Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Needful Things, by Stephen King

Needful Things is another book by Stephen King. The book is set in Castle Rock, Maine, just like a few of his other books. The book follows the opening of a small shop in the town called “Needful Things”, owned by a man named Leland Gaunt.

The shop itself holds magical properties in that it has items that characters in the story want the most. For example, in Myra Evans case, she wants most a framed picture of Elvis Presley. Leland is actually tricking the people into believing these items exist, when in reality they are nothing more than junk. Many of his items are actually aging and tattered and do not hold true to the ideas of those who pursue them. Closer to the end of the book, it is revealed to the reader that Leland has been going from town to town for hundreds of years and is some kind of supernatural entity.


Leland does not let each character in the book simply buy the item. To obtain the items the characters must perform pranks and practical jokes on other people in the town. This quickly gets out of hand, and plunges the town into dissonance. Alan Pangborn, the towns sheriff, eventually finds out that these jokes are tied to Leland and drives him out of the town, but not before many of the townspeople are dead.

The book is very sinister in that it plays on an innocent shopkeeper for such nefarious deeds. Leland’s evil is apparent and early on in the book the reader realizes there is something wrong.

Like The Cycle of the Werewolf, King’s work really shows through in his detail and wild imagination. Even though he has many, many publications, each one is an adventure that King has worked painstakingly on to create vivid details and terrific storylines. I really enjoy his books, as I am a fan of horror and science fiction. King's detail in his stories comes through because of his imagination, which really appeals to me.

The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

The Hound of the Baskervilles is a thrilling tale, which brings Sherlock Holmes and his assistant Dr. Watson back for another detective mystery novel. After I read this book I felt that I should read other Doyle, because Holmes keen sense of logic appeals to me.

The story begins with Holmes and Watson trying to find out who left a cane in their office. Holmes easily deduces that it is James Mortimer. Mortimer reads the legend of the Hound of the Baskervilles, and how it relates to Hugo Baskerville’s death. A supernatural hound killed him at his estate in Devonshire. Holmes refuses to go to Devonshire with Watson to help him solve the case as he has other matters to attend to in London. Holmes tells Watson to report back with his findings, but later the reader finds out that Holmes secretly travels to Devonshire to try to solve the mystery without the suspects knowing that he is there.

Jack Stapleton is the heir to the Baskerville fortune, who Holmes then labels as the prime suspect. The reader is led on in that the escaped con, who is related to the caretakers at the Baskerville Mansion, is the killer, a veritable red herring. It turns out that Stapleton is painting a large, starving, dog with special glow in the dark cream in order to make it look demonic or ghostly. Charles Baskerville had a heart attack upon seeing it (which we find out about earlier in the novel). Holmes figures out the mystery and uses Henry Baskerville, or the Baskerville next on Stapleton’s list, in order to lure out the dog. The dog is shot and the case is finished.


I especially like these kinds of novels because you really never know “whodunit” until the end of the book. Doyle paints Sherlock Holmes and Watson like real characters in the latter part of the 1800’s, also giving the book a vivid feel. Doyle’s writing style can be confusing at times due to old English here and there, but the book really does it for me because of Holmes’ mystery solving skills.

Sunday, May 6, 2007

The Deep End Of The Ocean, by Jacquelyn Mitchard

The Deep End Of The Ocean is a novel about a child vanishing from his family. It’s an emotional thriller, and what the family goes through when the little boy disappears is completely gripping to read. The mother’s name is Beth. She is busy like most working moms, rushing between her home and family and her other work.

Beth goes to Chicago to a school reunion leaves her older son, Vincent, in charge of his very young brother, Ben. When she comes back to get the kids, Ben seems to have wandered off. They call him and look for him, but they can’t find any trace of him. Jacquelyn Mitchard writes of the growing panic of the mom when she can’t find the boy, and then the disbelief and shock when the police have to be called in and the family has to face the fact that something serious has happened to the little boy.

Several years pass, and they all continue to try to cope with what has happened. The older son, Vincent, always feels it’s his fault. Then, nine years later, after they have moved to Chicago, Beth believes she has found her son again. Now aged 12, the boy is called Sam and he lives nearby. Beth and her family slowly learn the truth about Ben’s life in the past few years and the mentally ill woman who took him in the first place. Finding the son, however, does not make everything okay for Beth and her family. Ben has been adopted, and the man who has raised him loves him and doesn’t want to give him back to Beth. Ben himself feels as if he belongs with the father who has brought him up since he was very small. Now he feels caught between two families. The book doesn’t resolve everything, but when the two brothers, Ben and Vincent, begin to form a relationship again, it is obvious things will move toward a happy conclusion.
I enjoyed Mitchard’s writing in that the way she conveys a parent’s loss as well as the pain of losing a child is very realistic and evokes sympathy for Beth.

Cycle of the Werewolf, by Stephen King

Cycle of the Werewolf is a story about a werewolf terrorizing the small town of Tarker's Mills. Every full moon more and more people are killed, and the book follows the tribulations of Marty Coslaw, a young boy paralyzed from the waste down, confined to a wheelchair.

The book goes between Marty’s life in the town and the werewolf killings. Marty is deeply affected by the killings and must also deal with living as a crippled boy at such a young age. A turning point in the novel is when Tarker’s Mills fireworks show for Independence Day is cancelled. Marty’s Uncle Red gets him his own fireworks because Marty has been looking forward to the show for a long time. While Marty is setting off his fireworks and having a great time, the werewolf attacks him. It’s looking bleak but at the last second Marty manages to blind the werewolf in one eye.

The police report is laughed at, the police are not looking for a werewolf, they are obviously searching for a human murderer. The atrocities committed by the werewolf continue through the summer as the full moon cycles continue.

Halloween comes around, and while Marty is trick or treating he comes across Reverend Lowe with an eye patch over the same eye that Marty blasted earlier. Marty puts two and two together and realizes who the werewolf truly is. Marty begins to write anonymous letters to the reverend asking him to kill himself and stop the madness. Marty signs the last letter he sends, and also convinces his uncle to craft 2 silver bullets. When the wolf tries to kill Marty, Marty shoots him with the silver bullets and kills him.

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel; King’s writing style captures the terror of Marty and the town very well. I also found it interesting that the protagonist is a crippled boy, as the book is really about how although different, Marty must overcome his disability and combat the werewolf that is hurting his town.

The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair

The Jungle is a novel written by Upton Sinclair that focuses on a Lithuanian family who deal with the hardships of Chicago in the early 20th century. The main character is a man named Jurgis Rudkus. His wife’s name is Ona, and throughout the novel their group of characters (family and siblings, Ona's stepmother Teta and her children, cousin Marija, etc.) face challenges together.

The novel begins with a lavish wedding ceremony for Jurgis and Ona, which is enjoyed by all. However, a question arises: will they be able to afford everything? Typical of those seeking a better life, Jurgis and his family travel to America, in this case, Chicago. Upon arriving, the family is faced with con men and also finds difficulty obtaining a home.

Jurgis and part of his family are forced to find work in the meat packing industry or the stockyards of Chicago, an oppressive environment full of danger and terrible conditions. Jurgis becomes miserable and his hopes of providing the good life for his family begin to slip. Tragically his wife Ona dies of childbirth because the family could not afford a proper doctor to deliver the baby. Jurgis is demoralized beyond recognition and he leaves the city, depressed and searching for an answer.

Jurgis tries to find farm work but realizes that once the harvest is finished farmers will no longer have need for him. He returns to Chicago and again tries to find work, this time away from the meat packing plants. Jurgis is still searching for meaning when he comes across the socialist party, and learns about labor unions. These things symbolize a remedy for his problems and Sinclair at the end of the book focuses on the socialist campaign.

I found The Jungle to be a harrowing read because of the descriptions of the meat packing industries disgusting conditions. Stories about immigrant workers being ground up after falling into machines and what Jurgis Rudkus and his family go through made me realize what life was like for immigrant workers at the beginning of the 20th century-not so good. The book led to the Food and Drug Administration’s creation after the public’s reaction to this book, which really goes to show how much of an impact it has had.