The Tommyknockers
|
| List Price: | £7.99 |
| Price: | £6.69 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 2 to 4 weeks
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
263 new or used available from £0.01
Average customer review:Product Description
Set in Maine, this story concerns Bobbi who has developed telepathic powers. A spaceship landed at the bottom of her garden and when it is uncovered, the citizens of Haven metamorphose into increasingly bizarre and dangerous creatures.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #213230 in Books
- Published on: 1989-10-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 704 pages
Editorial Reviews
The Sunday Times
‘A writer of excellence...King is one of the most fertile storytellers of the modern novel...brilliantly done’
Review
‘An incredibly gifted writer, whose writing, like Truman Capote’s, is so fluid that you often forget that you’re reading’ (Guardian )
‘A writer of excellence...King is one of the most fertile storytellers of the modern novel...brilliantly done’ (The Sunday Times )
‘Splendid entertainment...Stephen King is one of those natural storytellers...getting hooked is easy’ (Frances Fyfield, Express )
Guardian
‘An incredibly gifted writer, whose writing, like Truman Capote’s, is so fluid that you often forget that you’re reading’
Customer Reviews
Stephen King's buried spaceship science fiction horror story
The start of Stephen King's 1987 novel "The Tommyknockers" has always reminded me of the set up of one of my all-time favorite science fiction-horror films, "5 Million Years to Earth" (a.k.a. "Quatermass and the Pit" in the U.K.). A writer named Roberta Anderson, living on the outskirts of the small town of Haven, Maine, is out looking for firewood in the forest behind her house when she stumbles over three inches of metal. She assumes that she has stumbled over a beer can left behind by a logger, but instead she discovers the metal was solid. What she has found is a space ship, buried in the earth for millions of years, but still vibrating faintly. So, Bobbi begins to dig the giant craft out of the earth by herself, soon to be joined by her friend and former lover Jim Gardener, and by the strange advanced technology that they are suddenly inspired to create. But as they uncover more of the ship Bobbi and Jim, as well as the rest of the citizens of Haven, all start to change.
Up to that point "The Tommyknockers" is pretty good and I have to admit that I thought the idea of alien technology working into the ancient rubric that there are some things human beings were not meant to tamper with was enough to sustain the story. But instead we are treated to a malevolent presence that has evil designs on the citizen of Haven and that seemed to me like overkill. Add to that the fact the two main characters are writers (King dedicates the novel to his wife Tabitha, who is also a novelist), and "The Tommyknockers" becomes a bit too self referential for me as does the whole subplot about Gardener’s writer’s block. This novel represents the start of a period in King's writing where my recurring complaint was that the great set up never resulted in an ending that was equal to the task, although we do have a sort of reverse "deus ex machina" at the end of this one. But the discovery of the ship and the weird inventions people in Haven start putting together out of odds, ends and batteries is pretty good stuff.
Superb
I've been a bit confused about some of the negative reviews that this novel has received. But then again, I've been equally surprised at some of the positive reviews that some other books have received when I've absolutely hated them (The Regulators? Desperation? Awful!) I guess it proves the old adage true that one man's meat is another man's poison.
Well, in my opinion The Tommyknockers is quite simply stunning and one of the very best from The Master, definitely in my top 5 (The Stand, IT, The Shining and The Dead Zone being the others). Wonderfully realised and well rounded characters, a suspensful plot and some lovely sub-plots (I particularly loved/hated Bobbi's awful sister!) make this a must read for fans and non-fans alike.
One of King's best
Before reading this book I was told by many people that it was not one of Stephen King's better books. However, I read the book within a week and I simply could not put it down. I mean what's not to like about it, ok, the plot may concern an alien space craft, but it is still an excellent read. The stories two main characters are easy to identify with and right from the start they are very likable and throughout the book you can really emphathise with the feelings they have and the suffering they are going through. If you are looking for a horror story or a tale of the macabre, you are better going with IT, Pet Sematery or The Stand. Overall though this book ranks up top amongst King's best alongwith books, such as Salem's Lot and The Shining.




