There’s no point in mincing words, I’ve been dreading Doctor
Sleep pretty much since it’s been announced. Not in a good way either. I’ve
been a big proponent of King’s late period. By my mark everything he’s written
since Cell has been worth reading and a good deal of it (particularly Full Dark
No Stars) deserves mention among the best work he’s done. While the last seven
years haven’t been entirely without missteps (I still say Under The Dome
stumbles at the finish line) taken as a whole the body of work King has
produced is incredibly strong.
This did nothing to bolster my confidence in Doctor Sleep.
The Shining is a perfect popular novel. If you have any
interest in writing genre fiction, not just horror fiction, you owe it to
yourself to read it. It’s a freaking machine. The word page turner is often
used dismissively, but the construction of The Shining, the way every revelation
baits you deeper and deeper into the book is a thing of beauty. And it’s all in
the service of a story with so much empathy and hurt that it matters. The fact
that the book is scary as hell almost seems like a bonus. That’s not the kind
of thing you can just replicate. Particularly thirty five years after the fact.
And as details on Doctor Sleep leaked out it didn’t exactly
inspire confidence. The initial premise, Danny Torrance working at a hospice
where he helps ease his patient’s transition into death, sounded promising, but then King announced that “psychic vampire pirates” would be in the mix and
sometime after that I trained myself to stop reading articles about Doctor
Sleep.
So color me pleasantly surprised that Doctor Sleep is a
complete blast of a novel, it might not have the ambition of 11/22/63, it might
not be as introspective as Duma Key, or push his limits like Lisey’s Story. But
it ranks among King’s most purely entertaining work. God help me I never
thought I’d type this, but the story in which Danny Torrance battles what for
all the world reads like the world’s first NC-17 Sailor Moon villain, ends up
being not merely an entertaining read but a genuinely satisfying conclusion
(continuation?) to The Shining.
After a brief prologue Doctor Sleep opens with Danny
Torrance as a wreck, having followed his father’s footsteps much closer than
the ending of The Shining would have you guess. Drifting and self destructive
Danny finds himself drawn to a New England town where he joins AA, finds work
at a hospice, and prepares himself for a destiny he can faintly see coming.
Doctor Sleep is one of those happy books were even its flaws
end up working for it. At first The True Knot, arguably the best villains that
King has cooked up since Annie Wilkes, and their carny slang patois seem
jarring and out of place. But they end up being conduits for the sheer love of
language that has always been one of King’s best qualities. No other popular
novelist has King’s pure pleasure in playing with words, deconstructing them
into babble, smashing together disparate bits of counter slang into inimitable
phrases. It takes Doctor Sleep a bit to kick into its main plot, but that’s
only because the AA material is so obviously heartfelt. And if Doctor Sleep,
like this year’s Joyland, is kinder gentler King, with characters he can’t
quite bring himself to really put the screws to, he’s still capable of hitting
hard enough in the early goings of the story that you never take anyone’s
safety for granted.
Heartfelt, funny, and genuinely eerie at times, far from
derailing King’s late period resurgence as I feared it might Doctor Sleep
continues it in high style. Hail to the king baby.
4 comments:
Count me as another who surprisingly enjoyed this more than expected.
He must have sold his soul to the Devil after his accident. He really does get better with age
Good to hear. Having just read your book (loved it), I know how much you like The Shining so this is high praise.
Agree with you 100% on Under the Dome. Ending is terrible. How you can go 1000 pages and...SPOILER ALERT...
...not have any kind of Barbie/Big Jim confrontation. And the children with their toys wrap-up doesn't help matters.
I'm not a huge fan of the tv show but I think it has gone in some more interesting directions than the book did.
I couldn't agree more. IMO, this is the best thing he's written in 20 years.
Great review!
www.james-newman.com
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