappointed by the first Dark Tower book, "The Gunslinger", I was hopeful that the second installment would entertain me to a much higher tree. Jackpot!

    Whereas "Gunslinger" had a little too much storytelling and a little too little explanation, "The Drawing of the Three" takes a bit of a step back to help explain exactly what type of world Roland is living in.

    For a quick summary of the text (without spoiling anything!), Roland finds out that doors exist between his world and other worlds...doors that he can enter. By entering those doors (as prophesized by the Man in Black in "Gunslinger"), Roland draws some of the companions that will help him on his quest to find the Dark Tower itself. First, Roland meets Eddie Dean, a heroin junkie, who has trouble trusting this gunslinger from another world (imagine that!). Roland also becomes acquainted with Odetta Holmes/Detta Walker, a multiple-personality woman whom Roland must make whole again if she is to help him on his quest. Finally, Roland again comes face to face with another incarnation of the Man in Black, which he must destroy if one world will ever be stable again.

    The real entertaining portion of these books, however, is seeing how each character interacts with each other. Roland is completely lost (yet remarkably savvy) in Eddie and Odetta/Detta's world, while they have a difficult time coming to grips over where he is from. Of course, this being Stephen King, there is plenty of action to keep the story moving along, and the reader begins to get a better understanding of what exactly is going on in this series (something completely lacking in "Gunslinger!).

    So, if you read "The Gunslinger" and were disappointed or confused, PLEASE don't abandon your quest for the Dark Tower yet. Instead, give this book a try. I can almost guarantee you that you won't be disappointed!

    Best book in a great series5
    This is a great book. It's one of my favorite series, because it is epic fantasy told by a master of supernatural horror whose strongest talent as a writer is his ability to depict realism, particularly realistic people and human interaction -- that's a good combination. Stephen King's books feel real, which is why his monsters and things are so very creepy, because they seem like they're actually happening -- and his other great talent is in picking monsters and evil events that, if they were to actually happen, it would be the worst thing imaginable: we'd have to confront some really nasty things about ourselves and our world. Take Storm of the Century, for instance. The worst thing about that isn't Legion (Though he's extremely cool in his badness -- another King talent is how well he understands cool), the worst thing about that is that, if it happened, that is exactly what people would do. The audience would make the same choice that the characters do. And we know it. Most of us would be paralyzed with fear by It, most of us would either join Flagg or fail to live up to the requirements of being a hero in The Stand. Most of us would be completely sucked in by Needful Things -- hell, if you take it as an analogy for Wal*Mart, most of us have been completely sucked in by Needful Things.

    Anyway, this book might just be my favorite in the series, though I need to do my second reading of the last three books, all of which I've only read once. I know I think Eddie's a good character, and I really love Roland in this one; I absolutely can't stand Detta, which is as it should be. I realized this reading that I really don't care for Odetta, either; she's way too prissy and privileged, way too soft. People should have that softness, but it shouldn't be all they have; they should have the strength, too. Like the fact that she had to stay in jail after their civil rights protest until she peed herself; she should have either peed on the floor, just to irritate the guards, or she should have recognized it as something totally beyond her control and been angered, not shamed. Detta would have peed on the guard, of course.

    The lobstrosities are an incredible monster, and Jack Mort is a great bad guy; the chapter where Roland travels into Mort's mind is one of my all-time favorites. This is a great action book with some wonderful characterization, and I loved it. Again.

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